32,765 results on '"Crawford S"'
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2. Ralph Ronald Crawford s New Book, 'Twisted Tales: Growing Up and Old in the Mountains of Montana,' is a Witty Collection of Stories from the Author s Outdoorsy Upbringing
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Books ,General interest - Abstract
India, May 1 -- Ralph Ronald Crawford, a native Montanan with a passion for the outdoors, has completed his new book, Twisted Tales: Growing Up and Old in the Mountains [...]
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- 2023
3. The NEWS-G detector at SNOLAB
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Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Caron, J. F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J. M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Garrah, C., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Kwon, L., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Martin, R. D., Mols, J. P., Muraz, J. F., Nikolopoulos, K., O'Brien, P., Piro, M. C., Rowe, N., Santos, D., Samuleev, P., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. Vazquez deSola, Vidal, M., and Zampaolo, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The New Experiments With Spheres-Gas (NEWS-G) collaboration intends to achieve $\mathrm{sub-GeV/c^{2}}$ Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs) detection using Spherical Proportional Counters (SPCs). SPCs are gaseous detectors relying on ionization with a single ionization electron energy threshold. The latest generation of SPC for direct dark matter searches has been installed at SNOLAB in Canada in 2021. This article details the different processes involved in the fabrication of the NEWS-G experiment. Also outlined in this paper are the mitigation strategies, measurements of radioactivity of the different components, and estimations of induced background event rates that were used to quantify and address detector backgrounds., Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, 5 tables, to be published
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- 2022
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4. Coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering: Terrestrial and astrophysical applications
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Abdullah, M., Abele, H., Akimov, D., Angloher, G., Aristizabal-Sierra, D., Augier, C., Balantekin, A. B., Balogh, L., Barbeau, P. S., Baudis, L., Baxter, A. L., Beaufort, C., Beaulieu, G., Belov, V., Bento, A., Berge, L., Bernardi, I. A., Billard, J., Bolozdynya, A., Bonhomme, A., Bres, G., Bret, J-. L., Broniatowski, A., Brossard, A., Buck, C., Cadeddu, M., Calvo, M., Canonica, L., Cappella, F., Cardani, L., Casali, N., Cazes, A., Cerulli, R., Chaize, D., Chang, C., Chapellier, M., Chaplinsky, L., Chemin, G., Chen, R., Colantoni, I., Colas, J., Coloma, P., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Cruciani, A., Fard, A. Dastgheibi, De Jesus, M., de Marcillac, P., De Romeri, V., del Castello, G., del GalloRoccagiovine, M., Delicato, D., Demarteau, M., Deng, Y., Dent, J. B., Denton, P. B., Dering, K., Doblhammer, A., Dordei, F., Dorer, S., Dumoulin, L., Dunford, D., Dutta, B., Erhart, A., Exshaw, O., Ferriol, S., Figueroa-Feliciano, E., Filippini, J. B., Flores, L . J., Formaggio, J. A., Friedl, M., Fuard, S., Gao, F., Garai, A., Garces, E. A., Gascon, J., Gehrlein, J., Gerbier, G., Ghete, V. M., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Giuliani, A., Giunti, C., Gorel, P., Goupy, C., Goupy, J., Goy, C., Green, M. P., Gros, M., Guerin, C., Guidi, V., Guillaudin, O., Guy, E., Ha, C., Hauff, D., Hakenmuller, J., Harrington, P. M., Hedges, S., Heine, S. T., Hertel, S., Heusch, M., Hoarau, C., Hoferichter, M., Hoppe, E. W., Hong, Z., Horiuchi, S., Huber, P., Ianigro, J. C., Jachowicz, N., Jericha, E., Jin, Y., Johnston, J. P., Juillard, A., Katsioulas, I., Kazarcev, S., Kaznacheeva, M., Kelly, F., Kelly, K. J., Kim, D., Kinast, A., Klinkenberg, L., Kluck, H., Knights, P., Ko, Y. J., Kosmas, T. S., Kwon, L., Lamblin, J., Lang, R. F., Langenkamper, A., Langrock, S., Lasserre, T., Lattaud, H., Lautridou, P., Lee, H. S., Lenardo, B. G., Lhuillier, D., Li, M., Li, S. C., Li, Y. F., Li, Z., Lindner, M., Liu, J., Loomba, D., Lubashevskiy, A., Machado, P. A. N., Mancuso, M., Maneschg, W., Markoff, D. M., Marnieros, S., Martin, R., Martin, R. D., Mauri, B., Mayer, D. W., Mazzolari, A., Mazzucato, E., Menendez, J., Minet, J., Miranda, O. G., Misiak, D., Mols, J. -P., Monfardini, A., Mounier, F., Muraz, J. F., Neep, T., Neilson, R., Newby, J., Newstead, J. L., Neyrial, H., Ni, K., Nikolopoulos, K., Nones, C., Norcini, D., Pandey, V., O'Brien, P., O'Hare, C. A. J., Oberauer, L., Oliver, W., Olivieri, E., Onillon, A., Oriol, C., Ortmann, T., Owen, R., Palladino, K. J., Papoulias, D. K., Park, J. C., Parno, D. S., Patel, P. K., Pattavina, L., Peinado, E., Perbet, E., Peters, L., Petricca, F., Pinckney, H. D., Piro, M. -C., Ponomarev, D., Poda, D., Potzel, W., Probst, F., Pucci, F., Rarbi, F., Rapp, R., Ray, H., Real, J. -S., Reindl, F., Rich, G. C., Ricol, J. S., Rink, T., Redon, T., Rogly, R., Robert, A., Rothe, J., Rozov, S., Rozova, I., Salagnac, T., Garcia, E. Sanchez, Garcia, G. Sanchez, Sanders, O., Sanglard, V., Santos, D., Sarkis, Y., Savu, V., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Schermer, N., Schieck, J., Schmidt, B., Schonert, S., Scholberg, K., Schwenk, A., Schwertner, C., Scola, L., Shevchik, Ye., Shin, S., Sibille, V., Shoemaker, I. M., Snowden-Ifft, D. P., Soldner, T., Soum, G., Spooner, N. J. C., Stachurska, J., Stodolsky, L., Strauss, R., Strigari, L. E., Stutz, A., Suh, B. D., Suhonen, J., Tabrizi, Z., Takhistov, V., Thompson, A., Tomei, C., Tortola, M., Tripathi, M., Vagneron, L., Valle, J. W. F., Mirbach, K. v., Van De Ponteseele, W., Vignati, M., Vivier, M., Fernandez, F. Vazquez de Sola, Vezzu, F., Vidal, M., Wagner, V., Walker, J. W., Ward, R., Wex, A., Winslow, L., Wong, H. T., Wood, M. H., Xu, J., Yang, L., Yakushev, E., Zampaolo, M., Zettlemoyer, J., Zhang, Y. Y., and Zinatulina, D.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Coherent elastic neutrino-nucleus scattering (CE$\nu$NS) is a process in which neutrinos scatter on a nucleus which acts as a single particle. Though the total cross section is large by neutrino standards, CE$\nu$NS has long proven difficult to detect, since the deposited energy into the nucleus is $\sim$ keV. In 2017, the COHERENT collaboration announced the detection of CE$\nu$NS using a stopped-pion source with CsI detectors, followed up the detection of CE$\nu$NS using an Ar target. The detection of CE$\nu$NS has spawned a flurry of activities in high-energy physics, inspiring new constraints on beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics, and new experimental methods. The CE$\nu$NS process has important implications for not only high-energy physics, but also astrophysics, nuclear physics, and beyond. This whitepaper discusses the scientific importance of CE$\nu$NS, highlighting how present experiments such as COHERENT are informing theory, and also how future experiments will provide a wealth of information across the aforementioned fields of physics., Comment: contribution to Snowmasss 2021. Contact authors: P. S. Barbeau, R. Strauss, L. E. Strigari
