26,464 results on '"Urquhart, A"'
Search Results
2. G. F. Stout and the Theory of Descriptions
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Urquhart, Alasdair
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- 2023
3. Russell’s Idealist Phase
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Urquhart, Alasdair
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- 2023
4. The Roots of Modern Logic
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Urquhart, Alasdair
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- 2023
5. The Couturat-Russell Correspondence
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Urquhart, Alasdair
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- 2023
6. The Geography of Modern Africa by William A. Hance (review)
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Isaac, Erich and Urquhart, Alvin W.
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- 2023
7. PSR J1947-1120: A New Huntsman Millisecond Pulsar Binary
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Strader, Jay, Ray, Paul S., Urquhart, Ryan, Swihart, Samuel J., Chomiuk, Laura, Aydi, Elias, Bellm, Eric C., Dage, Kristen C., DeCesar, Megan E., Deneva, Julia S., McLaughlin, Maura A., Molina, Isabella, Panurach, Teresa, and Sokolovsky, Kirill V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of PSR J1947-1120, a new huntsman millisecond pulsar with a red giant companion star in a 10.3 d orbit. This pulsar was found via optical, X-ray, and radio follow-up of the previously unassociated gamma-ray source 4FGL J1947.6-1121. PSR J1947-1120 is the second confirmed pulsar in the huntsman class and establishes this as a bona fide subclass of millisecond pulsar. We use MESA models to show that huntsman pulsars can be naturally explained as neutron star binaries whose secondaries are currently in the "red bump" region of the red giant branch, temporarily underfilling their Roche lobes and hence halting mass transfer. Huntsman pulsars offer a new view of the formation of typical millisecond pulsars, allowing novel constraints on the efficiency of mass transfer and recycling at an intermediate stage in the process., Comment: ApJ in press
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- 2025
8. Transitioning Adolescents to Adult HIV Care in the United States: Implementation lessons from the 'iTransition' Intervention Pilot Trial
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Tanner, Amanda E, Mertus, Sulianie, Eldin Jibriel, Mohammed Sheikh, Urquhart, Rakira, Phillips, Keenan, Dowshen, Nadia, Dutta, Srija, Goldstein, Madeleine H, Lee, Susan, Knowles, Kayla, Darien, Kaja, Rulison, Kelly L, Madden, Julia, and Hussen, Sophia A
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- 2024
9. Detecting the Black Hole Candidate Population in M51's Young Massive Star Clusters: Constraints on Accreting Intermediate Mass Black Holes
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Dage, Kristen C., Tremou, Evangelia, Otahola, Bolivia Cuevas, Koch, Eric W., Oh, Kwangmin, Plotkin, Richard M., Tang, Vivian L., Aldhalemi, Muhammad Ridha, Bustani, Zainab, Fawaz, Mariam Ismail, Harff, Hans J., Khalyleh, Amna, McBride, Timothy, Mason, Jesse, Preston, Anthony, Rinehart, Cortney, Vinson, Ethan, Anderson, Gemma, Cackett, Edward M., Fu, Shih Ching, Kamann, Sebastian, Panurach, Teresa, Pechetti, Renuka, Saikia, Payaswini, Sett, Susmita, Urquhart, Ryan, and Usher, Christopher
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Intermediate mass black holes (10^2 < M_BH< 10^5 Msun) are an open question in our understanding of black hole evolution and growth. They have long been linked to dense star cluster environments thanks to cluster dynamics, but there are a limited number of secure detections. We leverage existing X-ray observations from Chandra X-ray Observatory and optical catalogs from Hubble Space Telescope with new radio observations from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array to search for any evidence of accreting black holes in young massive clusters in the nearby galaxy M51. We find that of 43 bright ($L_X > 10^{38}$ erg/s) X-ray point sources in M51, 24 had probable matches to objects including possible associated star clusters in the HST Legacy Extragalactic UV Survey catalog, seven of which were classified as contaminants (background galaxies or foreground stars). We explore the optical properties of the remaining 17 sources, including cluster age and mass estimates, and search for radio counterparts in the 8-12 GHz band. The lack of radio counterparts to X-ray sources we know to be associated with young massive clusters in M51 suggests that we do not significantly detect hard-state IMBHs ~ 10^4 Msun or above. However, more sensitive radio facilities like the Square Kilometre Array and next generation Very Large Array may be able to provide evidence for IMBHs with masses down to ~ 10^3 Msun., Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2024
10. Time evolution of o-H$_2$D$^+$, N$_2$D$^+$, and N$_2$H$^+$ during the high-mass star formation process
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Sabatini, G., Bovino, S., Redaelli, E., Wyrowski, F., Urquhart, J. S., Giannetti, A., Brand, J., and Menten, K. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Deuterium fractionation is a well-established evolutionary tracer in low-mass star formation, but its applicability to the high-mass regime remains an open question. The abundances and ratios of deuterated species have often been proposed as reliable evolutionary indicators for different stages of the high-mass star formation. We investigate the role of N$_2$H$^+$ and key deuterated molecules as tracers of the different stages of the high-mass star formation, and test whether their abundance ratios can serve as reliable evolutionary indicators. We conducted APEX observations of o-H$_2$D$^+$ (1$_{10}$-1$_{11}$), N$_2$H$^+$ (4-3), and N$_2$d$^+$ (3-2) in 40 high-mass clumps at different evolutionary stages, selected from the ATLASGAL survey. Molecular column densities ($N$) and abundances ($X$), were derived through spectral line modelling, both under local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and non-LTE conditions. The $N$(o-H$_2$D$^+$) show the smallest deviation from LTE results when derived under non-LTE assumptions. In contrast, N$_2$D$^+$ shows the largest discrepancy between the $N$ derived from LTE and non-LTE. In all the cases discussed, we found that $X$(o-H$_2$D$^+$) decreases more significantly with time than in the case of $X$(N$_2$D$^+$); whereas $X$(N$_2$H$^+$) increases slightly. Therefore, the validity of the recently proposed $X$(o-H$_2$D$^+$)/$X$(N$_2$D$^+$) ratio as a reliable evolutionary indicator was not observed for this sample. While the deuteration fraction derived from N$_2$D$^+$ and N$_2$H$^+$ clearly decreases with clump evolution, the interpretation of this trend is complex, given the different distribution of the two tracers. Our results suggest that a careful consideration of the observational biases and beam-dilution effects are crucial for an accurate interpretation of the evolution of the deuteration process during the high-mass star formation process., Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
11. Do Neutron Star Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources Masquerade as Intermediate Mass Black Holes in Radio and X-Ray?
