3,442 results on '"Turner N"'
Search Results
2. On wave interference in planet migration: dead zone torques modified by active zone forcing
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Chametla, R. O., Chrenko, O., Lyra, W., and Turner, N. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate planetary migration in the dead zone of a protoplanetary disk where there are a set of spiral waves propagating inward due to the turbulence in the active zone and the Rossby wave instability (RWI), which occurs at the transition between the dead and active zones. We perform global 3D unstratified magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations of a gaseous disk with the FARGO3D code, using weak gradients in the static resistivity profiles that trigger the formation of a vortex at the outer edge of the dead zone. We find that once the Rossby vortex develops, spiral waves in the dead zone emerge and interact with embedded migrating planets by wave interference, which notably changes their migration. The inward migration becomes faster depending on the mass of the planet, due mostly to the constructive (destructive) interference between the outer (inner) spiral arm of the planet and, the destruction of the dynamics of the horseshoe region by means of the set of background spiral waves propagating inward. The constructive wave interference produces a more negative Lindblad differential torque which inevitably leads to an inward migration. Lastly, for massive planets embedded in the dead zone, we find that the spiral waves can create an asymmetric wider and depeer gap than in the case of $\alpha$-disks, and can prevent the formation of vortices at the outer edge of the gap. The latter could generate a faster or slower migration compared to the standard type-II migration., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
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3. Previous vaccination modifies both the clinical disease and immunological features in children with measles
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Mitchell P, Turner N, Jennings L, and Dong H
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Immunoglobulin M ,measles ,measles-mumps-rubella vaccine ,polymerase chain reaction ,vaccination ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Measles that develops in previously vaccinated cases has been reported to be associated with modified disease, although severity has usually been assessed by the presence or absence of symptoms. To date no studies have attempted to subjectively grade the severity of the clinical features. AIM: To investigate both the objective and subjective severity of measles in vaccinated and unvaccinated cases in the context of a community outbreak. METHODS: A retrospective observational cohort study conducted in Christchurch in 2009 using notified data compared the presentation of measles in 14 confirmed cases that had received at least one MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccination and 14 age-matched unvaccinated confirmed cases. Additional details on the subjective and objective severity of the illness were obtained from parents/guardians using a standardised telephone questionnaire. RESULTS: The vaccinated group had significantly fewer clinical features on presentation (p=0.01, RR=1.3, 95% CI 1.1-1.6) and a less severe illness objectively, as measured by height and duration of fever, the number of days needing medication other than paracetamol and days required in bed. Unvaccinated cases were 2.8 times more likely to have more severe clinical features than vaccinated cases (OR=2.8, 95% CI 1.5-5.0). Unvaccinated cases were 3.0 times more likely to develop IgM antibody (RR=3.0, 95% CI 0.9-9.3). DISCUSSION: Previously vaccinated children who develop measles are likely to have less severe disease and serology results that may be inconclusive, particularly for IgM antibody if tested in the first few days after the rash onset.
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- 2013
4. Hydro-, Magnetohydro-, and Dust-Gas Dynamics of Protoplanetary Disks
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Lesur, G., Ercolano, B., Flock, M., Lin, M. -K., Yang, C. -C., Barranco, J. A., Benitez-Llambay, P., Goodman, J., Johansen, A., Klahr, H., Laibe, G., Lyra, W., Marcus, P., Nelson, R. P., Squire, J., Simon, J. B., Turner, N., Umurhan, O. M., and Youdin, A. N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The building of planetary systems is controlled by the gas and dust dynamics of protoplanetary disks. While the gas is simultaneously accreted onto the central star and dissipated away by winds, dust grains aggregate and collapse to form planetesimals and eventually planets. This dust and gas dynamics involves instabilities, turbulence and complex non-linear interactions which ultimately control the observational appearance and the secular evolution of these disks. This chapter is dedicated to the most recent developments in our understanding of the dynamics of gaseous and dusty disks, covering hydrodynamic and magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, gas-dust instabilities, dust clumping and disk winds. We show how these physical processes have been tested from observations and highlight standing questions that should be addressed in the future., Comment: 32 pages, 7 figures, to appear in Protostars and Planets VII, eds: Shu-ichiro Inutsuka, Yuri Aikawa, Takayuki Muto, Kengo Tomida, and Motohide Tamura
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- 2022
5. Accreting protoplanets: Spectral signatures and magnitude of gas and dust extinction at H alpha
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Marleau, G. -D., Aoyama, Y., Kuiper, R., Follette, K., Turner, N. J., Cugno, G., Manara, C. F., Haffert, S. Y., Kitzmann, D., Ringqvist, S. C., Wagner, K. R., van Boekel, R., Sallum, S., Schmidt, M. Janson. T. O. B., Venuti, L., Lovis, Ch., and Mordasini, C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Accreting planets have been seen at Ha (H alpha), but targeted searches have not been fruitful. For planets, accretion tracers should come from the shock itself, exposing them to extinction by the accreting material. High-resolution (R>5e4) spectrographs at Ha should soon allow studying how the incoming material shapes the line profile. We calculate how much the gas and dust accreting onto a planet reduce the Ha flux from the shock at the planetary surface and how they affect line shapes. We also study the absorption-modified relationship between Ha luminosity and Mdot. We compute the high-resolution radiative transfer of the Ha line using a 1D velocity-density-temperature structure for the inflowing matter in three representative accretion geometries: spherical symmetry, polar inflow, and magnetospheric accretion. For each, we explore wide ranges of Mdot and planet mass M. We use detailed gas opacities and estimate dust opacities. At Mdot<3e-6 MJ/yr, gas extinction is negligible for spherical or polar inflow and at most A_Ha<0.5 mag for magnetospheric accretion. Up to Mdot~3e-4 MJ/yr, the gas has A_Ha<4 mag. This decreases with M. We estimate realistic dust opacities at Ha as ~0.01-10 cm^2/g, i.e., 10-1e4 times lower than in the ISM. Extinction flattens the L_Ha-Mdot relationship, which becomes non-monotonic with a maximum L_Ha~1e-4 LSun near Mdot~1e-4 MJ/yr for M~10 MJ. In magnetospheric accretion, the gas can introduce features in line profiles, but the velocity gradient smears them out in other geometries. For most of parameter space, extinction by the accreting matter should be negligible, simplifying interpretation of observations, especially for planets in gaps. At high Mdot, strong absorption reduces the Ha flux, and some measurements can be interpreted as two Mdot values. Line profiles at R~1e5 can provide complex constraints on the accretion flow's thermal-dynamical structure., Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures (main text) + 3 pages, 4 figures (three appendices). In press at A&A. Comments welcome
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- 2021
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6. A phase I dose escalation and expansion trial of the next-generation oral SERD camizestrant in women with ER-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer: SERENA-1 monotherapy results
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Hamilton, E., Oliveira, M., Turner, N., García-Corbacho, J., Hernando, C., Ciruelos, E.M., Kabos, P., Ruiz-Borrego, M., Armstrong, A., Patel, M.R., Vaklavas, C., Twelves, C., Boni, V., Incorvati, J., Brier, T., Gibbons, L., Klinowska, T., Lindemann, J.P.O., Morrow, C.J., Sykes, A., and Baird, R.D.