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- 2022
5. EXCESS workshop: Descriptions of rising low-energy spectra
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Adari, P., Aguilar-Arevalo, A., Amidei, D., Angloher, G., Armengaud, E., Augier, C., Balogh, L., Banik, S., Baxter, D., Beaufort, C., Beaulieu, G., Belov, V., Gal, Y. Ben, Benato, G., Benoît, A., Bento, A., Bergé, L., Bertolini, A., Bhattacharyya, R., Billard, J., Bloch, I. M., Botti, A., Breier, R., Bres, G., Bret, J-. L., Broniatowski, A., Brossard, A., Bucci, C., Bunker, R., Cababie, M., Calvo, M., Camus, P., Cancelo, G., Canonica, L., Cappella, F., Cardani, L., Caron, J. -F., Casali, N., del Castello, G., Cazes, A., Cerulli, R., Vergara, B. A. Cervantes, Chaize, D., Chapellier, M., Chaplinsky, L., Charlieux, F., Chaudhuri, M., Chavarria, A. E., Chemin, G., Chen, R., Chen, H., Chierchie, F., Colantoni, I., Colas, J., Cooley, J., Coquillat, J. -M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Crisler, M., Cruciani, A., Cushman, P., D'Addabbo, A., D'Olivo, J. C., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., De Jésus, M., Deng, Y., Dent, J. B., Depaoli, E. L., Dering, K., Dharani, S., Di Lorenzo, S., Drlica-Wagner, A., Dumoulin, L., Durnford, D., Dutta, B., Einfalt, L., Erb, A., Erhart, A., Essig, R., Estrada, J., Etzion, E., Exshaw, O., Favela-Perez, F., Feilitzsch, F. v., Moroni, G. Fernandez, Iachellini, N. Ferreiro, Ferriol, S., Fichtinger, S., Figueroa-Feliciano, E., Filippini, J. -B., Filosofov, D., Formaggio, J. A., Friedl, M., Fuard, S., Fuchs, D., Fuss, A., Gaïor, R., Garai, A., Garrah, C., Gascon, J., Gerbier, G., Ghaith, M., Ghete, V. M., Gift, D., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Giuliani, A., Gorel, P., Gorla, P., Goupy, C., Goupy, J., Goy, C., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guardincerri, Y., Guerin, C., Guidi, V., Guillaudin, O., Gupta, S., Guy, E., Harrington, P., Hauff, D., Heine, S. T., Hertel, S. A., Holland, S. E., Hong, Z., Hoppe, E. W., Hossbach, T. W., Ianigro, J. -C., Iyer, V., Jastram, A., Ješkovský, M., Jin, Y., Jochum, J., Johnston, J. P., Juillard, A., Karaivanov, D., Kashyap, V., Katsioulas, I., Kazarcev, S., Kaznacheeva, M., Kelly, F., Kilminster, B., Kinast, A., Klinkenberg, L., Kluck, H., Knights, P., Korn, Y., Kraus, H., von Krosigk, B., Kubik, A., Kurinsky, N. A., Lamblin, J., Langenkämper, A., Langrock, S., Lasserre, T., Lattaud, H., Lautridou, P., Lawson, I., Lee, S. J., Lee, M., Letessier-Selvon, A., Lhuillier, D., Li, M., Lin, Y. -T., Lubashevskiy, A., Mahapatra, R., Maludze, S., Mancuso, M., Manthos, I., Marini, L., Marnieros, S., Martin, R. D., Matalon, A., Matthews, J., Mauri, B., Mayer, D. W., Mazzolari, A., Mazzucato, E., Theenhausen, H. Meyer zu, Michielin, E., Minet, J., Mirabolfathi, N., Mirbach, K. v., Misiak, D., Mitra, P., Mocellin, J-. L., Mohanty, B., Mokina, V., Mols, J. -P., Monfardini, A., Mounier, F., Munagavalasa, S., Muraz, J. -F., Navick, X. -F., Neep, T., Neog, H., Neyrial, H., Nikolopoulos, K., Nilima, A., Nones, C., Novati, V., O'Brien, P., Oberauer, L., Olivieri, E., Olmi, M., Onillon, A., Oriol, C., Orly, A., Orrell, J. L., Ortmann, T., Overman, C. T., Pagliarone, C., Palušová, V., Pari, P., Patel, P. K., Pattavina, L., Petricca, F., Piers, A., Pinckney, H. D., Piro, M. -C., Platt, M., Poda, D., Ponomarev, D., Potzel, W., Povinec, P., Pröbst, F., Privitera, P., Pucci, F., Ramanathan, K., Real, J. -S., Redon, T., Reindl, F., Ren, R., Robert, A., Da Rocha, J., Rodrigues, D., Rogly, R., Rothe, J., Rowe, N., Rozov, S., Rozova, I., Saab, T., Saffold, N., Salagnac, T., Sander, J., Sanglard, V., Santos, D., Sarkis, Y., Savu, V., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Schönert, S., Schäffner, K., Schermer, N., Schieck, J., Schmidt, B., Schmiedmayer, D., Schwertner, C., Scola, L., Settimo, M., Shevchik, Ye., Sibille, V., Sidelnik, I., Singal, A., Smida, R., Haro, M. Sofo, Soldner, T., Stachurska, J., Stahlberg, M., Stefanazzi, L., Stodolsky, L., Strandhagen, C., Strauss, R., Stutz, A., Thomas, R., Thompson, A., Tiffenberg, J., Tomei, C., Traina, M., Uemura, S., Usherov, I., Vagneron, L., Van De Pontseele, W., Fernandez, F. A. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., Vignati, M., Virto, A. L., Vivier, M., Volansky, T., Wagner, V., Wagner, F., Walker, J., Ward, R., Watkins, S. L., Wex, A., Willers, M., Wilson, M. J., Winslow, L., Yakushev, E., Yu, T. -T., Zampaolo, M., Zaytsev, A., Zema, V., Zinatulina, D., and Zolotarova, A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Many low-threshold experiments observe sharply rising event rates of yet unknown origins below a few hundred eV, and larger than expected from known backgrounds. Due to the significant impact of this excess on the dark matter or neutrino sensitivity of these experiments, a collective effort has been started to share the knowledge about the individual observations. For this, the EXCESS Workshop was initiated. In its first iteration in June 2021, ten rare event search collaborations contributed to this initiative via talks and discussions. The contributing collaborations were CONNIE, CRESST, DAMIC, EDELWEISS, MINER, NEWS-G, NUCLEUS, RICOCHET, SENSEI and SuperCDMS. They presented data about their observed energy spectra and known backgrounds together with details about the respective measurements. In this paper, we summarize the presented information and give a comprehensive overview of the similarities and differences between the distinct measurements. The provided data is furthermore publicly available on the workshop's data repository together with a plotting tool for visualization., Comment: 44 pages, 20 figures; Editors: A. Fuss, M. Kaznacheeva, F. Reindl, F. Wagner; updated copyright statements and funding information
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- 2022
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6. Measurements of the ionization efficiency of protons in methane