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Panurach, Teresa, Dage, Kristen C., Urquhart, Ryan, Plotkin, Richard M., Paul, Jeremiah D., Bahramian, Arash, Brumback, McKinley C., Galvin, Timothy J., Molina, Isabella, Miller-Jones, James C. A., and Saikia, Payaswini
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) were once largely believed to be powered by super-Eddington accretion onto stellar-mass black holes, although in some rare cases, ULXs also serve as potential candidates for (sub-Eddington) intermediate mass black holes. However, a total of eight ULXs have now been confirmed to be powered by neutron stars, thanks to observed pulsations, and may act as contaminants for radio/X-ray selection of intermediate mass black holes. Here we present the first comprehensive radio study of seven known neutron star ULXs using new and archival data from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array and the Australia Telescope Compact Array, combined with the literature. Across this sample there is only one confident radio detection, from the Galactic neutron star ULX Swift J0243.6+6124. The other six objects in our sample are extragalactic, and only one has coincident radio emission, which we conclude is most likely contamination from a background HII region. We conclude that with current facilities, neutron star ULXs do not produce significant enough radio emission to cause them to be misidentified as radio/X-ray selected intermediate mass black hole candidates. Thus, if background star formation has been properly considered, the current study indicates that a ULX with a compact radio counterpart is not likely to be a neutron star., Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures, accepted to ApJ
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- 2024
12. A 34-Year Timing Solution of the Redback Millisecond Pulsar Terzan 5A
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Rosenthal, Alexandra C., Ransom, Scott M., Corcoran, Kyle A., DeCesar, Megan E., Freire, Paolo C. C., Hessels, Jason W. T., Keith, Michael J., Lynch, Ryan S., Lyne, Andrew, Nice, David J., Stairs, Ingrid H., Stappers, Ben, Strader, Jay, Thorsett, Stephen E., and Urquhart, Ryan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a 34-year timing solution of the redback pulsar system Terzan 5A (Ter5A). Ter5A, also known as B1744$-$24A or J1748$-$2446A, has a 11.56 ms pulse period, a $\sim$0.1 solar mass dwarf companion star, and an orbital period of 1.82 hours. Ter5A displays highly variable eclipses and orbital perturbations. Using new timing techniques, we have determined a phase-connected timing solution for this system over 34 years. This is the longest ever published for a redback pulsar. We find that the pulsar's spin variability is much larger than most globular cluster pulsars. In fact, of the nine redback pulsars with published or in preparation long-term timing solutions, Ter5A is by far the noisiest. We see no evidence of strong correlations between orbital and spin variability of the pulsar. We also find that long-term astrometric timing measurements are likely too contaminated by this variability to be usable, and therefore require careful short-term timing to determine reasonable positions. Finally, we measure an orbital period contraction of $-2.5(3) \times 10^{-13}$, which is likely dominated by the general relativistic orbital decay of the system. The effects of the orbital variability due to the redback nature of the pulsar are not needed to explain the observed orbital period derivative, but they are constrained to less than $\sim$30% of the observed value.
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- 2024
13. Dynamic Massive Star Formation: Radio Flux Variability in UCHII Regions
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Yang, A. Y., Thompson, M. A., Urquhart, J. S., Brunthaler, A., Menten, K. M., Gong, Y., Tsai, Chao-Wei, Patel, A. L., Li, D., and Cotton, W. D.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context: Theoretical models of early accretion during the formation process of massive stars have predicted that HII regions exhibit radio variability on timescales of decades. However, large-scale searches for such temporal variations with sufficient sensitivity have not yet been carried out. Aims: We aim to identify HII regions with variable radio wavelength fluxes and to investigate the properties of the identified objects, especially those with the highest level of variability. Methods: We compared the peak flux densities of 86 ultracompact HII (UCHII) regions measured by the GLOSTAR and CORNISH surveys and identified variables that show flux variations higher than 30% over ~8 yr timespan between these surveys. Results: We found a sample of 38 variable UCHII regions, which is the largest sample identified to date. The overall occurrence of variability is 44$\pm$5%, suggesting that variation in UCHII regions is significantly more common than prediction. The variable UCHII regions are found to be younger than non-variable UCHII regions, all of them meeting the size criterion of hypercompact (HC) HII regions. We studied the 7 UCHII regions (the ``Top7'') that show the highest variability with variations > 100%. The Top7 variable UCHII regions are optically thick at 4--8 GHz and compact, suggesting they are in a very early evolutionary stage of HCHII or UCHII regions. There is a significant correlation between variability and the spectral index of the radio emission. No dependence is observed between the variations and the properties of the sources' natal clumps traced by submillimeter continuum emission from dust, although variable HII regions are found in clumps at an earlier evolutionary stage., Comment: 11pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2024
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14. A Novel high-z submm Galaxy Efficient Line Survey in ALMA bands 3 through 8 -- An ANGELS Pilot
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Bakx, T. J. L. C., Amvrosiadis, A., Bendo, G. J., Algera, H. S. B., Serjeant, S., Bonavera, L., Borsato, E., Chen, X., Cox, P., González-Nuevo, J., Hagimoto, M., Harrington, K. C., Ivison, R. J., Kamieneski, P., Marchetti, L., Riechers, D. A., Tsukui, T., van der Werf, P. P., Yang, C., Zavala, J. A., Andreani, P., Berta, S., Cooray, A. R., De Zotti, G., Eales, S., Ikeda, R., Knudsen, K. K., Mitsuhashi, I., Negrello, M., Neri, R., Omont, A., Scott, D., Tamura, Y., Temi, P., and Urquhart, S. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use the Atacama Large sub/Millimetre Array (ALMA) to efficiently observe spectral lines across Bands 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 at high-resolution (0.5" - 0.1") for 16 bright southern Herschel sources at $1.5 < z < 4.2$. With only six and a half hours of observations, we reveal 66 spectral lines in 17 galaxies. These observations detect emission from CO (3-2) to CO(18-17), as well as atomic ([CI](1-0), (2-1), [OI] 145 $\mu$m and [NII] 205 $\mu$m) lines. Additional molecular lines are seen in emission (${\rm H_2O}$ and ${\rm H_2O^+}$) and absorption (OH$^+$ and CH$^+$). The morphologies based on dust continuum ranges from extended sources to strong lensed galaxies with magnifications between 2 and 30. CO line transitions indicate a diverse set of excitation conditions with a fraction of the sources ($\sim 35$%) showcasing dense, warm gas. The resolved gas to star-formation surface densities vary strongly per source, and suggest that the observed diversity of dusty star-forming galaxies could be a combination of lensed, compact dusty starbursts and extended, potentially-merging galaxies. The predicted gas depletion timescales are consistent with 100 Myr to 1 Gyr, but require efficient fueling from the extended gas reservoirs onto the more central starbursts, in line with the Doppler-shifted absorption lines that indicate inflowing gas for two out of six sources. This pilot paper explores a successful new method of observing spectral lines in large samples of galaxies, supports future studies of larger samples, and finds that the efficiency of this new observational method will be further improved with the planned ALMA Wideband Sensitivity Upgrade., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 42 pages, including 20 figures + spectra. Comments and discussion are warmly welcomed
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- 2024
15. High resolution observations of 12CO and 13CO(3--2) toward the NGC 6334 extended filament
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Neupane, S., Wyrowski, F., Menten, K. M., Urquhart, J., Colombo, D., Lin, L. -H., and Garay, G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