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- 2024
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7. Specifieke omstandigheden
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Schoon, Y., Turner, N. M., van den Berg, T. J., Verweij, B. G. F., Weenink, R. P., Kooiman, C. G. H. M., Huizinga, E. P., Wulterkens, Th. W., Ruijten, M., Kooij, F. O., Tan, E.C.T.H., editor, Kaasjager, H.A.H., editor, Kooij, F.O., editor, Motz, C., editor, Verdonschot, R.J.C.G., editor, and Wulterkens, Th.W., editor
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- 2023
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8. A High Angular Resolution Survey of Massive Stars in Cygnus OB2: $JHK$ Adaptive Optics Results from the Gemini Near-InfraRed Imager
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Caballero-Nieves, S. M., Gies, D. R., Baines, E. K., Bouchez, A. H., Dekany, R. G., Goodwin, S. P., Rickman, E. L., Roberts Jr., L. C., Taggart, K., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, and Turner, N. H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of a high angular resolution survey of massive OB stars in the Cygnus OB2 association that we conducted with the NIRI camera and ALTAIR adaptive optics system of the Gemini North telescope. We observed 74 O- and early B-type stars in Cyg OB2 in the $JHK$ infrared bands in order to detect binary and multiple companions. The observations are sensitive to equal-brightness pairs at separations as small as 0.08 \arcsec, and progressively fainter companions are detectable out to $\Delta$ K = 9 mag at a separation of 2 arcsec. This faint contrast limit due to readnoise continues out to 10 arcsec near the edge of the detector. We assigned a simple probability of chance alignment to each companion based upon its separation and magnitude difference from the central target star and upon areal star counts for the general star field of Cyg OB2. Companion stars with a field membership probability of less than 1% are assumed to be physical companions. This assessment indicates that 47% of the targets have at least one resolved companion that is probably gravitationally bound. Including known spectroscopic binaries, our sample includes 27 binary, 12 triple, and 9 systems with four or more components. These results confirm studies of high mass stars in other environments that find that massive stars are born with a high multiplicity fraction. The results are important for the placement of the stars in the H-R diagram, the interpretation of their spectroscopic analyses, and for future mass determinations through measurement of orbital motion., Comment: 53 pages, 5 figures, Accepted to AJ
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- 2020
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9. Visible and near-infrared spectro-interferometric analysis of the edge-on Be star $\omicron$ Aquarii
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de Almeida, E. S. G., Meilland, A., de Souza, A. Domiciano, Stee, P., Mourard, D., Nardetto, N., Ligi, R., Tallon-Bosc, I., Faes, D. M., Carciofi, A. C., Bednarski, D., Mota, B. C., Turner, N., and Brummelaar, T. A. ten
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed visible and near-IR spectro-interferometric analysis of the Be-shell star $\omicron$ Aquarii from quasi-contemporaneous CHARA/VEGA and VLTI/AMBER observations. We measured the stellar radius of $\omicron$ Aquarii as 4.0 $\pm$ 0.3 $\mathrm{R_{\odot}}$. We constrained the disk geometry and kinematics using a kinematic model and a MCMC fitting procedure. The disk sizes in H$\alpha$ and Br$\gamma$ were found to be similar, at $\sim$10-12 $\mathrm{D_{\star}}$, which is uncommon since most results for Be stars show a larger extension in H$\alpha$ than in Br$\gamma$. We found that the inclination angle $i$ derived from H$\alpha$ is significantly lower ($\sim$15 deg) than the one derived from Br$\gamma$. The disk kinematics were found to be near to the Keplerian rotation in Br$\gamma$, but not in H$\alpha$. After analyzing all our data using a grid of HDUST models (BeAtlas), we found a common physical description for the disk in both lines: $\Sigma_{0}$ = 0.12 g cm\textsuperscript{-2} and $m$ = 3.0. The stellar rotational rate was found to be very close ($\sim$96\%) to the critical value. Our analysis of multi-epoch H$\alpha$ profiles and imaging polarimetry indicates that the disk has been stable for at least 20 years. Compared to Br$\gamma$, the data in H$\alpha$ shows a substantially different picture that cannot fully be understood using the current physical models of Be star disks. $\omicron$ Aquarii presents a stable disk, but the measured $m$ is lower than the standard value in the VDD model for steady-state. Such long-term stability can be understood in terms of the high rotational rate for this star, the rate being a main source for the mass injection in the disk. Our results on the stellar rotation and disk stability are consistent with results in the literature showing that late-type Be stars are more likely to be fast rotators and have stable disks., Comment: 24 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics on 06/02/2020. Abstract shortened to fit within arXiv character limit
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- 2020
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10. Understanding breast cancer complexity to improve patient outcomes: The St Gallen International Consensus Conference for the Primary Therapy of Individuals with Early Breast Cancer 2023
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Aebi, S., Al-Foheidi, M., André, F., Anikusko, M., Badwe, R., Barrio, A.V., Barrios, C., Bergh, J., Bonnefoi, H., Bretel Morales, D., Brucker, S., Burstein, H.J., Caldas, C., Cameron, D., Cardoso, F., Cardoso, M.J., Carey, L., Chia, S., Coles, C., Cortes, J., Curigliano, G., de Boniface, J., Delaloge, S., DeMichele, A., Denkert, C., Fastner, G., Fitzal, F., Francis, P., Gamal, H., Gentilini, O., Gnant, M., Gradishar, W., Gulluoglu, B., Harbeck, N., Heil, J., Huang, C.-S.H., Huober, J., Jiang, Z., Kaidar-Person, O., Kok, M., Lee, E.-S., Loi, S., Loibl, S., Martin, M., Meattini, I., Morrow, M., Partridge, A., Penault-Llorca, F., Piccart, M., Pierce, L., Poortmans, P., Regan, M., Reis-Filho, J., Rubio, I., Rugo, H., Rutgers, E., Saura, C., Senkus, E., Shao, Z., Singer, C., Spanic, T., Thuerlimann, B., Toi, M., Tolaney, S., Turner, N., Tutt, A., Vrancken Peeters, M.-J., Watanabe, T., Weber, W., Wildiers, H., Xu, B., Regan, M.M., Weber, W.P., and Thürlimann, B.
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- 2023
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11. A near-infrared interferometric survey of debris-disk stars. VI. Extending the exozodiacal light survey with CHARA/JouFLU
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Nunez, Paul D., Scott, N. J., Mennesson, B., Absil, O., Augereau, J. -C., Bryden, G., Brummelaar, T. ten, Ertel, S., Foresto, V. Coude du, Ridgway, S. T., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N. J., and Turner, N. H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the results of high-angular-resolution observations that search for exozodiacal light in a sample of main sequence stars and sub-giants. Using the "jouvence" of the fiber linked unit for optical recombination (JouFLU) at the center for high angular resolution astronomy (CHARA) telescope array, we have observed a total of 44 stars. Out of the 44 stars, 33 are new stars added to the initial, previously published survey of 42 stars performed at CHARA with the fiber linked unit for optical recombiation (FLUOR). Since the start of the survey extension, we have detected a K-band circumstellar excess for six new stars at the ~ 1\% level or higher, four of which are known or candidate binaries, and two for which the excess could be attributed to exozodiacal dust. We have also performed follow-up observations of 11 of the stars observed in the previously published survey and found generally consistent results. We do however detect a significantly larger excess on three of these follow-up targets: Altair, $\upsilon$ And and $\kappa$ CrB. Interestingly, the last two are known exoplanet host stars. We perform a statistical analysis of the JouFLU and FLUOR samples combined, which yields an overall exozodi detection rate of $21.7^{+5.7}_{-4.1}\%$. We also find that the K-band excess in FGK-type stars correlates with the existence of an outer reservoir of cold ($\lesssim 100\,$K) dust at the $99\%$ confidence level, while the same cannot be said for A-type stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. 18 pages, 20 figures
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- 2017
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12. The Taurus Boundary of Stellar/Substellar (TBOSS) Survey II. Disk Masses from ALMA Continuum Observations
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Ward-Duong, K., Patience, J., Bulger, J., van der Plas, G., Ménard, F., Pinte, C., Jackson, A. P., Bryden, G., Turner, N. J., Harvey, P., Hales, A., and De Rosa, R. J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report 885$\mu$m ALMA continuum flux densities for 24 Taurus members spanning the stellar/substellar boundary, with spectral types from M4 to M7.75. Of the 24 systems, 22 are detected at levels ranging from 1.0-55.6 mJy. The two non-detections are transition disks, though other transition disks in the sample are detected. Converting ALMA continuum measurements to masses using standard scaling laws and radiative transfer modeling yields dust mass estimates ranging from $\sim$0.3-20M$_{\oplus}$. The dust mass shows a declining trend with central object mass when combined with results from submillimeter surveys of more massive Taurus members. The substellar disks appear as part of a continuous sequence and not a distinct population. Compared to older Upper Sco members with similar masses across the substellar limit, the Taurus disks are brighter and more massive. Both Taurus and Upper Sco populations are consistent with an approximately linear relationship in $M_{dust}$ to $M_{star}$, although derived power-law slopes depend strongly upon choices of stellar evolutionary model and dust temperature relation. The median disk around early M-stars in Taurus contains a comparable amount of mass in small solids as the average amount of heavy elements in Kepler planetary systems on short-period orbits around M-dwarf stars, with an order of magnitude spread in disk dust mass about the median value. Assuming a gas:dust ratio of 100:1, only a small number of low-mass stars and brown dwarfs have a total disk mass amenable to giant planet formation, consistent with the low frequency of giant planets orbiting M-dwarfs., Comment: 41 pages and 32 figures, with all tables and appendices presented here in their entirety. Accepted for publication in AJ (November 26, 2017)
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- 2017
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13. Un-silencing the space of Eisenstein : a contemporary visual analysis of the use of space in Sergei Eisenstein's early silent films