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Collaboration, NEWS-G, Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Caron, J. -F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J. -M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Garrah, C., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Manthos, I., Martin, R. D., Matthews, J., Mols, J. -P., Muraz, J. -F., Neep, T., Nikolopoulos, K., O'Brien, P., Piro, M. -C., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., Ward, R., and Zampaolo, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The amount of energy released by a nuclear recoil ionizing the atoms of the active volume of detection appears "quenched" compared to an electron of the same kinetic energy. This different behavior in ionization between electrons and nuclei is described by the Ionization Quenching Factor (IQF) and it plays a crucial role in direct dark matter searches. For low kinetic energies (below $50~\mathrm{keV}$), IQF measurements deviate significantly from common models used for theoretical predictions and simulations. We report measurements of the IQF for proton, an appropriate target for searches of Dark Matter candidates with a mass of approximately 1 GeV, with kinetic energies in between $2~\mathrm{keV}$ and $13~\mathrm{keV}$ in $100~\mathrm{mbar}$ of methane. We used the Comimac facility in order to produce the motion of nuclei and electrons of controlled kinetic energy in the active volume, and a NEWS-G SPC to measure the deposited energy. The Comimac electrons are used as reference to calibrate the detector with 7 energy points. A detailed study of systematic effects led to the final results well fitted by $\mathrm{IQF}~(E_K)= E_K^\alpha~/~(\beta + E_K^\alpha)$ with $\alpha=0.70\pm0.08$ and $\beta = 1.32\pm0.17$. In agreement with some previous works in other gas mixtures, we measured less ionization energy than predicted from SRIM simulations, the difference reaching $33\%$ at $2~\mathrm{keV}$, Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures
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- 2022
7. Crawford, S., Hadley, D. M. & Shepherd, G. (eds.) (2018). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Childhood
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Baxter, Jane Eva and Halcrow, Siân
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Rezension zu: Crawford, S., Hadley, D. M. & Shepherd, G. (eds.) (2018). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Childhood. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Hardback and ebook, 784 pages; ISBN 978-0-19-967069-7, Archäologische Informationen, Bd. 42 (2019): Archäologische Informationen
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- 2020
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8. Martin Crawford´s Forest garden
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A walk through Martin Crawford´s beatiful forest garden, a model for resilient, local food growing.
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- 2010
9. Solar Kaluza-Klein axion search with NEWS-G
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collaboration, NEWS-G, Arnaud, Q., Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Caron, J. -F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J. -M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Garrah, C., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Martin, R. D., Mols, J. -P., Muraz, J. -F., Neep, T., Nikolopoulos, K., O'Brien, P., Piro, M. -C., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. A. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., Ward, R., and Zampaolo, M.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Kaluza-Klein (KK) axions appear in theories with extra dimensions as higher mass, significantly shorter lifetime, excitations of the Peccei-Quinn axion. When produced in the Sun, they would remain gravitationally trapped in the solar system, and their decay to a pair of photons could provide an explanation of the solar corona heating problem. A low-density detector would discriminate such a signal from the background, by identifying the separation of the interaction point of the two photons. The NEWS-G collaboration uses large volume Spherical Proportional Counters, gas-filled metallic spheres with a spherical anode in their centre. After observation of a single axionlike event in a 42 day long run with the SEDINE detector, a $90\%$ C.L. upper limit of $g_{a\gamma\gamma}<8.99\cdot10^{-13}\,GeV^{-1}$ is set on the axion-photon coupling for a KK axion density on Earth of $n_{a}=4.07\cdot10^{13}\,m^{-3}$ and two extra dimensions of size $R = 1\,eV^{-1}$., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures. Updated with additional details requested during review for publication in PRD and mild relaxation of final constraint
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- 2021
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10. Quenching factor measurements of neon nuclei in neon gas
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Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Caron, J. -F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J. -M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Fard, A. Dastgheibi, Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Garrah, C., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Kwon, L., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Martin, R. D., Manthos, I., Matthews, J., Mols, J. -P., Muraz, J. -F., Neep, T., Nikolopoulos, K., O'Brien, P., Piro, M. -C., Samuleev, P., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., Ward, R., Zampaolo, M., An, P., Awe, C., Barbeau, P., Hedges, S., Li, L., and Runge, J.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The NEWS-G collaboration uses Spherical Proportional Counters (SPCs) to search for weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs). In this paper, we report the first measurements of the nuclear quenching factor in neon gas at \SI{2}{bar} using an SPC deployed in a neutron beam at the TUNL facility. The energy-dependence of the nuclear quenching factor is modelled using a simple power law: $\alpha$E$_{nr}^{\beta}$; we determine its parameters by simultaneously fitting the data collected with the detector over a range of energies. We measured the following parameters in Ne:CH$_{4}$ at \SI{2}{bar}: $\alpha$ = 0.2801 $\pm$ 0.0050 (fit) $\pm$ 0.0045 (sys) and $\beta$ = 0.0867 $\pm$ 0.020 (fit) $\pm$ 0.006(sys). Our measurements do not agree with expected values from SRIM or Lindhard theory. We demonstrated the feasibility of performing quenching factor measurements at sub-keV energies in gases using SPCs and a neutron beam.
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- 2021
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11. Crawford, S. Cromwell . Hindu Bioethics for the Twenty‐first Century . SUNY Series in Religious Studies. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2003. 256 pp. $62.50 (cloth); $20.45 (paper).
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Perrett, Roy W.
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- 2006
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12. Synergistic potential of Leu 10 -teixobactin and cefepime against multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.