NGC 6334 is a giant molecular cloud complex with elongated filamentary structure, harbouring OB-stars, HII regions and star forming clumps. To study the emission and velocity structure of the gas in the extended NGC 6334 region, we made observations of the 12CO and 13CO (J=3-2) lines with the APEX telescope. The data provides a spatial resolution of 20 arcsec (~0.16 pc) and sensitivity of ~0.4 K at a spectral resolution of 0.25 km/s. Our observations reveal in the extended NGC 6334 region a connected velocity coherent structure of ~-3.9 km/s over ~80 pc parallel to the galactic plane. The NGC 6334 complex has two connected velocity structures at velocities ~ -9.2 km/s (the bridge features) and ~-20 km/s (the Northern Filament, NGC 6334-NF). We observed local velocity fluctuations at smaller spatial scales along the filament tracing local density enhancement and infall. We investigated the 13CO emission and velocity structure around HII regions and found that most HII regions show signs of molecular gas dispersal from the center and intensity enhancement at their outer radii. Overall NGC 6334 exhibits sequential star formation from west to east. Located in the west, the GM-24 region exhibits bubbles within bubbles and is at a relatively evolved stage of star formation. The NGC 6334 central ridge is undergoing global gas infall and exhibits two gas bridge features possibly connected to the cloud-cloud collision scenario of the NGC 6334-NF and the NGC 6334 main gas component. The relatively quiescent eastern filament (EF1 - G352.1) is a hub-filament in formation which shows the kinematic signature of global gas infall onto the filament. Our observations highlight the important role of H II regions in shaping the molecular gas emission and velocity structure as well as the overall evolution of the molecular filaments in NGC 6334., Comment: 38 pages, 21 figures, Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
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16. PAMS: The Perseus Arm Molecular Survey -- I. Survey description and first results
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Rigby, Andrew J., Thompson, Mark A., Eden, David J., Moore, Toby J. T., Mutale, Mubela, Peretto, Nicolas, Plume, Rene, Urquhart, James S., Williams, Gwenllian M., and Currie, Malcolm J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The external environments surrounding molecular clouds vary widely across galaxies such as the Milky Way, and statistical samples of clouds are required to understand them. We present the Perseus Arm Molecular Survey (PAMS), a James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) survey combining new and archival data of molecular-cloud complexes in the outer Perseus spiral arm in $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO, and C$^{18}$O ($J$=3-2). With a survey area of $\sim$8 deg$^2$, PAMS covers well-known complexes such as W3, W5, and NGC 7538 with two fields at $\ell \approx 110^{\circ}$ and $\ell \approx 135^{\circ}$. PAMS has an effective resolution of 17 arcsec, and rms sensitivity of $T_\mathrm{mb} = 0.7$-1.0 K in 0.3 km s$^{-1}$ channels. Here we present a first look at the data, and compare the PAMS regions in the Outer Galaxy with Inner Galaxy regions from the CO Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey (CHIMPS). By comparing the various CO data with maps of H$_2$ column density from Herschel, we calculate representative values for the CO-to-H$_2$ column-density $X$-factors, which are $X_{^{12}\mathrm{CO (3-2)}}=4.0\times10^{20}$ and $X_{^{13}\mathrm{CO (3-2)}}=4.0\times10^{21}$cm$^{-2}$ (K km s$^{-1}$)$^{-1}$ with a factor of 1.5 uncertainty. We find that the emission profiles, size-linewidth and mass-radius relationships of $^{13}$CO-traced structures are similar between the Inner and Outer Galaxy. Although PAMS sources are slightly more massive than their Inner Galaxy counterparts for a given size scale, the discrepancy can be accounted for by the Galactic gradient in gas-to-dust mass ratio, uncertainties in the $X$-factors, and selection biases. We have made the PAMS data publicly available, complementing other CO surveys targeting different regions of the Galaxy in different isotopologues and transitions., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS
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- 2024
17. ISMGCC: Finding Gas Structures in Molecular Interstellar Medium Using Gaussian Decomposition and Graph Theory
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Feng, Haoran, Chen, Zhiwei, Jiang, Zhibo, and Urquhart, James S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Molecular line emissions are commonly used to trace the distribution and properties of molecular Interstellar Medium (ISM). However, the emissions are heavily blended on the Galactic disk toward the inner Galaxy because of the relatively large line widths and the velocity overlaps of spiral arms. Structure identification methods based on voxel connectivity in PPV data cubes often produce unrealistically large structures, which is the ``over-linking'' problem. Therefore, identifying molecular cloud structures in these directions is not trivial. We propose a new method based on Gaussian decomposition and graph theory to solve the over-linking problem, named ISMGCC (InterStellar Medium Gaussian Component Clustering). Using the MWISP ${}^{13}\mathrm{CO}~(1-0)$ data in the range of $13.5^{\circ} \leq l \leq 14.5^{\circ}, |b| \leq 0.5^{\circ}$, and $-100\leq V_{\mathrm{LSR}} \leq +200~\mathrm{km~s^{-1}}$, our method identified three hundred molecular gas structures with at least 16 pixels. These structures contain $92\%$ of the total flux in the raw data cube and show single-peaked line profiles on more than $93\%$ of their pixels. The ISMGCC method could distinguish gas structures in crowded regions and retain most of the flux without global data clipping or assumptions on the structure geometry, meanwhile, allowing multiple Gaussian components for complicated line profiles., Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Research in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2024
18. A 2.9-hour periodic radio transient with an optical counterpart
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Hurley-Walker, N., McSweeney, S. J., Bahramian, A., Rea, N., Horvath, C., Buchner, S., Williams, A., Meyers, B. W., Strader, Jay, Aydi, Elias, Urquhart, Ryan, Chomiuk, Laura, Galvin, T. J., Zelati, F. Coti, and Bailes, Matthew
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a long-period radio transient (GLEAM-X J0704-37) discovered to have an optical counterpart, consistent with a cool main sequence star of spectral type M3. The radio pulsations occur at the longest period yet found, 2.9 hours, and were discovered in archival low-frequency data from the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). High time resolution observations from MeerKAT show that pulsations from the source display complex microstructure and high linear polarisation, suggesting a pulsar-like emission mechanism occurring due to strong, ordered magnetic fields. The timing residuals, measured over more than a decade, show tentative evidence of a ~6-yr modulation. The high Galactic latitude of the system and the M-dwarf star excludes a magnetar interpretation, suggesting a more likely M-dwarf / white dwarf binary scenario for this system., Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJL 19th October 2024
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- 2024
19. SCOTCH Search for Clandestine Optically Thick Compact HII regions II
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Patel, A. L., Urquhart, J. S., Yang, A. Y., Moore, T., Thompson, M. A., Menten, K. M., and Csengeri, T.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In this study we present 18 to 24 GHz and high angular resolution radio wavelength Australia Telescope Compact Array follow up observations towards a sample of 39 HC HII region candidates. These objects, taken from a sample hosting 6.7 GHz methanol masers, were chosen due to the compact and optically thick nature of their continuum emission. We have detected 27 compact radio sources and constructed their spectral energy distributions over the 5 to 24 GHz range to determine the young HII regions physical properties, i.e., diameter, electron density ne, emission measure, Lyman continuum flux NLy and turnover frequency. The flux measurements are fitted for 20 objects assuming an ionisation bounded HII region with uniform density model. For the remaining 7 objects that lack constraints spanning both their optically thick and thin regimes, we utilise relations from the literature to determine their physical properties. Comparing these determined parameters with those of known hypercompact and ultracompact HII regions, we have identified 13 HC HII regions, 6 intermediate objects that fall between HC HII and UC HII regions, 6 UC HII regions and one radio jet candidate which increases the known population of HC HII regions by 50 per cent. All the young and compact HII regions are embedded in dusty and dense clumps and 80 percent of the HC HII regions identified in this work are associated with various maser species. Four of our radio sources remain optically thick at 24 GHz, we consider these to be amongst the youngest HC HII regions.