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Turner, N. C., Koeck, Richard, and Jackson, Iain
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791.4302 - Published
- 2018
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14. The peculiar fast-rotating star 51 Oph probed by VEGA/CHARA
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Jamialahmadi, Narges, Berio, Philippe, Meilland, Anthony, Perraut, Karine, Mourard, Denis, Lopez, Bruno, Stee, Philippe, Nardetto, Nicolas, Pichon, B., Clausse, J. M., Spang, A., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Sturmann, J., Turner, N., Farrington, C., Vargas, N., and Scott, N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Stellar rotation is a key in our understanding of both mass-loss and evolution of intermediate and massive stars. It can lead to anisotropic mass-loss in the form of radiative wind or an excretion disk. We wished to spatially resolve the photosphere and gaseous environment of 51 Oph, a peculiar star with a very high vsin(i) of 267km s$^{-1}$ and an evolutionary status that remains unsettled. It has been classified by different authors as a Herbig, a $\beta$ Pic, or a classical Be star. We used the VEGA visible beam combiner installed on the CHARA array that reaches a submilliarcsecond resolution. Observation were centered on the H$\alpha$ emission line. We derived, for the first time, the extension and flattening of 51 Oph photosphere. We found a major axis of $\theta_{{\mathrm{eq}}}$=8.08$\pm$0.70$R_\odot$ and a minor axis of $\theta_{{\mathrm{pol}}}$=5.66$\pm$0.23$R_\odot$ . This high photosphere distortion shows that the star is rotating close to its critical velocity. Finally, using spectro-interferometric measurements in the H$ \alpha$ line, we constrained the circumstellar environment geometry and kinematics and showed that the emission is produced in a 5.2$\pm$2R$_{*}$ disk in Keplerian rotation. From the visible point of view, 51 Oph presents all the features of a classical Be star: near critical-rotation and double-peaked H$\alpha $ line in emission produced in a gaseous disk in Keplerian rotation. However, this does not explain the presence of dust as seen in the mid-infrared and millimeter spectra, and the evolutionary status of 51 Oph remains unsettled., Comment: Published in A&A Letter. 5 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables
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- 2017
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15. 3D Radiation Non-ideal Magnetohydrodynamical Simulations Of The Inner Rim In Protoplanetary Disks
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Flock, M., Fromang, S., Turner, N. J., and Benisty, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Many planets orbit within an AU of their stars, raising questions about their origins. Particularly puzzling are the planets found near the silicate sublimation front. We investigate conditions near the front in the protostellar disk around a young intermediate-mass star, using the first global 3-D radiation non-ideal MHD simulations in this context. We treat the starlight heating; the silicate grains sublimation and deposition at the local, time-varying temperature and density; temperature-dependent Ohmic dissipation; and various initial magnetic fields. The results show magnetorotational turbulence around the sublimation front at 0.5 AU. The disk interior to 0.8 AU is turbulent, with velocities exceeding 10% of the sound speed. Beyond 0.8 AU is the dead zone, cooler than 1000 K and with turbulence orders of magnitude weaker. A local pressure maximum just inside the dead zone concentrates solid particles, favoring their growth. Over many orbits, a vortex develops at the dead zones inner edge, increasing the disks thickness locally by around 10%. We synthetically observe the results using Monte Carlo transfer calculations, finding the sublimation front is near-infrared bright. The models with net vertical magnetic fields develop extended, magnetically-supported atmospheres that reprocess extra starlight, raising the near-infrared flux 20%.The vortex throws a nonaxisymmetric shadow on the outer disk. At wavelengths > 2 micron, the flux varies several percent on monthly timescales. The variations are more regular when the vortex is present. The vortex is directly visible as an arc at ultraviolet through near-infrared wavelengths, given sub-AU spatial resolution., Comment: accepted for ApJ
- Published
- 2016
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16. A Phase 1 dose escalation and expansion trial of the next-generation oral SERD camizestrant in women with ER-positive, HER2-negative advanced breast cancer: SERENA-1 monotherapy results
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Hamilton, E., primary, Oliveira, M., additional, Turner, N., additional, García-Corbacho, J., additional, Hernando, C., additional, Ciruelos, E.M., additional, Kabos, P., additional, Borrego, M.R., additional, Armstrong, A., additional, Patel, M.R., additional, Vaklavas, C., additional, Twelves, C., additional, Boni, V., additional, Incorvati, J., additional, Brier, T., additional, Gibbons, L., additional, Klinowska, T., additional, Lindemann, J.P.O., additional, Morrow, C.J., additional, Sykes, A., additional, and Baird, R., additional
- Published
- 2024
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17. Final results from the PERUSE study of first-line pertuzumab plus trastuzumab plus a taxane for HER2-positive locally recurrent or metastatic breast cancer, with a multivariable approach to guide prognostication
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Bachelot, T., Bouzid, K., Campone, M., Desmoulins, I., Coudert, B., Bondarenko, I., Nowecki, Z., Glogowska, I., Ciruelos Gil, E., Errihani, H., Dalenc, F., Ricci, F., Dieras, V., Kaufman, B., Paluch-Shimon, S., Wardley, A., Schneeweiss, A., Ferreira, A., Mano, M., Kalofonos, H., Andreetta, C., Puglisi, F., Montemurro, F., Barrett, S., Zhang, Q., Mavroudis, D., Matus, J., Villarreal Garza, C., Beato, C., Ismael, G., Hu, X., Abdel Azeem, H., Gaafar, R., Perrin, C., Kerbrat, P., Ettl, J., Paepke, S., Hitre, E., Lang, I., Trudeau, M., Verma, S., Li, H., Hoffmann, O., Aktas, B., Cariello, A., Cruciani, G., Tienghi, A., Tondini, C., Al-Twegieri, T., Loman, N., Laing, R., Miles, D., Brain, E., Fasching, P., Lux, M., Frassoldati, A., Aziz, Z., Salas, J., Streb, J., Krzemieniecki, K., Wronski, A., Garcia Garcia, J., Menjon Beltran, S., Cicin, I., Schmid, P., Gallagher, C., Turner, N., Tong, Z., Boer, K., Juhász, B., Horvath, Z., Bianchini, G., Gianni, L., Curigliano, G., Juarez Ramiro, A., Susnjar, S., Matos, E., Sevillano, E., Garcia Estevez, L., Gokmen, E., Uslu, R., Wildiers, H., Schutz, F., Cruz, M., Bourgeois, H., von Schumann, R., Stemmer, S., Dominguez, A., Morales-Vásques, F., Wojtukiewicz, M., Trifunovic, J., Echarri Gonzalez, M.J., Illarramendi Mañas, J., Martinez De Dueñas, E., Voitko, N., Hicks, J., Waters, S., Barrett-Lee, P., Wheatley, D., De Boer, R., Cocquyt, V., Jerusalem, G., Barrios, C., Panasci, L., Mattson, J., Tanner, M., Gozy, M., Vasilopoulos, G., Papandreou, C., Revesz, J., Battelli, N., Benedetti, G., Latini, L., Gridelli, C., Lazaro Leon, J., Alarcón Company, J., Arance Fernandez, A., Barnadas Molins, A., Calvo Plaza, I., Bratos, R., Gonzalez Martin, A., Izarzugaza Peron, Y., Klint, L., Kovalev, A., McCarthy, N., Yeo, B., Kee, D., Thomson, J., White, S., Greil, R., Wang, S., Artignan, X., Juhasz-Böess, I., Rody, A., Ngan, R., Dourleshter, F., Goldberg, H., Doni, L., Di Costanzo, F., Ferraù, F., Drobniene, M., Aleknavicius, E., Rashid, K., Costa, L., de la Cruz Merino, L., Garcia Saenz, J., López, R., Del Val Munoz, O., Ozyilkan, O., Azribi, F., Jaafar, H., Baird, R., Verrill, M., Beith, J., Petzer, A., Moreira de Andrade, J., Bernstein, V., Macpherson, N., Rayson, D., Saad Eldin, I., Achille, M., Augereau, P., Müller, V., Rasco, A., Evron, E., Katz, D., Berardi, R., Cascinu, S., De Censi, A., Gennari, A., El-Saghir, N., Ghosn, M., Oosterkamp, H.M., Van den Bosch, J., Kukulska, M., Kalinka, E., Alonso, J., Dalmau Portulas, E., Del Mar Gordon Santiago, M., Pelaez Fernandez, I., Aksoy, S., Altundag, K., Senol Coskun, H., Bozcuk, H., Shparyk, Y., Barraclough, L., Levitt, N., Panwar, U., Kelly, S., Rigg, A., Varughese, M., Castillo, C., Fein, L., Malik, L., Stuart-Harris, R., Singer, C., Stoeger, H., Samonigg, H., Feng, J., Cedeño, M., Ruohola, J., Berdah, J.-F., Goncalves, A., Orfeuvre, H., Grischke, E.-M., Simon, E., Wagner, S., Koumakis, G., Papazisis, K., Ben Baruch, N., Fried, G., Geffen, D., Karminsky, N., Peretz, T., Cavanna, L., Pedrazzioli, P., Grasso, D., Ruggeri, E., D’Auria, G., Moscetti, L., Juozaityte, E., Rodriguez Cid, J., Roerdink, H., Siddiqi, N., Passos Coelho, J., Arcediano Del Amo, A., Garcia Garre, E., García Gonzalez, M., Garcia-Palomo Perez, A., Herenandez Perez, C., Lopez Alvarez, P., Lopez De Ceballos, M.H., Martínez Jañez, N., Mele Olive, M., McAdam, K., Perren, T., Dunn, G., Humphreys, A., Taylor, W., Vera, R., Kaen, L., Andel, J., Steger, G., De Grève, J., Huizing, M., Hegg, R., Joy, A., Kuruvilla, P., Sehdev, S., Smiljanic, S., Kütner, R., Alexandre, J., Grosjean, J., Laplaige, P., Largillier, R., Maes, P., Martin, P., Pottier, V., Christensen, B., Khandan, F., Lück, H.-J., Zahm, D.-M., Fountzilas, G., Karavasilis, V., Safra, T., Inbar, M., Ryvo, L., Bonetti, A., Seles, E., Giacobino, A., Chavarri Guerra, Y., de Jongh, F., van der Velden, A., van Warmerdam, L., Vrijaldenhoven, S., Smorenburg, C.H., Cavero, M., Andres Conejero, R., Oltra Ferrando, A., Redondo Sanchez, A., Ribelles Entrena, N., Saura Grau, S., Viñas Vilaro, G., Bachmeier, K., Beresford, M., Butt, M., Joffe, J., Poole, C., Woodings, P., Chakraborti, P., Yordi, G., Woodward, N., Nobre, A., Luiz Amorim, G., Califaretti, N., Fox, S., Robidoux, A., Li, E., Li, N., Jiang, J., Soria, T., Padrik, P., Lahdenpera, O., Barletta, H., Dohollou, N., Genet, D., Prulhiere, K., Coeffic, D., Facchini, T., Vieillot, S., Catala, S., Teixeira, L., Hesse, T., Kühn, T., Ober, A., Repp, R., Schröder, W., Pectasides, D., Bodoky, G., Kahan, Z., Jiveliouk, I., Rosengarten, O., Rossi, V., Alabiso, O., Pérez Martínez, M., van de Wouw, A.J., Smok-Kalwat, J., Damasecno, M., Augusto, I., Sousa, G., Saadein, A., Abdelhafiez, N., Abulkhair, O., Antón Torres, A., Corbellas Aparicio, M., Llorente Domenech, R., Florián Jerico, J., Garcia Mata, J., Gil Raga, M., Galan Brotons, A., Llombart Cussac, A., Llorca Ferrandiz, C., Martinez Del Prado, P., Olier Garate, C., Rodriguez Sanchez, C., Sanchez Gomez, R., Santisteban Eslava, M., Soberino, J., Vidal Losada Garcia, M., Soto de Prado, D., Torrego Garcia, J., Vicente Rubio, E., Garcia, M., Murias Rosales, A., Granstam Björneklett, H., Narbe, U., Jafri, M., Rea, D., Newby, J., Jones, A., Westwell, S., Ring, A., Alonso, I., Rodríguez, R., Ciruelos, E., Peretz-Yablonski, T., Merot, J.-L., Trask, P., du Toit, Y., Pena-Murillo, C., Revelant, V., and Klingbiel, D.