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Koh AJJ, Hussein M, Thombare V, Crawford S, Li J, and Velkov T
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- Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial drug effects, Staphylococcal Infections microbiology, Staphylococcal Infections drug therapy, Humans, Cefepime pharmacology, Anti-Bacterial Agents pharmacology, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Cephalosporins pharmacology, Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus drug effects, Drug Synergism, Biofilms drug effects, Depsipeptides pharmacology, Depsipeptides chemistry
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Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is a significant Gram-positive opportunistic pathogen behind many debilitating infections. β-lactam antibiotics are conventionally prescribed for treating S. aureus infections. However, the adaptability of S. aureus in evolving resistance to multiple β-lactams contributed to the persistence and spread of infections, exemplified in the emergence of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA). In the present study, we investigated the efficacies of the synthetic teixobactin analogue, Leu
10 -teixobactin, combined with the penicillinase-resistant cephalosporin cefepime against MRSA strains. The Leu10 -teixobactin and cefepime combination exerted synergism against most strains tested in broth microdilution assay. Time-kill profiles showed that both Leu10 -teixobactin and cefepime predominantly exhibited synergistic activity, with > 2.0-log10 CFU decrease compared to monotherapy at 24 h. Moreover, biofilm assays revealed a significant inhibition of biofilm production in ATCC™43300 cells treated with sub-MICs of Leu10 -teixobactin and cefepime. Subsequent electron microscopy studies showed more extensive damage with the combination therapy compared to monotherapies, including aberrant bacterial morphology, vesicle formation and substantial lysis, indicating combined damage to the cell wall. Quantitative real-time PCR revealed marked perturbation of genes mecA, sarA, atlA, and icaA, substantiating the apparent mode of combined antibacterial action of both antibiotics against peptidoglycan synthesis and initial biofilm production. Hence, the study highlights the prospective utility of the Leu10 -teixobactin-cefepime combination in treating MRSA infections via β-lactam potentiation., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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13. The $\beta$ Pictoris b Hill sphere transit campaign. Paper I: Photometric limits to dust and rings
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Kenworthy, M. A., Mellon, S. N., Bailey III, J. I., Stuik, R., Dorval, P., Talens, G. -J. J., Crawford, S. R., Mamajek, E. E., Laginja, I., Ireland, M., Lomberg, B., Kuhn, R. B., Snellen, I., Zwintz, K., Kuschnig, R., Kennedy, G. M., Abe, L., Agabi, A., Mekarnia, D., Guillot, T., Schmider, F., Stee, P., de Pra, Y., Buttu, M., Crouzet, N., Kalas, P., Wang, J. J., Stevenson, K., de Mooij, E., Lagrange, A. -M., Lacour, S., Etangs, A. Lecavelier des, Nowak, M., Strøm, P. A., Hui, Z., and Wang, L.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Photometric monitoring of Beta Pictoris in 1981 showed anomalous fluctuations of up to 4% over several days, consistent with foreground material transiting the stellar disk. The subsequent discovery of the gas giant planet Beta Pictoris b and the predicted transit of its Hill sphere to within 0.1 au projected distance of the planet provided an opportunity to search for the transit of a circumplanetary disk in this $21\pm 4$ Myr-old planetary system. Continuous broadband photometric monitoring of Beta Pictoris requires ground-based observatories at multiple longitudes to provide redundancy and to provide triggers for rapid spectroscopic followup. These observatories include the dedicated Beta Pictoris monitoring observatory bRing at Sutherland and Siding Springs, the ASTEP400 telescope at Concordia, and observations from the space observatories BRITE and Hubble Space Telescope. We search the combined light curves for evidence of short period transient events caused by rings and for longer term photometric variability due to diffuse circumplanetary material. We find no photometric event that matches with the event seen in November 1981, and there is no systematic photometric dimming of the star as a function of the Hill sphere radius. We conclude that the 1981 event was not caused by the transit of a circumplanetary disk around Beta Pictoris b. The upper limit on the long term variability of Beta Pictoris places an upper limit of $1.8\times 10^{22}$ g of dust within the Hill sphere. Circumplanetary material is either condensed into a non-transiting disk, is condensed into a disk with moons that has a small obliquity, or is below our detection threshold. This is the first time that a dedicated international campaign has mapped the Hill sphere transit of a gas giant extrasolar planet at 10 au., Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in A&A. Reduced data and reduction scripts on GitHub at https://github.com/mkenworthy/beta_pic_b_hill_sphere_transit
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- 2021
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14. The Evolution of the Luminosity Function for Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies to z=1
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Hunt, L. R., Pisano, D. J., Crawford, S. M., Bershady, M. A., and Wirth, G. D.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) are compact, star-forming galaxies that are rarely observed in the local universe but abundant at z=1. This increase in LCBG number density over cosmic lookback time roughly follows the increase in the star formation rate density of the universe over the same period. We use publicly available data in the COSMOS field to study the evolution of the largest homogeneous sample of LCBGs to date by deriving their luminosity function in four redshift bins over the range $0.1\leq~z\leq1$. We find that over this redshift range, the characteristic luminosity (M$^{*}$) increases by $\sim$0.2 mag, and the number density increases by a factor of four. While LCBGs make up only about $18\%$ of galaxies more luminous than M$_{B}=-$18.5 at $z\sim0.2$, they constitute roughly $54\%$ at z$\sim$0.9. The strong evolution in number density indicates that LCBGs are an important population of galaxies to study in order to better understand the decrease in the star formation rate density of the universe since $z\sim1$., Comment: 19 pages, 12 Figures, Accepted in ApJ
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- 2021
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15. [Review of: A. Crawford, S. Lister (2005) Plural Policing: The Mixed Economy of Visible Patrols in England and Wales]
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Jones, T. and Jones, T.