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- 2024
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20. Responsibility and Regulation: Exploring Social Measures of Trust in Medical AI
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McGarry, Glenn, Crabtree, Andy, Urquhart, Lachlan, and Chamberlain, Alan
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,K.4 - Abstract
This paper explores expert accounts of autonomous systems (AS) development in the medical device domain (MD) involving applications of artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), and other algorithmic and mathematical modelling techniques. We frame our observations with respect to notions of responsible innovation (RI) and the emerging problem of how to do RI in practice. In contribution to the ongoing discourse surrounding trustworthy autonomous system (TAS) [29], we illuminate practical challenges inherent in deploying novel AS within existing governance structures, including domain specific regulations and policies, and rigorous testing and development processes, and discuss the implications of these for the distribution of responsibility in novel AI deployment., Comment: To be published in Second International Symposium on Trustworthy Autonomous Systems, September 15 18, 2024, Austin, Texas
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- 2024
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21. A global view on star formation: The GLOSTAR Galactic plane survey. XI. Radio source catalog IV: $2^\circ < \ell < 28^\circ$, $36^\circ < \ell < 60^\circ$ and $|b| < 1^\circ$
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Medina, S. -N. X., Dzib, S. A., Urquhart, J. S., Yang, A. Y., Brunthaler, A., Menten, K. M., Wyrowski, F., Cotton, W. D., Cheema, A., Dokara, R., Gong, Y., Khan, S., Nguyen, H., Ortiz-Leon, G. N., Rugel, M. R., Veena, V. S., Beuther, H., Csengeri, T., Pandian, J. D., and Roy, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The GLOSTAR survey studies star formation with the VLA and the Effelsberg 100m telescope in the Galactic plane (-2d
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- 2024
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22. A global view on star formation: The GLOSTAR Galactic plane survey X. Galactic HII region catalog using radio recombination lines
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Khan, S., Rugel, M. R., Brunthaler, A., Menten, K. M., Wyrowski, F., Urquhart, J. S., Gong, Y., Yang, A. Y., Nguyen, H., Dokara, R., Dzib, S. A., Medina, S. -N. X., Ortiz-León, G. N., Pandian, J. D., Beuther, H., Veena, V. S., Neupane, S., Cheema, A., Reich, W., and Roy, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Studies of Galactic HII regions are of crucial importance for studying star formation and the evolution of the interstellar medium. Gaining an insight into their physical characteristics contributes to a more comprehensive understanding of these phenomena. The GLOSTAR project aims to provide a GLObal view on STAR formation in the Milky Way by performing an unbiased and sensitive survey. This is achieved by using the extremely wideband (4{-}8 GHz) C-band receiver of the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array and the Effelsberg 100 m telescope. Using radio recombination lines observed in the GLOSTAR survey with the VLA in D-configuration with a typical line sensitivity of 1{\sigma} {\sim} 3.0 mJy beam{^-1} at {\sim} 5 km s{^-1} and an angular resolution of 25", we cataloged 244 individual Galactic HII regions and derived their physical properties. We examined the mid-infrared (MIR) morphology of these HII regions and find that a significant portion of them exhibit a bubble-like morphology in the GLIMPSE 8 {\mu}m emission. We also searched for associations with the dust continuum and sources of methanol maser emission, other tracers of young stellar objects, and find that 48\% and 14\% of our HII regions, respectively, are coextensive with those. We measured the electron temperature for a large sample of HII regions within Galactocentric distances spanning from 1.6 to 13.1 kpc and derived the Galactic electron temperature gradient as {\sim} 372 {\pm} 28 K kpc{^-1} with an intercept of 4248 {\pm} 161 K, which is consistent with previous studies., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2024
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23. Amplitude-noise-resilient entangling gates for trapped ions
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Le, Nguyen H., Orozco-Ruiz, Modesto, Kulmiya, Sahra A., Urquhart, James G., Hile, Samuel J., Hensinger, Winfried K., and Mintert, Florian
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Noise resilience of quantum information processing is a crucial precondition to reach the fault-tolerance threshold. While resilience to many types of noise can be achieved through suitable control schemes, resilience to amplitude noise seems to be elusive within the common harmonic approximation for the bus mode of trapped ions. We show that weak an-harmonicities admit control schemes that achieve amplitude noise-resilience consistent with state-of-the-art experimental requirements, and that the required an-harmonicities can be achieved with current standards of micro-structured traps or even the intrinsically an-harmonic Coulomb interaction.
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- 2024
24. Estimating species distribution from camera trap by-catch data, using jaguarundi ( Herpailurus yagouaroundi ) as an example
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Harmsen, Bart J., Williams, Sara, Abarca, Maria, Calderón, Francisco Samuel Álvarez, Araya-Gamboa, Daniela, Avila, Hefer Daniel, Barrantes-Núñez, Mariano, la Cruz, Yaribeth Bravata-de, Broadfield, Joleen, Cabral-Araújo, Valquíria, Calderón, Ana Patricia, Castañeda, Franklin, Corrales-Gutiérrez, Daniel, do Couto-Peret Dias, Bárbara, Marinho, Paulo Henrique Dantas, Devlin, Allison L., Escobar-Anleu, Barbara I., Espinoza-Muñoz, Deiver, Esser, Helen J., Foster, Rebecca J., Fragoso, Carlos Eduardo, Friedeberg, Diana, Herrera, Luis Alberto, Hidalgo-Mihart, Mircea G., Hoogesteijn, Rafael, Jansen, Patrick A., Jędrzejewski, Włodzimierz, la Cruz, Alejandro Jesus-de, de Jesus Rodrigues, Domingos, Jordan, Chris A., Juárez-Lopez, Rugieri, Kadosoe, Vanessa, Kelly, Marcella J., King, Travis W., Lugarini, Camile, Venticinque, Eduardo Martins, da Matta Nigro, Giulia, McPhail, Darby K. T., Meyer, Ninon, Morales-Rivas, Andrea, Nepomuceno, Vance, Nipko, Rob B., Noronha, Janaina, de Oliveira-Vasquez, Mariana, Ouboter, Paul, Paemelaere, Evi A. D., Payán, Esteban, dos Santos, Thais Pereira, Salom-Pérez, Roberto, Sanchez, Emma E., Santos-Simioni, Stephanie, Schmidt, Krzysztof, Stasiukyans, Diana, Tortato, Fernando R., Urbina-Ruiz, Ever, Urquhart, Gerald R., Wong, Wai-Ming, and Robinson, Hugh
- Published
- 2024
25. Feminist approaches to environmental politics: Feminist approaches to environmental politics
- Author
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Lawrence, Jennifer L., Altamirano-Jiménez, Isabel, Daggett, Cara, MacGregor, Sherilyn, Ray, Emily, Wiebe, Sarah Marie, Battersby, Hannah, Rodekirchen, Magdalena, and Urquhart, Heather
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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26. The effect of insomnia treatment on work productivity and related costs among cancer survivors with insomnia and comorbid perceived cognitive impairments: A secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial
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Tulk, Joshua, Gambin, Lynn, Browne, Sondria, Laing, Kara, Rash, Joshua A., Savard, Josée, Seal, Melanie, Thoms, John, Urquhart, Robin, and Garland, Sheila N.
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- 2025
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27. Real Talk: Conversations on HIV with Black Heterosexual Men in Healthcare Settings
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Urquhart, Rakira, Adams, Mackenzie, Chakraborty, Shawtaabdee, and Burns, Jade C.