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- 2021
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18. Orbits, Distance, and Stellar Masses of the Massive Triple Star Sigma Orionis
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Schaefer, G. H., Hummel, C. A., Gies, D. R., Zavala, R. T., Monnier, J. D., Walter, F. M., Turner, N. H., Baron, F., Brummelaar, T. ten, Che, X., Farrington, C. D., Kraus, S., Sturmann, J., and Sturmann, L.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present interferometric observations of the sigma Orionis triple system using the CHARA Array, NPOI, and VLTI. Using these measurements, we spatially resolve the orbit of the close spectroscopic binary (Aa,Ab) for the first time and present a revised orbit for the wide pair (A,B). Combining the visual orbits with previously published radial velocity measurements and new radial velocities measured at CTIO, we derive dynamical masses for the three massive stars in the system of M_Aa = 16.99 +/- 0.20 Msun, M_Ab = 12.81 +/- 0.18 Msun, and M_B = 11.5 +/- 1.2 Msun. The inner and outer orbits in the triple are not coplanar, with a relative inclination of 120-127 deg. The orbital parallax provides a precise distance of 387.5 +/- 1.3 pc to the system. This is a significant improvement over previous estimates of the distance to the young sigma Orionis cluster., Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. 23 pages, 11 figures, 11 tables
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- 2016
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19. Multiplicity of Galactic Cepheids from long-baseline interferometry~III. Sub-percent limits on the relative brightness of a close companion of $\delta$~Cephei
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Gallenne, A., Merand, A., Kervella, P., Monnier, J. D., Schaefer, G. H., Roettenbacher, R. M., Gieren, W., Pietrzynski, G., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., and Anderson, R. I.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We report new CHARA/MIRC interferometric observations of the Cepheid archetype $\delta$ Cep, which aimed at detecting the newly discovered spectroscopic companion. We reached a maximum dynamic range $\Delta H $ = 6.4, 5.8, and 5.2 mag, respectively within the relative distance to the Cepheid $r < 25$ mas, $25 < r < 50$ mas and $50 < r < 100$ mas. Our observations did not show strong evidence of a companion. We have a marginal detection at $3\sigma$ with a flux ratio of 0.21\%, but nothing convincing as we found other possible probable locations. We ruled out the presence of companion with a spectral type earlier than F0V, A1V and B9V, respectively for the previously cited ranges $r$. From our estimated sensitivity limits and the Cepheid light curve, we derived lower-limit magnitudes in the $H$ band for this possible companion to be $H_\mathrm{comp} > 9.15, 8.31$ and 7.77 mag, respectively for $r < 25$ mas, $25 < r < 50$ mas and $50 < r < 100$ mas. We also found that to be consistent with the predicted orbital period, the companion has to be located at a projected separation $< 24$ mas with a spectral type later than a F0V star., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2016
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20. Letter to the Editor regarding the two e-published articles related to young people’s self-reported history of restraint by R. S. Aarvik, E. J. Svendsen and M. L. Agdal
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Chapman, H. R. and Kirby-Turner, N.
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- 2022
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21. Radiation hydrodynamical models of the inner rim in protoplanetary disks
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Flock, M., Fromang, S., Turner, N. J., and Benisty, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Many stars host planets orbiting within a few astronomical units (AU). The occurrence rate and distributions of masses and orbits vary greatly with the host stars mass. These close planets origins are a mystery that motivates investigating protoplanetary disks central regions. A key factor governing the conditions near the star is the silicate sublimation front, which largely determines where the starlight is absorbed, and which is often called the inner rim. We present the first radiation hydrodynamical modeling of the sublimation front in the disks around the young intermediate-mass stars called Herbig Ae stars. The models are axisymmetric, and include starlight heating, silicate grains sublimating and condensing to equilibrium at the local, time-dependent temperature and density, and accretion stresses parametrizing the results of MHD magneto-rotational turbulence models. The results compare well with radiation hydrostatic solutions, and prove to be dynamically stable. Passing the model disks into Monte Carlo radiative transfer calculations, we show that the models satisfy observational constraints on the inner rims location. A small optically-thin halo of hot dust naturally arises between the inner rim and the star. The inner rim has a substantial radial extent, corresponding to several disk scale heights. While the fronts overall position varies with the stellar luminosity, its radial extent depends on the mass accretion rate. A pressure maximum develops near the location of thermal ionization at temperatures about 1000 K. The pressure maximum is capable of halting solid pebbles radial drift and concentrating them in a zone where temperatures are sufficiently high for annealing to form crystalline silicates., Comment: accepted for ApJ
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- 2016
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22. Palbociclib in combination with endocrine therapy versus capecitabine in hormonal receptor-positive, human epidermal growth factor 2-negative, aromatase inhibitor-resistant metastatic breast cancer: a phase III randomised controlled trial—PEARL
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Martin, M., Zielinski, C., Ruiz-Borrego, M., Carrasco, E., Turner, N., Ciruelos, E.M., Muñoz, M., Bermejo, B., Margeli, M., Anton, A., Kahan, Z., Csöszi, T., Casas, M.I., Murillo, L., Morales, S., Alba, E., Gal-Yam, E., Guerrero-Zotano, A., Calvo, L., de la Haba-Rodriguez, J., Ramos, M., Alvarez, I., Garcia-Palomo, A., Huang Bartlett, C., Koehler, M., Caballero, R., Corsaro, M., Huang, X., Garcia-Sáenz, J.A., Chacón, J.I., Swift, C., Thallinger, C., and Gil-Gil, M.
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- 2021
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23. The Ages of A-Stars I: Interferometric Observations and Age Estimates for Stars in the Ursa Major Moving Group
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Jones, Jeremy, White, R. J., Boyajian, T., Schaefer, G., Baines, E., Ireland, M., Patience, J., Brummelaar, T. ten, McAlister, H., Ridgway, S. T., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., and Goldfinger, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We have observed and spatially resolved a set of seven A-type stars in the nearby Ursa Major moving group with the Classic, CLIMB, and PAVO beam combiners on the CHARA Array. At least four of these stars have large rotational velocities ($v \sin i$ $\gtrsim$ 170 $\mathrm{km~s^{-1}}$) and are expected to be oblate. These interferometric measurements, the stars' observed photometric energy distributions, and $v \sin i$ values are used to computationally construct model oblate stars from which stellar properties (inclination, rotational velocity, and the radius and effective temperature as a function of latitude, etc.) are determined. The results are compared with MESA stellar evolution models (Paxton et al. 2011, 2013) to determine masses and ages. The value of this new technique is that it enables the estimation of the fundamental properties of rapidly rotating stars without the need to fully image the star. It can thus be applied to stars with sizes comparable to the interferometric resolution limit as opposed to those that are several times larger than the limit. Under the assumption of coevality, the spread in ages can be used as a test of both the prescription presented here and the MESA evolutionary code for rapidly rotating stars. With our validated technique, we combine these age estimates and determine the age of the moving group to be 414 $\pm$ 23 Myr, which is consistent with, but much more precise than previous estimates., Comment: Accepted by ApJ
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- 2015
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24. First Images of Cool Starspots on a Star Other than the Sun: Interferometric Imaging of $\lambda$ Andromedae
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Parks, J. R., White, R. J., Baron, F., Monnier, J. D., Kloppenborg, B., Henry, G., Scheafer, G., Che, X., Pedretti, E., Thureau, N., Zhao, M., Brummelaar, T. ten, McAlister, H., Ridgway, S. T., Turner, N., Sturmann, J., and Sturmann, L.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Presented are the first interferometric images of cool starspots on the chromospherically active giant $\lambda$ Andromedae. These images represent the first model-independent images of cool starspots on a star other than the Sun to date. The interferometric observations, taken with the Michigan Infra-Red Combiner coupled to the Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy Array, span 26 days from Aug 17$^{th}$, 2008 to Sep 24$^{th}$, 2011. The photometric time series acquired at Fairborn Observatory spanning Sep 20$^{th}$, 2008 to Jan 20$^{th}$, 2011 is also presented. The angular diameter and power law limb-darkening coefficient of this star are 2.759 $\pm$ 0.050 mas and 0.229 $\pm$ 0.111, respectively. Starspot properties are obtained from both modeled and SQUEEZE reconstructed images. The images from 2010 through 2011 show anywhere from one to four starspots. The measured properties of identical starspots identified in both the model and reconstructed images are within two $\sigma$ error bars in 51$\%$ of cases. The cadence in the data for the 2010 and 2011 data sets are sufficient to measure a stellar rotation period based on apparent starspot motion. This leads to estimates of the rotation period (P$_{2010}$ = 60 $\pm$ 13 days, P$_{2011}$ = 54.0 $\pm$ 7.6 days) that are consistent with the photometrically determined period of 54.8 days. In addition, the inclination and position angle of the rotation axis is computed for both the 2010 and 2011 data sets; values ($\bar{\Psi}$ = 21.5$\degree$, $\bar{\emph{i}}$ = 78.0$\degree$) for each are nearly identical between the two years. \end{abstract}
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- 2015
25. The Expanding Fireball of Nova Delphini 2013
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Schaefer, G. H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Gies, D. R., Farrington, C. D., Kloppenborg, B., Chesneau, O., Monnier, J. D., Ridgway, S. T., Scott, N., Tallon-Bosc, I., McAlister, H. A., Boyajian, T., Maestro, V., Mourard, D., Meilland, A., Nardetto, N., Stee, P., Sturmann, J., Vargas, N., Baron, F., Ireland, M., Baines, E. K., Che, X., Jones, J., Richardson, N. D., Roettenbacher, R. M., Sturmann, L., Turner, N. H., Tuthill, P., van Belle, G., von Braun, K., Zavala, R. T., Banerjee, D. P. K., Ashok, N. M., Joshi, V., Becker, J., and Muirhead, P. S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