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- 2007
16. Copper electroplating for background suppression in the NEWS-G experiment
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Collaboration, NEWS-G, Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Bunker, R., Caron, J. -F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J. -M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Fard, A. Dastgheibi, Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Kwon, L., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Martin, R. D., Mols, J. -P., Muraz, J. -F., Navick, X. -F., Neep, T., Nikolopoulos, K., O'Brien, P., Owen, R., Piro, M. -C., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., Ward, R., Zampaolo, M., Anguiano, S. Alcantar, Arnquist, I. J., di Vacri, M. L., Harouaka, K., Kobayashi, K., and Thommasson, K. S.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
New Experiments with Spheres-Gas (NEWS-G) is a dark matter direct detection experiment that will operate at SNOLAB (Canada). Similar to other rare-event searches, the materials used in the detector construction are subject to stringent radiopurity requirements. The detector features a 140-cm diameter proportional counter comprising two hemispheres made from commercially sourced 99.99% pure copper. Such copper is widely used in rare-event searches because it is readily available, there are no long-lived Cu radioisotopes, and levels of non-Cu radiocontaminants are generally low. However, measurements performed with a dedicated 210Po alpha counting method using an XIA detector confirmed a problematic concentration of 210Pb in bulk of the copper. To shield the proportional counter's active volume, a low-background electroforming method was adapted to the hemispherical shape to grow a 500-$\mu$m thick layer of ultra-radiopure copper to the detector's inner surface. In this paper the process is described, which was prototyped at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), USA, and then conducted at full scale in the Laboratoire Souterrain de Modane in France. The radiopurity of the electroplated copper was assessed through Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS). Measurements of samples from the first (second) hemisphere give 68% confidence upper limits of <0.58 $\mu$Bq/kg (<0.24 $\mu$Bq/kg) and <0.26 $\mu$Bq/kg (<0.11 $\mu$Bq/kg) on the 232Th and 238U contamination levels, respectively. These results are comparable to previously reported measurements of electroformed copper produced for other rare-event searches, which were also found to have low concentration of 210Pb consistent with the background goals of the NEWS-G experiment., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables
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- 2020
17. First Cosmology Results using Supernovae Ia from the Dark Energy Survey: Survey Overview, Performance, and Supernova Spectroscopy
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Smith, M, D’Andrea, CB, Sullivan, M, Möller, A, Nichol, RC, Thomas, RC, Kim, AG, Sako, M, Castander, FJ, Filippenko, AV, Foley, RJ, Galbany, L, González-Gaitán, S, Kasai, E, Kirshner, RP, Lidman, C, Scolnic, D, Brout, D, Davis, TM, Gupta, RR, Hinton, SR, Kessler, R, Lasker, J, Macaulay, E, Wolf, RC, Zhang, B, Asorey, J, Avelino, A, Bassett, BA, Calcino, J, Carollo, D, Casas, R, Challis, P, Childress, M, Clocchiatti, A, Crawford, S, Frohmaier, C, Glazebrook, K, Goldstein, DA, Graham, ML, Hoormann, JK, Kuehn, K, Lewis, GF, Mandel, KS, Morganson, E, Muthukrishna, D, Nugent, P, Pan, Y-C, Pursiainen, M, Sharp, R, Sommer, NE, Swann, E, Thomas, BP, Tucker, BE, Uddin, SA, Wiseman, P, Zheng, W, Abbott, TMC, Annis, J, Avila, S, Bechtol, K, Bernstein, GM, Bertin, E, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Cunha, CE, da Costa, LN, Davis, C, De Vicente, J, Diehl, HT, Eifler, TF, Estrada, J, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gaztanaga, E, Gerdes, DW, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hartley, WG, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Hoyle, B, James, DJ, Johnson, MWG, Johnson, MD, Kuropatkin, N, Li, TS, Lima, M, Maia, MAG, March, M, Marshall, JL, Martini, P, Menanteau, F, Miller, CJ, and Miquel, R
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,Type Ia supernovae ,Supernovae ,Cosmology ,Cosmological parameters ,Observational cosmology ,Sky surveys ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics - Abstract
We present details on the observing strategy, data-processing techniques, and spectroscopic targeting algorithms for the first three years of operation for the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN). This five-year program using the Dark Energy Camera mounted on the 4 m Blanco telescope in Chile was designed to discover and follow supernovae (SNe) Ia over a wide redshift range (0.05 < z < 1.2) to measure the equation-of-state parameter of dark energy. We describe the SN program in full: Strategy, observations, data reduction, spectroscopic follow-up observations, and classification. From three seasons of data, we have discovered 12,015 likely SNe, 308 of which have been spectroscopically confirmed, including 251 SNe Ia over a redshift range of 0.017 < z < 0.85. We determine the effective spectroscopic selection function for our sample and use it to investigate the redshiftdependent bias on the distance moduli of SNe Ia we have classified. The data presented here are used for the first cosmology analysis by DES-SN ("DES-SN3YR"), the results of which are given in Dark Energy Survey Collaboration et al. The 489 spectra that are used to define the DES-SN3YR sample are publicly available at https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/sn.
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- 2020
18. Duo charged with murder in Christina Crawford`s death due for joint trial
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Murder -- Cases ,Robbery ,Company legal issue ,Business, international ,Law - Abstract
Two people from Eastern Panhandle are facing murder charges following the August death of a Kearneysville, W.Va., woman.30-year old Mark Wayne Carter Jr., of Bunker Hill, W.Va., and Shannon Brooke [...]
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- 2019
19. Revisiting the pulsational characteristics of the exoplanet host star $\beta$ Pictoris
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Zwintz, K., Reese, D. R., Neiner, C., Pigulski, A., Kuschnig, R., Muellner, M., Zieba, S., Abe, L., Guillot, T., Handler, G., Kenworthy, M., Stuik, R., Moffat, A. F. J., Popowicz, A., Rucinski, S. M., Wade, G. A., Weiss, W. W., Bailey III, J. I., Crawford, S., Ireland, M., Kuhn, R., Lomberg, B., Mamajek, E. E., Mellon, S. N., and Talens, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Exoplanet properties crucially depend on their host stars' parameters. In case the exoplanet host star shows pulsations, asteroseismology can be used for an improved description of the stellar parameters. We aim to revisit the pulsational properties of beta Pic and identify its pulsation modes from normalised amplitudes in five different passbands. We also investigate the potential presence of a magnetic field. We conduct a frequency analysis using three seasons of BRITE-Constellation observations in the BRITE blue and red filters, the ~620-day long bRing light curve and the nearly 8-year long SMEI photometric time series. We calculate normalised amplitudes using all passbands including previously published values obtained from ASTEP observations. We investigate the magnetic properties of beta Pic using spectropolarimetric observations conducted with the HARPSpol instrument. Using 2D rotating models, we fit the normalised amplitudes and frequencies through Monte Carlo Markov Chains. We identify 15 pulsation frequencies in the range from 34 to 55c/d, where two display clear amplitude variability. We use the normalised amplitudes in up to five passbands to identify the modes as three l = 1, six l = 2 and six l = 3 modes. beta Pic is shown to be non-magnetic with an upper limit of the possible undetected dipolar field of 300G. Multiple fits to the frequencies and normalised amplitudes are obtained including one with a near equator-on inclination for beta Pic, which corresponds to our expectations based on the orbital inclination of beta Pic b and the orientation of the circumstellar disk. This solution leads to a rotation rate of 27% of the Keplerian break-up velocity, a radius of 1.497+-0.025Rsun, and a mass of 1.797+-0.035Msun. The ~2% errors in radius and mass do not account for uncertainties in the models and a potentially erroneous mode-identification., Comment: 26 pages, 19 figures, accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2019