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- 2025
- Full Text
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28. Acceleration of Core Post-quantum Cryptography Primitive on Open-Source Silicon Platform Through Hardware/Software Co-design
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Urquhart, Emma, Stajano, Frank, Goos, Gerhard, Series Editor, Hartmanis, Juris, Founding Editor, Bertino, Elisa, Editorial Board Member, Gao, Wen, Editorial Board Member, Steffen, Bernhard, Editorial Board Member, Yung, Moti, Editorial Board Member, Kohlweiss, Markulf, editor, Di Pietro, Roberto, editor, and Beresford, Alastair, editor
- Published
- 2025
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29. SCUBA-2 Ultra Deep Imaging EAO Survey (STUDIES). V. Confusion-limited Submillimeter Galaxy Number Counts at 450 $\mu$m and Data Release for the COSMOS Field
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Gao, Zhen-Kai, Lim, Chen-Fatt, Wang, Wei-Hao, Chen, Chian-Chou, Smail, Ian, Chapman, Scott C., Zheng, Xian Zhong, Shim, Hyunjin, Kodama, Tadayuki, Ao, Yiping, Chang, Siou-Yu, Clements, David L., Dunlop, James S., Ho, Luis C., Hsu, Yun-Hsin, Hwang, Chorng-Yuan, Hwang, Ho Seong, Koprowski, M. P., Scott, Douglas, Serjeant, Stephen, Toba, Yoshiki, and Urquhart, Sheona A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present confusion-limited SCUBA-2 450-$\mu$m observations in the COSMOS-CANDELS region as part of the JCMT Large Program, SCUBA-2 Ultra Deep Imaging EAO Survey (STUDIES). Our maps at 450 and 850 $\mu$m cover an area of 450 arcmin$^2$. We achieved instrumental noise levels of $\sigma_{\mathrm{450}}=$ 0.59 mJy beam$^{-1}$ and $\sigma_{\mathrm{850}}=$ 0.09 mJy beam$^{-1}$ in the deepest area of each map. The corresponding confusion noise levels are estimated to be 0.65 and 0.36 mJy beam$^{-1}$. Above the 4 (3.5) $\sigma$ threshold, we detected 360 (479) sources at 450 $\mu$m and 237 (314) sources at 850 $\mu$m. We derive the deepest blank-field number counts at 450 $\mu$m, covering the flux-density range of 2 to 43 mJy. These are in agreement with other SCUBA-2 blank-field and lensing-cluster observations, but are lower than various model counts. We compare the counts with those in other fields and find that the field-to-field variance observed at 450 $\mu$m at the $R=6^\prime$ scale is consistent with Poisson noise, so there is no evidence of strong 2-D clustering at this scale. Additionally, we derive the integrated surface brightness at 450 $\mu$m down to 2.1 mJy to be $57.3^{+1.0}_{-6.2}$~Jy deg$^{-2}$, contributing to (41$\pm$4)\% of the 450-$\mu$m extragalactic background light (EBL) measured by COBE and Planck. Our results suggest that the 450-$\mu$m EBL may be fully resolved at $0.08^{+0.09}_{-0.08}$~mJy, which extremely deep lensing-cluster observations and next-generation submillimeter instruments with large aperture sizes may be able to achieve., Comment: 29 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2024
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30. Spectrum and polarization of the Galactic center radio transient ASKAP J173608.2-321635 from THOR-GC and VLITE
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Weatherhead, Kierra J., Stil, Jeroen M., Rugel, Michael, Peters, Wendy M., Anderson, Loren, Barnes, Ashley, Beuther, Henrik, Clarke, Tracy E., Dzib, Sergio A., Goldsmith, Paul, Menten, Karl M., Nyland, Kristina E., Sormani, Mattia C., and Urquhart, James
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The radio transient ASKAP J173608.2-321735, at the position (l,b)= (356.0872,-0.0390), was serendipitously observed by The HI/OH/Recombination Line Survey of the Galactic Center (THOR-GC) at three epochs in March 2020, April 2020 and February 2021. The source was detected only on 2020 April 11 with flux density 20.6 +/- 1.1 mJy at 1.23 GHz and in-band spectral index alpha = -3.1 +/- 0.2. The commensal VLA Low-band Ionsophere and Transient Experiment (VLITE) simultaneously detected the source at 339 MHz with a flux density 122.6 +/- 20.4 mJy, indicating a spectral break below 1 GHz. The rotation measure in April 2020 was 63.9 +/- 0.3rad/m2, which almost triples the range of the variable rotation measure observed by Wang et al. (2021) to ~130 rad/m2. The polarization angle, corrected for Faraday rotation, was 97 +/- 6 degrees. The 1.23 GHz linear polarization was 76.7% +/- 3.9% with wavelength-dependent depolarization indicating Faraday depth dispersion sigma_phi = 4.8^{+0.5}_{-0.7} rad/m2. We find an upper limit to circular polarization |V|/I < 10.1%. Interpretation of the data in terms of diffractive scattering of radio waves by a plasma near the source indicates electron density and line-of-sight magnetic field strength within a factor 3 of n_e ~2 cm^{-3} and B_par ~2 x 10^5 microgauss. Combined with causality limits to the size of the source, these parameters are consistent with the low-frequency spectral break resulting from synchrotron self-absorption, not free-free absorption. A possible interpretation of the source is a highly supersonic neutron star interacting with a changing environment., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
31. A study of Galactic Plane Planck Galactic Cold Clumps observed by SCOPE and the JCMT Plane Survey
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Eden, D. J., Liu, Tie, Moore, T. J. T., Di Francesco, J., Fuller, G., Kim, Kee-Tae, Li, Di, Liu, S. -Y., Plume, R., Tatematsu, Ken'ichi, Thompson, M. A., Wu, Y., Bronfman, L., Butner, H. M., Currie, M. J., Garay, G., Goldsmith, P. F., Hirano, N., Johnstone, D., Juvela, M., Lai, S. -P., Lee, C. W., Mannfors, E. E., Olguin, F., Pattle, K., Park, Geumsook, Polychroni, D., Rawlings, M., Rigby, A. J., Sanhueza, P., Traficante, A., Urquhart, J. S., Weferling, B., White, G. J., and Yadav, R. K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We have investigated the physical properties of Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCCs) located in the Galactic Plane, using the JCMT Plane Survey (JPS) and the SCUBA-2 Continuum Observations of Pre-protostellar Evolution (SCOPE) survey. By utilising a suite of molecular-line surveys, velocities and distances were assigned to the compact sources within the PGCCs, placing them in a Galactic context. The properties of these compact sources show no large-scale variations with Galactic environment. Investigating the star-forming content of the sample, we find that the luminosity-to-mass ratio (L/M) is an order of magnitude lower than in other Galactic studies, indicating that these objects are hosting lower levels of star formation. Finally, by comparing ATLASGAL sources that are associated or are not associated with PGCCs, we find that those associated with PGCCs are typically colder, denser, and have a lower L/M ratio, hinting that PGCCs are a distinct population of Galactic Plane sources., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
32. AI and the Iterable Epistopics of Risk
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Crabtree, Andy, McGarry, Glenn, and Urquhart, Lachlan
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,I.2 ,J.4 ,H.1.2 - Abstract
Abstract. The risks AI presents to society are broadly understood to be manageable through general calculus, i.e., general frameworks designed to enable those involved in the development of AI to apprehend and manage risk, such as AI impact assessments, ethical frameworks, emerging international standards, and regulations. This paper elaborates how risk is apprehended and managed by a regulator, developer and cyber-security expert. It reveals that risk and risk management is dependent on mundane situated practices not encapsulated in general calculus. Situated practice surfaces iterable epistopics, revealing how those involved in the development of AI know and subsequently respond to risk and uncover major challenges in their work. The ongoing discovery and elaboration of epistopics of risk in AI a) furnishes a potential program of interdisciplinary inquiry, b) provides AI developers with a means of apprehending risk, and c) informs the ongoing evolution of general calculus., Comment: 17 pages
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- 2024
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33. A dusty proto-cluster surrounding the binary galaxy HerBS-70 at $z = 2.3$