A classical nova occurs when material accreting onto the surface of a white dwarf in a close binary system ignites in a thermonuclear runaway. Complex structures observed in the ejecta at late stages could result from interactions with the companion during the common envelope phase. Alternatively, the explosion could be intrinsically bipolar, resulting from a localized ignition on the surface of the white dwarf or as a consequence of rotational distortion. Studying the structure of novae during the earliest phases is challenging because of the high spatial resolution needed to measure their small sizes. Here we report near-infrared interferometric measurements of the angular size of Nova Delphini 2013, starting from one day after the explosion and continuing with extensive time coverage during the first 43 days. Changes in the apparent expansion rate can be explained by an explosion model consisting of an optically thick core surrounded by a diffuse envelope. The optical depth of the ejected material changes as it expands. We detect an ellipticity in the light distribution, suggesting a prolate or bipolar structure that develops as early as the second day. Combining the angular expansion rate with radial velocity measurements, we derive a geometric distance to the nova of 4.54 +/- 0.59 kpc from the Sun., Comment: Published in Nature. 32 pages. Final version available at http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v515/n7526/full/nature13834.html
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- 2015
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26. Robust high-contrast companion detection from interferometric observations. The CANDID algorithm and an application to six binary Cepheids
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Gallenne, A., Mérand, A., Kervella, P., Monnier, J. D., Schaefer, G. H., Baron, F., Breitfelder, J., Bouquin, J. B. Le, Roettenbacher, R. M., Gieren, W., Pietrzynski, G., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Ridgway, S., and Kraus, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Long-baseline interferometry is an important technique to spatially resolve binary or multiple systems in close orbits. By combining several telescopes together and spectrally dispersing the light, it is possible to detect faint components around bright stars. Aims. We provide a rigorous and detailed method to search for high-contrast companions around stars, determine the detection level, and estimate the dynamic range from interferometric observations. We developed the code CANDID (Companion Analysis and Non-Detection in Interferometric Data), a set of Python tools that allows us to search systematically for point-source, high-contrast companions and estimate the detection limit. The search pro- cedure is made on a N x N grid of fit, whose minimum needed resolution is estimated a posteriori. It includes a tool to estimate the detection level of the companion in the number of sigmas. The code CANDID also incorporates a robust method to set a 3{\sigma} detection limit on the flux ratio, which is based on an analytical injection of a fake companion at each point in the grid. We used CANDID to search for the companions around the binary Cepheids V1334 Cyg, AX Cir, RT Aur, AW Per, SU Cas, and T Vul. First, we showed that our previous discoveries of the components orbiting V1334 Cyg and AX Cir were detected at > 13 sigmas. The companion around AW Per is detected at more than 15 sigmas with a flux ratio of f = 1.22 +/- 0.30 %. We made a possible detection of the companion orbiting RT Aur with f = 0.22 +/- 0.11 %. It was detected at 3.8{\sigma} using the closure phases only, and so more observations are needed to confirm the detection. We also set the detection limit for possible undetected companions. We found that there is no companion with a spectral type earlier than B7V, A5V, F0V, B9V, A0V, and B9V orbiting V1334 Cyg, AX Cir, RT Aur, AW Per, SU Cas, and T Vul, respectively., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2015
27. Spectral and spatial imaging of the Be+sdO binary phi Persei
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Mourard, D., Monnier, J. D., Meilland, A., Gies, D., Millour, F., Benisty, M., Che, X., Grundstrom, E. D., Ligi, R., Schaefer, G., Baron, F., Kraus, S., Zhao, M., Pedretti, E., Berio, P., Clausse, J. M., Nardetto, N., Perraut, K., Spang, A., Stee, P., Tallon-Bosc, I., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Ridgway, S. T., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., and Farrington, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The rapidly rotating Be star phi Persei was spun up by mass and angular momentum transfer from a now stripped-down, hot subdwarf companion. Here we present the first high angular resolution images of phi Persei made possible by new capabilities in longbaseline interferometry at near-IR and visible wavelengths. We observed phi Persei with the MIRC and VEGA instruments of the CHARA Array. Additional MIRC-only observations were performed to track the orbital motion of the companion, and these were fit together with new and existing radial velocity measurements of both stars to derive the complete orbital elements and distance. The hot subdwarf companion is clearly detected in the near-IR data at each epoch of observation with a flux contribution of 1.5% in the H band, and restricted fits indicate that its flux contribution rises to 3.3% in the visible. A new binary orbital solution is determined by combining the astrometric and radial velocity measurements. The derived stellar masses are 9.6+-0.3Msol and 1.2+-0.2Msol for the Be primary and subdwarf secondary, respectively. The inferred distance (186 +- 3 pc), kinematical properties, and evolutionary state are consistent with membership of phi Persei in the alpha Per cluster. From the cluster age we deduce significant constraints on the initial masses and evolutionary mass transfer processes that transformed the phi Persei binary system. The interferometric data place strong constraints on the Be disk elongation, orientation, and kinematics, and the disk angular momentum vector is coaligned with and has the same sense of rotation as the orbital angular momentum vector. The VEGA visible continuum data indicate an elongated shape for the Be star itself, due to the combined effects of rapid rotation, partial obscuration of the photosphere by the circumstellar disk, and flux from the bright inner disk., Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 1 Annex
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- 2015
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28. Type I fiber decrease and ectopic fat accumulation in skeletal muscle from women with PCOS
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Stener-Victorin, E, primary, Eriksson, G, additional, Mohan Shrestha, M, additional, Rodriguez Paris, V, additional, Lu, H, additional, Banks, J, additional, Samad, M, additional, Perian, C, additional, Jude, B, additional, Engman, V, additional, Boi, R, additional, Nilsson, E, additional, Ling, C, additional, Nyström, J, additional, Wernstedt Asterholm, I, additional, Turner, N, additional, Lanner, J T, additional, and Benrick, A, additional
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- 2023
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29. Rossby wave instability does not require sharp resistivity gradients
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Lyra, W., Turner, N., and McNally, C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Rossby wave instability (RWI) at dead zone boundaries may play an important role in planet formation. Viscous hydrodynamics results suggest RWI is excited only when the viscosity changes over a radial distance less than two density scale heights. However in the disks around Solar-mass T Tauri stars, it is not viscosity but magnetic forces that provide the accretion stress beyond about 10 AU, where surface densities are low enough so stellar X-rays and interstellar cosmic rays can penetrate. Here we aim to explore the conditions for RWI in the smooth transition with increasing distance, from resistive and magnetically-dead to conducting and magnetically-active. We perform 3D unstratified MHD simulations with the Pencil Code, using static resistivity profiles. As a result, we find that in MHD, contrary to viscous models, the RWI is triggered even with a gradual change in resistivity extending from 10 to 40 AU (i.e., spanning 15 scale heights for aspect ratio 0.1). This is because magneto-rotational turbulence sets in abruptly when the resistivity reaches a threshold level. At higher resistivities the longest unstable wavelength is quenched, resulting in a sharp decline of the Maxwell stress towards the star. The sharp gradient in the magnetic forces leads to a localized density bump, that is in turn Rossby wave unstable. We conclude that even weak gradients in the resistivity can lead to sharp transitions in the Maxwell stress. The upshot is that the RWI is more easily activated in the outer disk than previously thought. Rossby vortices at the outer dead zone boundary thus could underlie the dust asymmetries seen in the outer reaches of transition disks., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by A&A. Animation of fig 4 at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XBH5o1q9pZI
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- 2014
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30. Benchmark stars for Gaia: fundamental properties of the Population II star HD140283 from interferometric, spectroscopic and photometric data
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Creevey, O., Thévenin, F., Berio, P., Heiter, U., von Braun, K., Mourard, D., Bigot, L., Boyajian, T. S., Kervella, P., Morel, P., Pichon, B., Chiavassa, A., Nardetto, N., Perraut, K., Meilland, A., Alister, H. A. Mc, Brummelaar, T. A. ten, Sturmann, C. Farrington. J., Sturmann, L., and Turner, N.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We determined the fundamental properties of HD 140283 by obtaining new interferometric and spectroscopic measurements and combining them with photometry from the literature. The interferometric measurements were obtained using the visible interferometer VEGA on the CHARA array and we determined a 1D limb-darkened angular diameter of 0.353 +/- 0.013 milliarcseconds. Using photometry from the literature we derived the bolometric flux with two solutions: a zero-reddening one of Fbol = 3.890 +/- 0.066 1E-8 erg/s/cm2 and a solution with a maximum of Av = 0.1 mag, Fbol= 4.220 +/- 0.067 1E-8 erg/s/cm2. The interferometric Teff is thus 5534 +/- 103 K or 5647 +/- 105 K and its radius is R = 2.21 +/- 0.08 Rsol. Spectroscopic measurements of HD140283 were obtained using HARPS, NARVAL, and UVES and a 1D LTE analysis of H-alpha line wings yields Teff(Halpha) = 5626 +/- 75 K. Using fine-tuned stellar models including diffusion of elements we then determined the mass M and age t of HD140283. Once the metallicity has been fixed, the age of the star depends on M, initial helium abundance Yi and mixing-length parameter alpha, only two of which are independent. We need to adjust alpha to much lower values than the solar one (~2) in order to fit the observations, and if Av = 0.0 mag then 0.5 < alpha < 1. We give an equation to estimate t from M, Yi (alpha) and Av. Establishing a reference alpha = 1.00 and adopting Yi = 0.245 we derive a mass and age of HD140283: M = 0.780 +/- 0.010 Msol and t = 13.7 +/- 0.7 Gyr (Av = 0.0) or M = 0.805 +/- 0.010 Msol and t = 12.2 +/- 0.6 Gyr (Av=0.1 mag). Our stellar models yield an initial metallicity of [Z/X]i = -1.70 and logg = 3.65 +/- 0.03. Asteroseismic observations are critical for overcoming limitations in our results., Comment: final accepted version paper (2 column format)
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- 2014
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31. Improving the surface brightness-color relation for early-type stars using optical interferometry