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20. MASCARA-4 b/bRing-1b - A retrograde hot Jupiter around the bright A3V star HD 85628
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Dorval, P., Talens, G. J. J., Otten, G. P. P. L., Brahm, R., Jordán, A., Vanzi, L., Zapata, A., Henry, T., Paredes, L., Jao, W. C., James, H., Hinojosa, R., Bakos, G. A., Csubry, Z., Bhatti, W., Suc, V., Osip, D., Mamajek, E. E., Mellon, S. N., Wyttenbach, A., Stuik, R., Kenworthy, M., Bailey, J., Ireland, M., Crawford, S., Lomberg, B., Kuhn, R., and Snellen, I.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper, we aim to characterize a transiting planetary candidate in the southern skies found in the combined MASCARA and bRing data sets of HD 85628, an A3V star of V = 8.2 mag at a distance 172 pc, to confirm its planetary nature. The candidate was originally detected in data obtained jointly with the MASCARA and bRing instruments using a BLS search for transit events. Further photometry was taken by the 0.7 m CHAT, and radial velocity measurements with FIDEOS on the ESO 1.0 m Telescope. High resolution spectra during a transit were taken with CHIRON on the SMARTS 1.5 m telescope to target the Doppler shadow of the candidate. We confirm the existence of a hot Jupiter transiting the bright A3V star HD 85628, which we co-designate as MASCARA-4b and bRing-1b. It is in a 2.824 day orbit, with an estimated planet radius of $1.53 ^{0.07}_{0.04}$ $R_{\rm{Jup}}$ and an estimated planet mass of $3.1 \pm 0.9$ $M_{\rm{Jup}}$, putting it well within the planet mass regime.. The CHAT observations show a partial transit, reducing the probability that the transit was around a faint background star. The CHIRON observations show a clear Doppler shadow, implying that the transiting object is in a retrograde orbit with $|\lambda| = 247.5 \pm 1.6 $\textdegree. The planet orbits at at a distance of 0.047 $\pm$ 0.004 AU from the star and has a zero-albedo equilibrium temperature of 2100 $\pm$ 100 K. In addition, we find that HD 85628 has a previously unreported stellar companion star in the Gaia DR2 data demonstrating common proper motion and parallax at 4.3 arcsecond separation (projected separation $\sim$740 AU), and with absolute magnitude consistent with being a K/M dwarf., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted to A&A
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- 2019
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21. Precision laser-based measurements of the single electron response of SPCs for the NEWS-G light dark matter search experiment
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Collaboration, NEWS-G, Arnaud, Q., Bard, J. -P., Brossard, A., Chapellier, M., Clark, M., Crawford, S., Corcoran, E. C., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., Dering, K., Di Stefano, P., Durnford, D., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Kamaha, A., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, D. G., Knights, P., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Martin, R. D., McDonald, J., Muraz, J. -F., Mols, J. -P., Nikolopoulos, K., Piquemal, F., Piro, M. -C., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Fernandez, F. Vazquez de Sola, Vidal, M., and Zampaolo, M.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Spherical Proportional Counters (SPCs) are a novel gaseous detector technology employed by the NEWS-G low-mass dark matter search experiment for their high sensitivity to single electrons from ionization. In this paper, we report on the first characterization of the single electron response of SPCs with unprecedented precision, using a UV-laser calibration system. The experimental approach and analysis methodology are presented along with various direct applications for the upcoming next phase of the experiment at SNOLAB. These include the continuous monitoring of the detector response and electron drift properties during dark matter search runs, as well as the experimental measurement of the trigger threshold efficiency. We measure a mean ionization energy of $\mathrm{W}=27.6\pm0.2~\mathrm{eV}$ in $\mathrm{Ne + CH_4}$ $(2\%)$ for 2.8 keV X-rays, and demonstrate the feasibility of performing similar precision measurements at sub-keV energies for future gas mixtures to be used for dark matter searches at SNOLAB., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. D
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- 2019
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22. Large Synoptic Survey Telescope White Paper; The Case for Matching U-band on Deep Drilling Fields
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Holwerda, B. W., Baker, A., Blyth, S., Kannappan, S., Obreschkow, D., Ravindranath, S., Elson, E., Vaccari, M., Crawford, S., Bershady, M., Hathi, N., Maddox, N., Taylor, Russ, Jarvis, Matt, and Bridge, Joanna
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
U-band observations with the LSST have yet to be fully optimized in cadence. The straw man survey design is a simple coverage of the medium-deep-fast survey. Here we argue that deep coverage of the four deep drilling fields (XMM-LSS, ECDFS, ELAIS-S1 and COSMOS) has a much higher scientific return, given that these are also the target of the Southern Hemisphere's Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder, the MeerKAT specifically, deep radio observations., Comment: LSST White paper
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- 2018
23. First Cosmology Results Using Type Ia Supernovae From the Dark Energy Survey: Survey Overview and Supernova Spectroscopy
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D'Andrea, C. B., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Nichol, R. C., Thomas, R. C., Kim, A. G., Möller, A., Sako, M., Castander, F. J., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Galbany, L., González-Gaitán, S., Kasai, E., Kirshner, R. P., Lidman, C., Scolnic, D., Brout, D., Davis, T. M., Gupta, R. R., Hinton, S. R., Kessler, R., Lasker, J., Macaulay, E., Wolf, R. C., Zhang, B., Asorey, J., Avelino, A., Bassett, B. A., Calcino, J., Carollo, D., Casas, R., Challis, P., Childress, M., Clocchiatti, A., Crawford, S., Glazebrook, K., Goldstein, D. A., Graham, M. L., Hoormann, J. K., Kuehn, K., Lewis, G. F., Mandel, K. S., Morganson, E., Muthukrishna, D., Nugent, P., Pan, Y. -C., Pursiainen, M., Sharp, R., Sommer, N. E., Swann, E., Tucker, B. E., Uddin, S. A., Wiseman, P., Zheng, W., Abbott, T. M. C., Annis, J., Avila, S., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Cunha, C. E., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., De Vicente, J., Diehl, H. T., Eifler, T. F., Estrada, J., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gschwend, J., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Hoyle, B., James, D. J., Johnson, M. W. G., Johnson, M. D., Kuropatkin, N., Li, T. S., Lima, M., Maia, M. A. G., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Neilsen, E., Ogando, R. L. C., Plazas, A. A., Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., and Wester, W.