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Bakx, Tom J. L. C., Berta, S., Dannerbauer, H., Cox, P., Butler, K. M., Hagimoto, M., Hughes, D. H., Riechers, D. A., van der Werf, P. P., Yang, C., Baker, A. J., Beelen, A., Bendo, G. J., Borsato, E., Buat, V., Cooray, A. R., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Gavazzi, R., Harris, A. I., Ismail, D., Ivison, R. J., Jones, B., Krips, M., Lehnert, M. D., Marchetti, L., Messias, H., Negrello, M., Neri, R., Omont, A., Perez-Fournon, I., Nanni, A., Chartab, N., Serjeant, S., Stanley, F., Tamura, Y., Urquhart, S. A., Vlahakis, C., Weiß, A., and Young, A. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on deep SCUBA-2 observations at 850$\mu$m and NOEMA spectroscopic measurements at 2 mm of the environment surrounding the luminous, massive ($M_{*} \approx 2 \times 10^{11}$ M$_{\odot}$) Herschel-selected source HerBS-70. This source was revealed by previous NOEMA observations to be a binary system of dusty star-forming galaxies at $z= 2.3$, with the East component (HerBS-70E) hosting an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN). The SCUBA-2 observations detected, in addition to the binary system, twenty-one sources at $> 3.5 \sigma$ over an area of $\sim 25$ square comoving Mpc with a sensitivity of $\sigma_{850} = 0.75$ mJy. The surface density of continuum sources around HerBS-70 is three times higher than for field galaxies. The NOEMA spectroscopic measurements confirm the protocluster membership of three of the nine brightest sources through their CO(4 - 3) line emission, yielding a volume density 36 times higher than for field galaxies. All five confirmed sub-mm galaxies in the HerBS-70 system have relatively short gas depletion times ($80 - 500$ Myr), indicating the onset of quenching for this protocluster core due to the depletion of gas. The dark matter halo mass of the HerBS-70 system is estimated around $5 \times{} 10^{13}$ M$_{\odot}$, with a projected current-day mass of $10^{15}$ M$_{\odot}$, similar to the local Virgo and Coma clusters. These observations support the claim that DSFGs, in particular the ones with observed multiplicity, can trace cosmic overdensities., Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
34. Embodying Pedagogy
- Author
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Allen G. Jorgenson, Bethan Riehle-Johns, Katrina Urquhart, and Nancy L. Dresser
- Abstract
This article reflects on an instructor's experience of incorporating an optional assignment in a theology class wherein students are invited to learn a new athletic skill, journal while doing so, and then theologically reflect on their experience. It begins with the instructor making a case for the need to bring the body back into the classroom. This is followed by the theological reflections of three of the instructor's students. Finally, the instructor reflects on the themes of balance and muscle memory, stretching, and flow developed in the student reflections. These are used to outline how a balanced classroom revives theological wonder, affirms change in a cruciform fashion, and understands failure as part of God's modus operandi and so intrinsic to theology.
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- 2024
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35. Sense-making, sensemaking and sense making - A systematic review and meta-synthesis of literature in information science and education: An Annual Review of Information Science and Technology (ARIST) paper.
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Christine Urquhart, Bonnie Cheuk, Louisa Lam, and Dave Snowden
- Published
- 2025
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36. Price divergence in bitcoin market: Price divergence in bitcoin market
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Chu, Gang, Li, Xiao, Shen, Dehua, and Urquhart, Andrew
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- 2024
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37. Cervical orthosis does not improve postoperative pain following posterior cervical fusion: a randomized controlled trial
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Fernandes, Renan, Thornley, Patrick, Urquhart, Jennifer, Alahmari, Abdulmajeed, Alenezi, Nasser, Kelly, Sean, Rasoulinejad, Parham, Singh, Supriya, Siddiqi, Fawaz, Gurr, Kevin, and Bailey, Chris
- Published
- 2024
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38. An examination of auxetic componentry for applications in human-centred biomedical product design settings
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Urquhart, Lewis, Tamburrino, Francesco, Neri, Paolo, Wodehouse, Andrew, Fingland, Craig, and Razionale, Armando Viviano
- Published
- 2024
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39. A survey for variable stars with small telescopes: IX -- Evolution of Spot Properties on YSOs in IC5070
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Herbert, Carys, Froebrich, Dirk, Vanaverbeke, Siegfried, Scholz, Aleks, Eislöffel, Jochen, Urtly, Thomas, Walton, Ivan L., Wiersema, Klaas, Quinn, Nick J., Piehler, Georg, Aimar, Mario Morales, García, Rafael Castillo, Vanmunster, Tonny, Alfaro, Francisco C. Soldán, de la Cuesta, Faustino García, Licchelli, Domenico, Perez, Alex Escartin, Mañanes, Esteban Fernández, Ribes, Noelia Graciá, González, José Luis Salto, Futcher, Stephen R. L., Nelson, Tim, Dvorak, Shawn, Moździerski, Dawid, Kotysz, Krzysztof, Mikołajczyk, Przemysław, Fleming, George, Phillips, Mark, Vale, Tony, Dubois, Franky, Eggenstein, Heinz-Bernd, Heald, Michael A., Lewin, Pablo, OKeeffe, Derek, Popowicz, Adam, Bernacki, Krzysztof, Malcher, Andrzej, Lasota, Slawomir, Fiolka, Jerzy, Dustor, Adam, Percy, Stephen C., Devine, Pat, Patel, Aashini L., Dickers, Matthew D., Dover, Lord, Grozdanova, Ivana I., Urquhart, James S., and Lynch, Chris J. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present spot properties on 32 periodic young stellar objects in IC 5070. Long term, $\sim$5 yr, light curves in the $V$, $R$, and $I$-bands are obtained through the HOYS (Hunting Outbursting Young Stars) citizen science project. These are dissected into six months long slices, with 3 months oversampling, to measure 234 sets of amplitudes in all filters. We fit 180 of these with reliable spot solutions. Two thirds of spot solutions are cold spots, the lowest is 2150 K below the stellar temperature. One third are warm spots that are above the stellar temperature by less than $\sim$2000 K. Cold and warm spots have maximum surface coverage values of 40 percent, although only 16 percent of warm spots are above 20 percent surface coverage as opposed to 60 percent of the cold spots. Warm spots are most likely caused by a combination of plages and low density accretion columns, most common on objects without inner disc excess emission in $K-W2$. Five small hot spot solutions have $<3$ percent coverage and are 3000 - 5000 K above the stellar temperature. These are attributed to accretion, and four of them occur on the same object. The majority of our objects are likely to be accreting. However, we observe very few accretion hot spots as either the accretion is not stable on our timescale or the photometry is dominated by other features. We do not identify cyclical spot behaviour on the targets. We additionally identify and discuss a number of objects that have interesting amplitudes, phase changes, or spot properties., Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS. 17 + 7 pages, 7 + 23 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
40. A Generative Model of Symmetry Transformations
- Author
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Allingham, James Urquhart, Mlodozeniec, Bruno Kacper, Padhy, Shreyas, Antorán, Javier, Krueger, David, Turner, Richard E., Nalisnick, Eric, and Hernández-Lobato, José Miguel
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Correctly capturing the symmetry transformations of data can lead to efficient models with strong generalization capabilities, though methods incorporating symmetries often require prior knowledge. While recent advancements have been made in learning those symmetries directly from the dataset, most of this work has focused on the discriminative setting. In this paper, we take inspiration from group theoretic ideas to construct a generative model that explicitly aims to capture the data's approximate symmetries. This results in a model that, given a prespecified but broad set of possible symmetries, learns to what extent, if at all, those symmetries are actually present. Our model can be seen as a generative process for data augmentation. We provide a simple algorithm for learning our generative model and empirically demonstrate its ability to capture symmetries under affine and color transformations, in an interpretable way. Combining our symmetry model with standard generative models results in higher marginal test-log-likelihoods and improved data efficiency., Comment: Accepted at NeurIPS 2024