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Challouf, M., Nardetto, N., Mourard, D., Graczyk, D., Aroui, H., Chesneau, O., Delaa, O., Pietrzyński, G., Gieren, W., Ligi, R., Meilland, A., Perraut, K., Tallon-Bosc, I., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., Vargas, N., and Scott, N.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The aim of this work is to improve the SBC relation for early-type stars in the $-1 \leq V-K \leq 0$ color domain, using optical interferometry. Observations of eight B- and A-type stars were secured with the VEGA/CHARA instrument in the visible. The derived uniform disk angular diameters were converted into limb darkened angular diameters and included in a larger sample of 24 stars, already observed by interferometry, in order to derive a revised empirical relation for O, B, A spectral type stars with a V-K color index ranging from -1 to 0. We also took the opportunity to check the consistency of the SBC relation up to $V-K \simeq 4$ using 100 additional measurements. We determined the uniform disk angular diameter for the eight following stars: $\gamma$ Ori, $\zeta$ Per, $8$ Cyg, $\iota$ Her, $\lambda$ Aql, $\zeta$ Peg, $\gamma$ Lyr, and $\delta$ Cyg with V-K color ranging from -0.70 to 0.02 and typical precision of about $1.5\%$. Using our total sample of 132 stars with $V-K$ colors index ranging from about $-1$ to $4$, we provide a revised SBC relation. For late-type stars ($0 \leq V-K \leq 4$), the results are consistent with previous studies. For early-type stars ($-1 \leq V-K \leq 0$), our new VEGA/CHARA measurements combined with a careful selection of the stars (rejecting stars with environment or stars with a strong variability), allows us to reach an unprecedented precision of about 0.16 magnitude or $\simeq 7\%$ in terms of angular diameter., Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2014
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32. Young Stellar Object Variability (YSOVAR): Long Timescale Variations in the Mid-Infrared
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Rebull, L. M., Cody, A. M., Covey, K. R., Guenther, H. M., Hillenbrand, L. A., Plavchan, P., Poppenhaeger, K., Stauffer, J. R., Wolk, S. J., Gutermuth, R., Morales-Calderon, M., Song, I., Barrado, D., Bayo, A., James, D., Hora, J. L., Vrba, F. J., de Oliveira, C. Alves, Bouvier, J., Carey, S. J., Carpenter, J. M., Favata, F., Flaherty, K., Forbrich, J., Hernandez, J., McCaughrean, M. J., Megeath, S. T., Micela, G., Smith, H. A., Terebey, S., Turner, N., Allen, L., Ardila, D., Bouy, H., and Guieu, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The YSOVAR (Young Stellar Object VARiability) Spitzer Space Telescope observing program obtained the first extensive mid-infrared (3.6 & 4.5 um) time-series photometry of the Orion Nebula Cluster plus smaller footprints in eleven other star-forming cores (AFGL490, NGC1333, MonR2, GGD 12-15, NGC2264, L1688, Serpens Main, Serpens South, IRAS 20050+2720, IC1396A, and Ceph C). There are ~29,000 unique objects with light curves in either or both IRAC channels in the YSOVAR data set. We present the data collection and reduction for the Spitzer and ancillary data, and define the "standard sample" on which we calculate statistics, consisting of fast cadence data, with epochs about twice per day for ~40d. We also define a "standard sample of members", consisting of all the IR-selected members and X-ray selected members. We characterize the standard sample in terms of other properties, such as spectral energy distribution shape. We use three mechanisms to identify variables in the fast cadence data--the Stetson index, a chi^2 fit to a flat light curve, and significant periodicity. We also identified variables on the longest timescales possible of ~6 years, by comparing measurements taken early in the Spitzer mission with the mean from our YSOVAR campaign. The fraction of members in each cluster that are variable on these longest timescales is a function of the ratio of Class I/total members in each cluster, such that clusters with a higher fraction of Class I objects also have a higher fraction of long-term variables. For objects with a YSOVAR-determined period and a [3.6]-[8] color, we find that a star with a longer period is more likely than those with shorter periods to have an IR excess. We do not find any evidence for variability that causes [3.6]-[4.5] excesses to appear or vanish within our data; out of members and field objects combined, at most 0.02% may have transient IR excesses., Comment: Accepted to AJ; 38 figures, 93 pages
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- 2014
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33. Effect of OH depletion on measurements of the mass-to-flux ratio in molecular cloud cores
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Tassis, K., Willacy, K., Yorke, H. W., and Turner, N. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The ratio of mass and magnetic flux determines the relative importance of magnetic and gravitational forces in the evolution of molecular clouds and their cores. Its measurement is thus central in discriminating between different theories of core formation and evolution. Here we discuss the effect of chemical depletion on measurements of the mass-to-flux ratio using the same molecule (OH) both for Zeeman measurements of the magnetic field and the determination of the mass of the region. The uncertainties entering through the OH abundance in determining separately the magnetic field and the mass of a region have been recognized in the literature. It has been proposed however that, when comparing two regions of the same cloud, the abundance will in both cases be the same. We show that this assumption is invalid. We demonstrate that when comparing regions with different densities, the effect of OH depletion in measuring changes of the mass-to-flux ratio between different parts of the same cloud can even reverse the direction of the underlying trends (for example, the mass-to-flux ratio may appear to decrease as we move to higher density regions). The systematic errors enter primarily through the inadequate estimation of the mass of the region., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2014
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34. CHARA/MIRC observations of two M supergiants in Perseus OB1: temperature, Bayesian modeling, and compressed sensing imaging
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Baron, F., Monnier, J. D., Kiss, L. L., Neilson, H. R., Zhao, M., Anderson, M., Aarnio, A., Pedretti, E., Thureau, N., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, Ridgway, S. T., McAlister, H. A., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., and Turner, N.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Two red supergiants of the Per OB1 association, RS Per and T Per, have been observed in H band using the MIRC instrument at the CHARA array. The data show clear evidence of departure from circular symmetry. We present here new techniques specially developed to analyze such cases, based on state-of-the-art statistical frameworks. The stellar surfaces are first modeled as limb-darkened discs based on SATLAS models that fit both MIRC interferometric data and publicly available spectrophotometric data. Bayesian model selection is then used to determine the most probable number of spots. The effective surface temperatures are also determined and give further support to the recently derived hotter temperature scales of red su- pergiants. The stellar surfaces are reconstructed by our model-independent imaging code SQUEEZE, making use of its novel regularizer based on Compressed Sensing theory. We find excellent agreement between the model-selection results and the reconstructions. Our results provide evidence for the presence of near-infrared spots representing about 3-5% of the stellar flux.
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- 2014
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35. Transport and Accretion in Planet-Forming Disks
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Turner, N. J., Fromang, S., Gammie, C., Klahr, H., Lesur, G., Wardle, M., and Bai, X. -N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Planets appear to form in environments shaped by the gas flowing through protostellar disks to the central young stars. The flows in turn are governed by orbital angular momentum transfer. In this chapter we summarize current understanding of the transfer processes best able to account for the flows, including magneto-rotational turbulence, magnetically-launched winds, self-gravitational instability and vortices driven by hydrodynamical instabilities. For each in turn we outline the major achievements of the past few years and the outstanding questions. We underscore the requirements for operation, especially ionization for the magnetic processes and heating and cooling for the others. We describe the distribution and strength of the resulting flows and compare with the long-used phenomenological $\alpha$-picture, highlighting issues where the fuller physical picture yields substantially different answers. We also discuss the links between magnetized turbulence and magnetically-launched outflows, and between magnetized turbulence and hydrodynamical vortices. We end with a summary of the status of efforts to detect specific signatures of the flows., Comment: Refereed review chapter accepted for publication in Protostars and Planets VI, University of Arizona Press (2014), eds. H. Beuther, R. Klessen, C. Dullemond & Th. Henning. 24 pages, 7 figures. The talk presented at the Protostars and Planets VI conference is available at http://youtube.com/watch?v=tEgw0PXwkGE
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- 2014
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36. Basismaßnahmen und erweiterte Maßnahmen zur Wiederbelebung von Kindern: COVID-19-Leitlinien des European Resuscitation Council
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Van de Voorde, P., Biarent, D., Bingham, B., Brissaud, O., De Lucas, N., Djakow, J., Hoffmann, F., Lauritsen, T., Martinez, A. M., Turner, N. M., Maconochie, I., and Monsieurs, K. G.
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- 2020
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37. The fundamental parameters of the roAp star 10 Aql
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Perraut, K., Borgniet, S., Cunha, M., Bigot, L., Brandão, I., Mourard, D., Nardetto, N., Chesneau, O., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., and Goldfinger, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Due to the strong magnetic field and related abnormal surface layers existing in rapidly oscillating Ap stars, systematic errors are likely to be present when determining their effective temperatures, which potentially compromises asteroseismic studies of these pulsators. Using long-baseline interferometry, our goal is to determine accurate angular diameters of a number of roAp targets to provide a temperature calibration for these stars. We obtained interferometric observations of 10 Aql with the visible spectrograph VEGA at the CHARA array. We determined a limb-darkened angular diameter of 0.275+/-0.009 mas and deduced a linear radius of 2.32+/-0.09 R_sun. We estimated the star's bolometric flux and used it, in combination with its parallax and angular diameter, to determine the star's luminosity and effective temperature. For two data sets of bolometric flux we derived an effective temperature of 7800+/-170 K and a luminosity of 18+/-1 L_sun or of 8000+/-210 K and 19+/-2 L_sun. We used these fundamental parameters together with the large frequency separation to constrain the mass and the age of 10 Aql, using the CESAM stellar evolution code. Assuming a solar chemical composition and ignoring all kinds of diffusion and settling of elements, we obtained a mass of 1.92 M_sun and an age of 780 Gy or a mass of 1.95 M_sun and an age of 740 Gy, depending on the considered bolometric flux. For the first time, we managed to determine an accurate angular diameter for a star smaller than 0.3 mas and to derive its fundamental parameters. In particular, by only combining our interferometric data and the bolometric flux, we derived an effective temperature that can be compared to those derived from atmosphere models. Such fundamental parameters can help for testing the mechanism responsible for the excitation of the oscillations observed in the magnetic pulsating stars.