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present spectroscopy from the first three seasons of the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN). We describe the supernova spectroscopic program in full: strategy, observations, data reduction, and classification. We have spectroscopically confirmed 307 supernovae, including 251 type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) over a redshift range of $0.017 < z < 0.85$. We determine the effective spectroscopic selection function for our sample, and use it to investigate the redshift-dependent bias on the distance moduli of SNe Ia we have classified. We also provide a full overview of the strategy, observations, and data products of DES-SN, which has discovered 12,015 likely supernovae during these first three seasons. The data presented here are used for the first cosmology analysis by DES-SN ('DES-SN3YR'), the results of which are given in DES Collaboration (2018a)., Comment: 25 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables. Submitted to AJ
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- 2018
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24. First Cosmology Results using Type Ia Supernova from the Dark Energy Survey: Simulations to Correct Supernova Distance Biases
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Kessler, R., Brout, D., D'Andrea, C. B., Davis, T. M., Hinton, S. R., Kim, A. G., Lasker, J., Lidman, C., Macaulay, E., Möller, A., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Zhang, B., Andersen, P., Asorey, J., Avelino, A., Calcino, J., Carollo, D., Challis, P., Childress, M., Clocchiatti, A., Crawford, S., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Glazebrook, K., Hoormann, J. K., Kasai, E., Kirshner, R. P., Lewis, G. F., Mandel, K. S., March, M., Morganson, E., Muthukrishna, D., Nugent, P., Pan, Y. -C., Sommer, N. E., Swann, E., Thomas, R. C., Tucker, B. E., Uddin, S. A., Abbott, T. M. C., Allam, S., Annis, J., Avila, S., Banerji, M., Bechtol, K., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Davis, C., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Eifler, T. F., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gerdes, D. W., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Johnson, M. W. G., Johnson, M. D., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Li, T. S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Menanteau, F., Miller, C. J., Miquel, R., Nord, B., Plazas, A. A., Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Schindler, R., Schubnell, M., Serrano, S., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Soares-Santos, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Walker, A. R., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe catalog-level simulations of Type Ia supernova (SN~Ia) light curves in the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN), and in low-redshift samples from the Center for Astrophysics (CfA) and the Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP). These simulations are used to model biases from selection effects and light curve analysis, and to determine bias corrections for SN~Ia distance moduli that are used to measure cosmological parameters. To generate realistic light curves, the simulation uses a detailed SN~Ia model, incorporates information from observations (PSF, sky noise, zero point), and uses summary information (e.g., detection efficiency vs. signal to noise ratio) based on 10,000 fake SN light curves whose fluxes were overlaid on images and processed with our analysis pipelines. The quality of the simulation is illustrated by predicting distributions observed in the data. Averaging within redshift bins, we find distance modulus biases up to 0.05~mag over the redshift ranges of the low-z and DES-SN samples. For individual events, particularly those with extreme red or blue color, distance biases can reach 0.4~mag. Therefore, accurately determining bias corrections is critical for precision measurements of cosmological parameters. Files used to make these corrections are available at https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/sn.
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- 2018
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25. Velocity-resolved reverberation mapping of five bright Seyfert 1 galaxies
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De Rosa, G., Fausnaugh, M. M., Grier, C. J., Peterson, B. M., Denney, K. D., Horne, Keith, Bentz, M. C., Ciroi, S., Bonta`, E. Dalla, Joner, M. D., Kaspi, S., Kochanek, C. S., Pogge, R. W., Sergeev, S. G., Vestergaard, M., Adams, S. M., Antognini, J., Salvo, C. Araya, Armstrong, E., Bae, J., Barth, A. J., Beatty, T. G., Bhattacharjee, A., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brown, J. E., Brown, J. S., Brotherton, M. S., Coker, C. T., Clanton, C., Cracco, V., Crawford, S. M., Croxall, K. V., Eftekharzadeh, S., Eracleous, M., Fiorenza, S. L., Frassati, A., Hawkins, K., Henderson, C. B., Holoien, T. W. -S., Hutchison, T., Kellar, J., Kilerci-Eser, E., Kim, S., King, A. L., La Mura, G., Laney, C. D., Li, M., Lochhaas, C., Ma, Z., MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mason, M., McGraw, S. M., Mogren, K., Montouri, C., Moody, J. W., Mosquera, A. M., Mudd, D., Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Nguyen, M. L., Ochner, P., Okhmat, D. N., Onken, C. A., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Penny, M., Poleski, R., Portaluri, E., Prieto, J. -L., Price-Whelan, A. M., Pulatova, N. G., Rafter, S., Roettenbacher, R. M., Romero-Colmenero, E., Runnoe, J., Schimoia, J. S., Shappee, B. J., Sherf, N., Simonian, G. V., Siviero, A., Skowron, D. M., Skowron, J., Somers, G., Spencer, M., Starkey, D. A., Stevens, D. J., Stoll, R., Tamajo, E., Tayar, J., van Saders, J. L., Valenti, S., Villanueva, Jr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Y., Winkler, H., Zastrow, J., Zhu, W., and Zu, Y.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results from a reverberation-mapping campaign undertaken during the first half of 2012, with additional data on one AGN (NGC 3227) from a 2014 campaign. Our main goals are (1) to determine the black hole masses from continuum-Hbeta reverberation signatures, and (2) to look for velocity-dependent time delays that might be indicators of the gross kinematics of the broad-line region. We successfully measure Hbeta time delays and black hole masses for five AGNs, four of which have previous reverberation mass measurements. The values measured here are in agreement with earlier estimates, though there is some intrinsic scatter beyond the formal measurement errors. We observe velocity dependent Hbeta lags in each case, and find that the patterns have changed in the intervening five years for three AGNs that were also observed in 2007., Comment: Accepted for publication on ApJ; 32 pages, 16 figures, 10 tables
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- 2018
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26. Stability of the Broad Line Region Geometry and Dynamics in Arp 151 Over Seven Years