- Published
- 2024
41. Beyond Voice Assistants: Exploring Advantages and Risks of an In-Car Social Robot in Real Driving Scenarios
- Author
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Li, Yuanchao, Urquhart, Lachlan, Karatas, Nihan, Shao, Shun, Ishiguro, Hiroshi, and Shen, Xun
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Robotics ,Computer Science - Sound - Abstract
In-car Voice Assistants (VAs) play an increasingly critical role in automotive user interface design. However, existing VAs primarily perform simple 'query-answer' tasks, limiting their ability to sustain drivers' long-term attention. In this study, we investigate the effectiveness of an in-car Robot Assistant (RA) that offers functionalities beyond voice interaction. We aim to answer the question: How does the presence of a social robot impact user experience in real driving scenarios? Our study begins with a user survey to understand perspectives on in-car VAs and their influence on driving experiences. We then conduct non-driving and on-road experiments with selected participants to assess user experiences with an RA. Additionally, we conduct subjective ratings to evaluate user perceptions of the RA's personality, which is crucial for robot design. We also explore potential concerns regarding ethical risks. Finally, we provide a comprehensive discussion and recommendations for the future development of in-car RAs., Comment: Submitted to ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
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- 2024
42. A Survey for Radio Emission from White Dwarfs in the VLA Sky Survey
- Author
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Pelisoli, Ingrid, Chomiuk, Laura, Strader, Jay, Marsh, T. R., Aydi, Elias, Dage, Kristen C., Kyer, Rebecca, Molina, Isabella, Panurach, Teresa, Urquhart, Ryan, Maccarone, Thomas J., Rich, R. Michael, Rodriguez, Antonio C., Breedt, E., Brown, A. J., Dhillon, V. S., Dyer, M. J., Gaensicke, Boris. T., Garbutt, J. A., Green, M. J., Kennedy, M. R., Kerry, P., Littlefair, S. P., Munday, James, and Parsons, S. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Radio emission has been detected from tens of white dwarfs, in particular in accreting systems. Additionally, radio emission has been predicted as a possible outcome of a planetary system around a white dwarf. We searched for 3 GHz radio continuum emission in 846,000 candidate white dwarfs previously identified in Gaia using the Very Large Array Sky Survey (VLASS) Epoch 1 Quick Look Catalogue. We identified 13 candidate white dwarfs with a counterpart in VLASS within 2". Five of those were found not to be white dwarfs in follow-up or archival spectroscopy, whereas seven others were found to be chance alignments with a background source in higher-resolution optical or radio images. The remaining source, WDJ204259.71+152108.06, is found to be a white dwarf and M-dwarf binary with an orbital period of 4.1 days and long-term stochastic optical variability, as well as luminous radio and X-ray emission. For this binary, we find no direct evidence of a background contaminant, and a chance alignment probability of only ~2 per cent. However, other evidence points to the possibility of an unfortunate chance alignment with a background radio and X-ray emitting quasar, including an unusually poor Gaia DR3 astrometric solution for this source. With at most one possible radio emitting white dwarf found, we conclude that strong (> 1-3 mJy) radio emission from white dwarfs in the 3 GHz band is virtually nonexistent outside of interacting binaries., Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures. Updated to match version accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2024
43. A survey for variable young stars with small telescopes: VIII -- Properties of 1687 Gaia selected members in 21 nearby clusters
- Author
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Froebrich, Dirk, Scholz, Aleks, Campbell-White, Justyn, Vanaverbeke, Siegfried, Herbert, Carys, Eislöffel, Jochen, Urtly, Thomas, Long, Timothy P., Walton, Ivan L., Wiersema, Klaas, Quinn, Nick J., Rodda, Tony, González-Carballo, Juan-Luis, Aimar, Mario Morales, García, Rafael Castillo, Alfaro, Francisco C. Soldán, de la Cuesta, Faustino García, Licchelli, Domenico, Perez, Alex Escartin, González, José Luis Salto, Deldem, Marc, Futcher, Stephen R. L., Nelson, Tim, Dvorak, Shawn, Moździerski, Dawid, Kotysz, Krzysztof, Mikołajczyk, Przemysław, Fleming, George, Phillips, Mark, Vale, Tony, Öğmen, Yenal, Dubois, Franky, Rolfe, Samantha M., Campbell, David A., Eggenstein, Heinz-Bernd, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, Heald, Michael A., Lewin, Pablo, Rose, Adam C., Stone, Geoffrey, Crow, Martin Valentine, Dawes, Simon Francis, OKeeffe, Derek, Popowicz, Adam, Bernacki, Krzysztof, Malcher, Andrzej, Lasota, Slawomir, Fiolka, Jerzy, Dustor, Adam, Vajpayee, Amritanshu, Devine, Pat, Kolb, Matthias, Marquette, Jean-Baptiste, Ruppel, Gregg L., Crowson, Dan R., da Silva, Cledison Marcos, Michaud, Michel, Patel, Aashini L., Dickers, Matthew D., Dover, Lord, Grozdanova, Ivana I., Urquhart, James S., and Lynch, Chris J. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Hunting Outbursting Young Stars (HOYS) project performs long-term, optical, multi-filter, high cadence monitoring of 25 nearby young clusters and star forming regions. Utilising Gaia DR3 data we have identified about 17000 potential young stellar members in 45 coherent astrometric groups in these fields. Twenty one of them are clear young groups or clusters of stars within one kiloparsec and they contain 9143 Gaia selected potential members. The cluster distances, proper motions and membership numbers are determined. We analyse long term (about 7yr) V, R, and I-band light curves from HOYS for 1687 of the potential cluster members. One quarter of the stars are variable in all three optical filters, and two thirds of these have light curves that are symmetric around the mean. Light curves affected by obscuration from circumstellar materials are more common than those affected by accretion bursts, by a factor of 2-4. The variability fraction in the clusters ranges from 10 to almost 100 percent, and correlates positively with the fraction of stars with detectable inner disks, indicating that a lot of variability is driven by the disk. About one in six variables shows detectable periodicity, mostly caused by magnetic spots. Two thirds of the periodic variables with disk excess emission are slow rotators, and amongst the stars without disk excess two thirds are fast rotators - in agreement with rotation being slowed down by the presence of a disk., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS, 1 table, 9 figures
- Published
- 2024
44. OGHReS: Star formation in the Outer Galaxy ($\ell = 250^\circ$-$280^\circ$)
- Author
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Urquhart, J. S., König, C., Colombo, D., Karska, A., Wyrowski, F., Menten, K. M., Moore, T. J. T., Brand, J., Elia, D., Giannetti, A., Leurini, S., Figueira, M., Lee, M. -Y., and Dumke, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have used data from the Outer Galaxy High-Resolution Survey (OGHReS) to refine the velocities, distances, and physical properties of a large sample of 3584 clumps detected in far infrared/submillimetre emission in the HiGAL survey located in the $\ell = 250^\circ-280^\circ$ region of the Galactic plane. Using $^{12}$CO and $^{13}$CO spectra, we have determined reliable velocities to 3412 clumps (95% of the sample). In comparison to the velocities from the HiGAL catalogue, we find good agreement for 80% of the sample (within 5 km/s). Using the higher resolution and sensitivity of OGHReS has allowed us to correct the velocity for 632 clumps and provide velocities for 687 clumps for which no velocity had been previously allocated. The velocities are used with a rotation curve to refine the distances to the clumps and to calculate the clumps' properties using a distance-dependent gas-to-dust ratio. We have determined reliable physical parameters for 3200 outer Galaxy dense clumps (~90% of the HiGAL sources in the region). We find a trend of decreasing luminosity-to-mass ratio with increasing Galactocentric distance, suggesting the star formation efficiency is lower in the outer Galaxy or that it is resulting in more lower mass stars than in the inner Galaxy. We also find a similar surface density for protostellar clumps located in the inner and outer Galaxy, revealing that the surface density requirements for star formation are the same across the Galactic disc., Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication by MNRAS