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- 2013
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38. Herbig Stars' Near-Infrared Excess: An Origin in the Protostellar Disk's Magnetically-Supported Atmosphere
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Turner, N. J., Benisty, M., Dullemond, C. P., and Hirose, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Young stars with masses 2-8 Suns, called the Herbig Ae and Be stars, often show a near-infrared excess too large to explain with a hydrostatically-supported circumstellar disk of gas and dust. At the same time the accretion flow carrying the circumstellar gas to the star is thought to be driven by magneto-rotational turbulence, which according to numerical MHD modeling yields an extended low-density atmosphere supported by the magnetic fields. We demonstrate that the base of the atmosphere can be optically-thick to the starlight and that the parts lying near 1 AU are tall enough to double the fraction of the stellar luminosity reprocessed into the near-infrared. We generate synthetic spectral energy distributions (SEDs) using Monte Carlo radiative transfer calculations with opacities for sub-micron silicate and carbonaceous grains. The synthetic SEDs closely follow the median Herbig SED constructed recently by Mulders and Dominik, and in particular match the large near-infrared flux, provided the grains have a mass fraction close to interstellar near the disk's inner rim., Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures. Grain settling discussed in new sec. 8.3. In press at ApJ
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- 2013
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39. A near-infrared interferometric survey of debris disc stars. III. First statistics based on 42 stars observed with CHARA/FLUOR
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Absil, O., Defrère, D., Foresto, V. Coudé du, Di Folco, E., Mérand, A., Augereau, J. -C., Ertel, S., Hanot, C., Kervella, P., Mollier, B., Scott, N., Che, X., Monnier, J. D., Thureau, N., Tuthill, P. G., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, McAlister, H. A., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., and Turner, N.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) Dust is expected to be ubiquitous in extrasolar planetary systems owing to the dynamical activity of minor bodies. Inner dust populations are, however, still poorly known because of the high contrast and small angular separation with respect to their host star. We aim to determine the level of near-infrared exozodiacal dust emission around a sample of 42 nearby main sequence stars with spectral types ranging from A to K and to investigate its correlation with various stellar parameters and with the presence of cold dust belts. We use high-precision K-band visibilities obtained with the FLUOR interferometer on the shortest baseline of the CHARA array. The calibrated visibilities are compared with the expected visibility of the stellar photosphere to assess whether there is an additional, fully resolved circumstellar emission. Near-infrared circumstellar emission amounting to about 1% of the stellar flux is detected around 13 of our 42 target stars. Follow-up observations showed that one of them (eps Cep) is associated with a stellar companion, while another one was detected around what turned out to be a giant star (kap CrB). The remaining 11 excesses found around single main sequence stars are most probably associated with hot circumstellar dust, yielding an overall occurrence rate of 28+8-6% for our (biased) sample. We show that the occurrence rate of bright exozodiacal discs correlates with spectral type, K-band excesses being more frequent around A-type stars. It also correlates with the presence of detectable far-infrared excess emission in the case of solar-type stars. This study provides new insight into the phenomenon of bright exozodiacal discs, showing that hot dust populations are probably linked to outer dust reservoirs in the case of solar-type stars. For A-type stars, no clear conclusion can be made regarding the origin of the detected near-infrared excesses., Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures
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- 2013
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40. Magnetic Coupling in the Disks Around Young Gas Giant Planets
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Turner, N. J., Lee, M. H., and Sano, T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We examine the conditions under which the disks of gas and dust orbiting young gas giant planets are sufficiently conducting to experience turbulence driven by the magneto-rotational instability. By modeling the ionization and conductivity in the disk around proto-Jupiter, we find that turbulence is possible if the X-rays emitted near the Sun reach the planet's vicinity and either (1) the gas surface densities are in the range of the minimum-mass models constructed by augmenting Jupiter's satellites to Solar composition, while dust is depleted from the disk atmosphere, or (2) the surface densities are much less, and in the range of gas-starved models fed with material from the Solar nebula, but not so low that ambipolar diffusion decouples the neutral gas from the plasma. The results lend support to both minimum-mass and gas-starved models of the protojovian disk: (1) The dusty minimum-mass models have internal conductivities low enough to prevent angular momentum transfer by magnetic forces, as required for the material to remain in place while the satellites form. (2) The gas-starved models have magnetically-active surface layers and a decoupled interior "dead zone". Similar active layers in the Solar nebula yield accretion stresses in the range assumed in constructing the circumjovian gas-starved models. Our results also point to aspects of both classes of models that can be further developed. Non-turbulent minimum-mass models will lose dust from their atmospheres by settling, enabling gas to accrete through a thin surface layer. For the gas-starved models it is crucial to learn whether enough stellar X-ray and ultraviolet photons reach the circumjovian disk. Additionally the stress-to-pressure ratio ought to increase with distance from the planet, likely leading to episodic accretion outbursts., Comment: 35 pages, 8 figures. Chemical network description expanded in sec. 4.1. Turbulent mixing discussion reorganized in secs. 6.3-6.4. Accepted to ApJ
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- 2013
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41. Enhanced Halpha activity at periastron in the young and massive spectroscopic binary HD200775
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Benisty, M., Perraut, K., Mourard, D., Stee, P., Lima, G. H. R. A., Bouquin, J. B. Le, Fernandes, M. Borges, Chesneau, O., Nardetto, N., Tallon-Bosc, I., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. Ten, Ridgway, S., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., and Goldfinger, P. J
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Young close binaries clear central cavities in their surrounding circumbinary disk from which the stars can still accrete material. This process takes place within the very first astronomical units, and is still not well constrained as the observational evidence has been gathered, until now, only by means of spectroscopy. The young object HD200775 (MWC361) is a massive spectroscopic binary (separation of ~15.9mas, ~5.0~AU), with uncertain classification (early/late Be), that shows a strong and variable Halpha emission. We aim to study the mechanisms that produce the Halpha line at the AU-scale. Combining the radial velocity measurements and astrometric data available in the literature, we determined new orbital parameters. With the VEGA instrument on the CHARA array, we spatially and spectrally resolved the Halpha emission of HD200775, at low and medium spectral resolutions (R~1600 and 5000) over a full orbital period (~3.6 years). We observe that the Halpha equivalent width varies with the orbital phase, and increases close to periastron, as expected from theoretical models that predict an increase of the mass transfer from the circumbinary disk to the primary disk. In addition, using spectral visibilities and differential phases, we find marginal variations of the typical extent of the Halpha emission (at 1 to 2-sigma level) and location (at 1 to 5-sigma level). The spatial extent of the Halpha emission, as probed by a Gaussian FWHM, is minimum at the ascending node (0.67+/-0.20 mas, i.e., 0.22+/-0.06 AU), and more than doubles at periastron. In addition, the Gaussian photocenter is slightly displaced in the direction opposite to the secondary, ruling out the scenario in which all or most of the Halpha emission is due to accretion onto the secondary. These findings, together with the wide Halpha line profile, may be due to a non-spherical wind enhanced at periastron., Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2013
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42. Interferometric radii of bright Kepler stars with the CHARA Array: {\theta} Cygni and 16 Cygni A and B
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White, T. R., Huber, D., Maestro, V., Bedding, T. R., Ireland, M. J., Baron, F., Boyajian, T. S., Che, X., Monnier, J. D., Pope, B. J. S., Roettenbacher, R. M., Stello, D., Tuthill, P. G., Farrington, C. D., Goldfinger, P. J., McAlister, H. A., Schaefer, G. H., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, and Turner, N. H.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of long-baseline optical interferometry observations using the Precision Astronomical Visual Observations (PAVO) beam combiner at the Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy (CHARA) Array to measure the angular sizes of three bright Kepler stars: {\theta} Cygni, and both components of the binary system 16 Cygni. Supporting infrared observations were made with the Michigan Infrared Combiner (MIRC) and Classic beam combiner, also at the CHARA Array. We find limb-darkened angular diameters of 0.753+/-0.009 mas for {\theta} Cyg, 0.539+/-0.007 mas for 16 Cyg A and 0.490+/-0.006 mas for 16 Cyg B. The Kepler Mission has observed these stars with outstanding photometric precision, revealing the presence of solar-like oscillations. Due to the brightness of these stars the oscillations have exceptional signal-to-noise, allowing for detailed study through asteroseismology, and are well constrained by other observations. We have combined our interferometric diameters with Hipparcos parallaxes, spectrophotometric bolometric fluxes and the asteroseismic large frequency separation to measure linear radii ({\theta} Cyg: 1.48+/-0.02 Rsun, 16 Cyg A: 1.22+/-0.02 Rsun, 16 Cyg B: 1.12+/-0.02 Rsun), effective temperatures ({\theta} Cyg: 6749+/-44 K, 16 Cyg A: 5839+/-42 K, 16 Cyg B: 5809+/-39 K), and masses ({\theta} Cyg: 1.37+/-0.04 Msun, 16 Cyg A: 1.07+/-0.05 Msun, 16 Cyg B: 1.05+/-0.04 Msun) for each star with very little model dependence. The measurements presented here will provide strong constraints for future stellar modelling efforts., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, and 5 tables, accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2013
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43. The H-band Emitting Region of the Luminous Blue Variable P Cygni: Spectrophotometry and Interferometry of the Wind
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Richardson, N. D., Schaefer, G. H., Gies, D. R., Chesneau, O., Monnier, J. D., Baron, F., Che, X., Parks, J. R., Matson, R. A., Touhami, Y., Clemens, D. P., Aldoretta, E. J., Morrison, N. D., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, McAlister, H. A., Kraus, S., Ridgway, S. T., Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Taylor, B., Turner, N. H., Farrington, C. D., and Goldfinger, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first high angular resolution observations in the nearinfrared H-band (1.6 microns) of the Luminous Blue Variable star P Cygni. We obtained six-telescope interferometric observations with the CHARA Array and the MIRC beam combiner. These show that the spatial flux distribution is larger than expected for the stellar photosphere. A two component model for the star (uniform disk) plus a halo (two-dimensional Gaussian) yields an excellent fit of the observations, and we suggest that the halo corresponds to flux emitted from the base of the stellar wind. This wind component contributes about 45% of the H-band flux and has an angular FWHM = 0.96 mas, compared to the predicted stellar diameter of 0.41 mas. We show several images reconstructed from the interferometric visibilities and closure phases, and they indicate a generally spherical geometry for the wind. We also obtained near-infrared spectrophotometry of P Cygni from which we derive the flux excess compared to a purely photospheric spectral energy distribution. The H-band flux excess matches that from the wind flux fraction derived from the two component fits to the interferometry. We find evidence of significant near-infrared flux variability over the period from 2006 to 2010 that appears similar to the variations in the H-alpha emission flux from the wind. Future interferometric observations may be capable of recording the spatial variations associated with temporal changes in the wind structure., Comment: 34 pages, 5 tables, 8 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2013
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44. A CHARA Array Survey of Circumstellar Disks around Nearby Be-type Stars
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Touhami, Y., Gies, D. R., Schaefer, G. H., McAlister, H. A., Ridgway, S. T., Richardson, N. D., Matson, R., Grundstrom, E. D., Brummelaar, T. A. ten, Goldfinger, P. J., Sturmann, L., Sturmann, J., Turner, N. H., and Farrington, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a high angular resolution survey of circumstellar disks around 24 northern sky Be stars. The K-band continuum survey was made using the CHARA Array long baseline interferometer (baselines of 30 to 331 m). The interferometric visibilities were corrected for the flux contribution of stellar companions in those cases where the Be star is a member of a known binary or multiple system. For those targets with good uv coverage, we used a four parameter Gaussian elliptical disk model to fit the visibilities and to determine the axial ratio, position angle, K-band photospheric flux contribution, and angular diameter of the disk major axis. For the other targets with relatively limited uv coverage, we constrained the axial ratio, inclination angle, and or disk position angle where necessary in order to resolve the degeneracy between possible model solutions. We also made fits of the ultraviolet and infrared spectral energy distributions to estimate the stellar angular diameter and infrared flux excess of each target. The mean ratio of the disk diameter (measured in K-band emission) to stellar diameter (from SED modeling) is 4.4 among the 14 cases where we reliably resolved the disk emission, a value which is generally lower than the disk size ratio measured in the higher opacity Halpha emission line. We estimated the equatorial rotational velocity from the projected rotational velocity and disk inclination for 12 stars, and most of these stars rotate close to or at the critical rotational velocity.
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- 2013
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45. Multiplicity of Galactic Cepheids from long-baseline interferometry I. CHARA/MIRC detection of the companion of V1334 Cygni
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Gallenne, A., Monnier, J. D., Mérand, A., Kervella, P., Kraus, S., Schaefer, G. H., Gieren, W., Pietrzynski, G., Szabados, L., Che, X., Baron, F., Pedretti, E., McAlister, H., Brummelaar, T. ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., and Vargas, N.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We aim at determining the masses of Cepheids in binary systems, as well as their geometric distances and the flux contribution of the companions. The combination of interferometry with spectroscopy will offer a unique and independent estimate of the Cepheid masses. Using long-baseline interferometry at visible and infrared wavelengths, it is possible to spatially resolve binary systems containing a Cepheid down to milliarcsecond separations. Based on the resulting visual orbit and radial velocities, we can then derive the fundamental parameters of these systems, particularly the masses of the components and the geometric distance. We therefore performed interferometric observations of the first-overtone mode Cepheid V1334 Cyg with the CHARA/MIRC combiner. We report the first detection of a Cepheid companion using long-baseline interferometry. We detect the signature of a companion orbiting V1334 Cyg at two epochs. We measure a flux ratio between the companion and the Cepheid f = 3.10+/-0.08%, giving an apparent magnitude mH = 8.47+/-0.15mag. The combination of interferometric and spectroscopic data have enabled the unique determination of the orbital elements: P = 1938.6+/-1.2 days, Tp = 2 443 616.1+/-7.3, a = 8.54+/-0.51mas, i = 124.7+/-1.8{\deg}, e = 0.190+/-0.013, {\omega} = 228.7+/-1.6{\deg}, and {\Omega} = 206.3+/-9.4{\deg}. We derive a minimal distance d ~ 691 pc, a minimum mass for both stars of 3.6 Msol, with a spectral type earlier than B5.5V for the companion star. Our measured flux ratio suggests that radial velocity detection of the companion using spectroscopy is within reach, and would provide an orbital parallax and model-free masses., Comment: Published in A&A
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- 2013
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46. Exploring the circumstellar environment of the young eruptive star V2492 Cyg
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Kóspál, Á., Ábrahám, P., Acosta-Pulido, J. A., Morales, M. J. Arévalo, Balog, Z., Carnerero, M. I., Szegedi-Elek, E., Farkas, A., Henning, Th., Kelemen, J., Kovács, T., Kun, M., Marton, G., Mészáros, Sz., Moór, A., Pál, A., Sárneczky, K., Szakáts, R., Szalai, N., Szing, A., Tóth, I., Turner, N. J., and Vida, K.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. V2492 Cyg is a young eruptive star that went into outburst in 2010. The near-infrared color changes observed since the outburst peak suggest that the source belongs to a newly defined sub-class of young eruptive stars, where time-dependent accretion and variable line-of-sight extinction play a combined role in the flux changes. Aims. In order to learn about the origin of the light variations and to explore the circumstellar and interstellar environment of V2492 Cyg, we monitored the source at ten different wavelengths, between 0.55 \mu m and 2.2 \mu m from the ground and between 3.6 \mu m and 160 \mu m from space. Methods. We analyze the light curves and study the color-color diagrams via comparison with the standard reddening path. We examine the structure of the molecular cloud hosting V2492 Cyg by computing temperature and optical depth maps from the far-infrared data. Results. We find that the shapes of the light curves at different wavelengths are strictly self-similar and that the observed variability is related to a single physical process, most likely variable extinction. We suggest that the central source is episodically occulted by a dense dust cloud in the inner disk, and, based on the invariability of the far-infrared fluxes, we propose that it is a long-lived rather than a transient structure. In some respects, V2492 Cyg can be regarded as a young, embedded analog of UX Orionis-type stars. Conclusions. The example of V2492 Cyg demonstrates that the light variations of young eruptive stars are not exclusively related to changing accretion. The variability provided information on an azimuthally asymmetric structural element in the inner disk. Such an asymmetric density distribution in the terrestrial zone may also have consequences for the initial conditions of planet formation., Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 2 online tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2013
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47. Basic Life Support en Advanced Life Support bij kinderen
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Kieboom, J. K. W., Turner, N. M., Derksen-Lubsen, G., editor, Moll, H.A., editor, Oudesluys-Murphy, A.M., editor, Sprij, A.J., editor, Bolt-Wieringa, J.W., editor, van den Elzen, A.P.M., editor, Leeuwenburgh-Pronk, W.G., editor, Ropers, F.G., editor, and Verhoeven, J.J., editor
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- 2018
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48. Bilingual Instruction at Tertiary Level in South Africa: What Are the Challenges?
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Wildsmith-Cromarty, R. and Turner, N.
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The University of KwaZulu-Natal has a bilingual language policy (2006) where students may receive instruction in isiZulu as well as in English. An online survey was carried out for all academic and support staff to gauge their linguistic capacity in isiZulu. Staff profiles were created in relation to their respective Colleges, Schools and Disciplines, and included age, language group, language use, language of schooling and years of experience in the Higher Education sector. It also included modules currently taught by staff through the medium of isiZulu; communicative language proficiency; instructional language proficiency; perceptions of own capacity to teach in isiZulu and perceptions of the time required to develop adequate proficiency to teach in isiZulu. Respondents were also asked to translate a complex sentence into isiZulu, the responses to which were later analysed into three categories: fluent, semi-fluent and not fluent for purposes of comparison with staff perceptions of their own proficiency. Findings revealed a serious gap between current staff capacity to teach in isiZulu, and the implementation of the policy within the projected timeframes. This study also reveals the complexities of teaching when discipline experts and students do not share a common language.
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- 2018
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49. Elacestrant in ESR1-mutant, endocrine-responsive metastatic breast cancer: should health authorities consider post hoc data to inform priority access?
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Valenza, C., Trapani, D., Bidard, F.-C., Gligorov, J., Cortés, J., Turner, N., Dalenc, F., Penault-Llorca, F., Freyer, G., Arnedos, M., Villanueva, C., Loibl, S., Pistilli, B., and Curigliano, G.
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- 2024
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50. Early ctDNA dynamics as a surrogate for progression-free survival in advanced breast cancer in the BEECH trial
- Author
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Hrebien, S., Citi, V., Garcia-Murillas, I., Cutts, R., Fenwick, K., Kozarewa, I., McEwen, R., Ratnayake, J., Maudsley, R., Carr, T.H., de Bruin, E.C., Schiavon, G., Oliveira, M., and Turner, N.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
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