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
45. Fear of cancer recurrence is associated with higher primary care use after cancer treatment: a survey-administrative health data linkage study
- Author
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Urquhart, Robin, Kendell, Cynthia, and Lethbridge, Lynn
- Published
- 2025
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46. Efficacy of non-surgical, non-pharmacological treatments for congenital muscular torticollis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
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Joyaa B. Antares, Mark A. Jones, Nga Ting Natalie Chak, Yuan Chi, Hong Li, Mingdi Li, Eva Y. W. Chan, Tracy Mui Kwan Chen, Crystal Man Ying Lee, and Donna M. Urquhart
- Subjects
Conservative treatment ,Safety ,Infant ,Manual therapy ,Electrophysical agents ,Traditional Chinese Massage ,Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,RC925-935 - Abstract
Abstract Background Congenital Muscular Torticollis (CMT) is the third most common musculoskeletal condition in infancy, and if untreated can lead to significant disability. While a range of conservative treatments are commonly used in the management of CMT, an understanding of their efficacy and safety is limited. This systematic review and meta-analysis, without language or discipline restriction, was conducted to address this knowledge gap. Methods Electronic searches of CENTRAL, PubMed, 22 other electronic databases, three trials registers and Google Scholar, were conducted for randomised controlled trials, which examined any non-surgical, non-pharmacological interventions, including but not limited to manual treatments, movement therapy, acupuncture, adjunctive therapies and physical support, in children aged 0 to 5 years with CMT. Two reviewers independently assessed the risk of bias of the included studies using the Cochrane Risk of bias 1 tool, rated their certainty of evidence using grading of recommendations assessment, development and evaluation (GRADE) framework, and performed random-effects meta-analyses. Results One hundred studies (80 from China) involving 8125 participants published between 1990 and 2023 were included. Adding manual therapy to an active control resulted in short-term improvements in passive cervical rotation (odds ratio (OR) 9.79, 95%CI 4.26,22.50), passive cervical lateroflexion (OR 2.66, 95%CI 1.17,6.04), active cervical rotation (OR 3.94, 95%CI 1.08,14.35), symmetric head posture (OR 4.55, 95%CI 2.57,8.05), sternocleidomastoid tumour thickness (mean difference (MD) -2.12 mm, 95%CI -2.98,-1.26) and development of symmetrical movement (standardised MD -0.70, 95%CI -0.95,-0.45). The addition of an electrophysical agent to an active control reduced sternocleidomastoid tumour thickness (MD -2.03 mm, 95%CI -2.67,-1.39) and optimised Tuina reduced tumour thickness more than traditional Tuina (MD -1.20 mm, 95%CI -1.80,-0.59). Adverse events were uncommon but poorly reported, with 71 (71%) of studies providing no data. Study heterogeneity limited pooling of data for meta-analysis, and there was very low to low certainty evidence for all results, due to high risk of bias, small sample sizes and study heterogeneity. Conclusions This review found that non-surgical, non-pharmacological treatments may be effective for CMT, but the certainty of evidence is very low to low. These findings are important in informing clinical guidelines and management for CMT and highlight an urgent need for large definitive trials that address the limitations of current studies. Protocol registration Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (No.: CD012987).
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- 2025
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47. Envisioning sustainable oral health through effective advocacy
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Manu Raj Mathur, Ankita Shashikant Bhosale, Stephen N. Abel, Julian Fisher, Stefan Listl, Alonso Carrasco-Labra, Olivia Urquhart, and Michael Glick
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Advocacy ,Oral health ,Stakeholders ,Health policy ,Access ,Health economics ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract In recent years, global commitments have endeavored to reduce the burden of oral diseases. To maintain this momentum, effective advocacy for sustainable oral health is needed to raise public awareness, garner support, and guide policy makers. However, there has been limited use of evidence-based frameworks and approaches to design and measure the impact of oral health advocacy efforts. The 2nd Global Oral Health Forum (GOHF II) was hosted in April 2024 over a 2-day period to reflect on and discuss effective advocacy approaches and strategies for sustainable oral health. Four thematic sessions were organized around advocacy including health policies, health economics, patients, and planetary health. Each session featured eminent transdisciplinary speakers followed by group discussions centered around ideas, experiences, and perspectives from forum participants. The outcome of the forum was a compilation of ten actionable recommendations for moving forward with effective advocacy in oral health. These recommendations are envisioned to help build and strengthen coalitions of like-minded stakeholders in and outside the oral health community to advocate for policies that support sustainable oral health and equitable access to oral health care.
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- 2025
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48. Stripping the Urban Landscape
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Urquhart, Alvin W.
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- 2014
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49. The Geographic Diffusion of Modern Science: 1600-1863
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Urquhart, Alvin W.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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50. Density distributions, magnetic field structures and fragmentation in high-mass star formation
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Beuther, H., Gieser, C., Soler, J. D., Zhang, Q., Rao, R., Semenov, D., Henning, Th., Pudritz, R., Peters, T., Klaassen, P., Beltran, M. T., Palau, A., Moeller, T., Johnston, K. G., Zinnecker, H., Urquhart, J., Kuiper, R., Ahmadi, A., Sanchez-Monge, A., Feng, S., Leurini, S., and Ragan, S. E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Methods: Observing the large pc-scale Stokes I mm dust continuum emission with the IRAM 30m telescope and the intermediate-scale (<0.1pc) polarized submm dust emission with the Submillimeter Array toward a sample of 20 high-mass star-forming regions allows us to quantify the dependence of the fragmentation behaviour of these regions depending on the density and magnetic field structures. Results: We infer density distributions n~r^{-p} of the regions with typical power-law slopes p around ~1.5. There is no obvious correlation between the power-law slopes of the density structures on larger clump scales (~1pc) and the number of fragments on smaller core scales (<0.1pc). Comparing the large-scale single-dish density profiles to those derived earlier from interferometric observations at smaller spatial scales, we find that the smaller-scale power-law slopes are steeper, typically around ~2.0. The flattening toward larger scales is consistent with the star-forming regions being embedded in larger cloud structures that do not decrease in density away from a particular core. Regarding the magnetic field, for several regions it appears aligned with filamentary structures leading toward the densest central cores. Furthermore, we find different polarization structures with some regions exhibiting central polarization holes whereas other regions show polarized emission also toward the central peak positions. Nevertheless, the polarized intensities are inversely related to the Stokes I intensities. We estimate magnetic field strengths between ~0.2 and ~4.5mG, and we find no clear correlation between magnetic field strength and the fragmentation level of the regions. Comparison of the turbulent to magnetic energies shows that they are of roughly equal importance in this sample. The mass-to-flux ratios range between ~2 and ~7, consistent with collapsing star-forming regions., Comment: Accepted for Astronomy & Astrophysics, 14 pages, 14 figures plus appendices, also download option at https://www2.mpia-hd.mpg.de/homes/beuther/papers.html
- Published
- 2023
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