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Pancoast, A., Barth, A. J., Horne, K., Treu, T., Brewer, B. J., Bennert, V. N., Canalizo, G., Gates, E. L., Li, W., Malkan, M. A., Sand, D., Schmidt, T., Valenti, S., Woo, J. H., Clubb, K. I., Cooper, M. C., Crawford, S. M., Honig, S. F., Joner, M. D., Kandrashoff, M. T., Lazarova, M., Nierenberg, A. M., Romero-Colmenero, E., Son, D., Tollerud, E., Walsh, J. L., and Winkler, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Seyfert 1 galaxy Arp 151 was monitored as part of three reverberation mapping campaigns spanning $2008-2015$. We present modeling of these velocity-resolved reverberation mapping datasets using a geometric and dynamical model for the broad line region (BLR). By modeling each of the three datasets independently, we infer the evolution of the BLR structure in Arp 151 over a total of seven years and constrain the systematic uncertainties in non-varying parameters such as the black hole mass. We find that the BLR geometry of a thick disk viewed close to face-on is stable over this time, although the size of the BLR grows by a factor of $\sim 2$. The dynamics of the BLR are dominated by inflow and the inferred black hole mass is consistent for the three datasets, despite the increase in BLR size. Combining the inference for the three datasets yields a black hole mass and statistical uncertainty of $\log_{10}($M$_{\rm BH}/\rm{M}_{\odot})=6.82^{+0.09}_{-0.09}$ with a standard deviation in individual measurements of 0.13 dex., Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2018
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27. Continuum Reverberation Mapping of the Accretion Disks in Two Seyfert 1 Galaxies
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Fausnaugh, M. M., Starkey, D. A., Horne, Keith, Kochanek, C. S., Peterson, B. M., Bentz, M. C., Denney, K. D., Grier, C. J., Grupe, D., Pogge, R. W., DeRosa, G., Adams, S. M., Barth, A. J., Beatty, Thomas G., Bhattacharjee, A., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brown, Jacob E., Brown, Jonathan S., Brotherton, M. S., Coker, C. T., Crawford, S. M., Croxall, K. V., Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Eracleous, Michael, Joner, M. D., Henderson, C. B., Holoien, T. W. -S., Hutchison, T., Kaspi, Shai, Kim, S., King, Anthea L., Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mason, M., Montuori, Carmen, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Nguyen, M. L., Okhmat, D. N., Onken, ChristopherA., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Penny, Matthew T., Poleski, Radosław, Rafter, Stephen, Romero-Colmenero, E., Runnoe, Jessie, Sand, David J., Schimoia, Jaderson S., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Simonian, Gregory V., Somers, Garrett, Spencer, M., Stevens, Daniel J., Tayar, Jamie, Treu, T., Valenti, Stefano, VanSaders, J., VillanuevaJr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Yaniv, Winkler, H., and Zhu, W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present optical continuum lags for two Seyfert 1 galaxies, MCG+08-11-011 and NGC 2617, using monitoring data from a reverberation mapping campaign carried out in 2014. Our light curves span the ugriz filters over four months, with median cadences of 1.0 and 0.6 days for MCG+08-11-011 and NGC\,2617, respectively, combined with roughly daily X-ray and near-UV data from Swift for NGC 2617. We find lags consistent with geometrically thin accretion-disk models that predict a lag-wavelength relation of $\tau \propto \lambda^{4/3}$. However, the observed lags are larger than predictions based on standard thin-disk theory by factors of 3.3 for MCG+08-11-011 and 2.3 for NGC\,2617. These differences can be explained if the mass accretion rates are larger than inferred from the optical luminosity by a factor of 4.3 in MCG+08-11-011 and a factor of 1.3 in NGC\,2617, although uncertainty in the SMBH masses determines the significance of this result. While the X-ray variability in NGC\,2617 precedes the UV/optical variability, the long 2.6 day lag is problematic for coronal reprocessing models., Comment: Accepted to ApJ, please send comments to faus@mit.edu. 24 pages, 8 figures
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- 2018
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28. ALMA observations of lensed Herschel sources : Testing the dark-matter halo paradigm
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Amvrosiadis, A., Eales, S. A., Negrello, M., Marchetti, L., Smith, M. W. L., Bourne, N., Clements, D. L., De Zotti, G., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Furlanetto, C., Ivison, R. J., Maddox, S., Valiante, E., Baes, M., Baker, A. J., Cooray, A., Crawford, S. M., Frayer, D., Harris, A., Michałowski, M. J., Nayyeri, H., Oliver, S., Riechers, D. A., Serjeant, S., and Vaccari, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
With the advent of wide-area submillimeter surveys, a large number of high-redshift gravitationally lensed dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) has been revealed. Due to the simplicity of the selection criteria for candidate lensed sources in such surveys, identified as those with $S_{500\mu m} > 100$ mJy, uncertainties associated with the modelling of the selection function are expunged. The combination of these attributes makes submillimeter surveys ideal for the study of strong lens statistics. We carried out a pilot study of the lensing statistics of submillimetre-selected sources by making observations with the Atacama Large Millimetre Array (ALMA) of a sample of strongly-lensed sources selected from surveys carried out with the Herschel Space Observatory. We attempted to reproduce the distribution of image separations for the lensed sources using a halo mass function taken from a numerical simulation which contains both dark matter and baryons. We used three different density distributions, one based on analytical fits to the halos formed in the EAGLE simulation and two density distributions (Singular Isothermal Sphere (SIS) and SISSA) that have been used before in lensing studies. We found that we could reproduce the observed distribution with all three density distributions, as long as we imposed an upper mass transition of $\sim$$10^{13} M_{\odot}$ for the SIS and SISSA models, above which we assumed that the density distribution could be represented by an NFW profile. We show that we would need a sample of $\sim$500 lensed sources to distinguish between the density distributions, which is practical given the predicted number of lensed sources in the Herschel surveys., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2018
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29. The Astropy Project: Building an inclusive, open-science project and status of the v2.0 core package
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The Astropy Collaboration, Price-Whelan, A. M., Sipőcz, B. M., Günther, H. M., Lim, P. L., Crawford, S. M., Conseil, S., Shupe, D. L., Craig, M. W., Dencheva, N., Ginsburg, A., VanderPlas, J. T., Bradley, L. D., Pérez-Suárez, D., de Val-Borro, M., Aldcroft, T. L., Cruz, K. L., Robitaille, T. P., Tollerud, E. J., Ardelean, C., Babej, T., Bachetti, M., Bakanov, A. V., Bamford, S. P., Barentsen, G., Barmby, P., Baumbach, A., Berry, K. L., Biscani, F., Boquien, M., Bostroem, K. A., Bouma, L. G., Brammer, G. B., Bray, E. M., Breytenbach, H., Buddelmeijer, H., Burke, D. J., Calderone, G., Rodríguez, J. L. Cano, Cara, M., Cardoso, J. V. M., Cheedella, S., Copin, Y., Crichton, D., DÁvella, D., Deil, C., Depagne, É., Dietrich, J. P., Donath, A., Droettboom, M., Earl, N., Erben, T., Fabbro, S., Ferreira, L. A., Finethy, T., Fox, R. T., Garrison, L. H., Gibbons, S. L. J., Goldstein, D. A., Gommers, R., Greco, J. P., Greenfield, P., Groener, A. M., Grollier, F., Hagen, A., Hirst, P., Homeier, D., Horton, A. J., Hosseinzadeh, G., Hu, L., Hunkeler, J. S., Ivezić, Ž., Jain, A., Jenness, T., Kanarek, G., Kendrew, S., Kern, N. S., Kerzendorf, W. E., Khvalko, A., King, J., Kirkby, D., Kulkarni, A. M., Kumar, A., Lee, A., Lenz, D., Littlefair, S. P., Ma, Z., Macleod, D. M., Mastropietro, M., McCully, C., Montagnac, S., Morris, B. M., Mueller, M., Mumford, S. J., Muna, D., Murphy, N. A., Nelson, S., Nguyen, G. H., Ninan, J. P., Nöthe, M., Ogaz, S., Oh, S., Parejko, J. K., Parley, N., Pascual, S., Patil, R., Patil, A. A., Plunkett, A. L., Prochaska, J. X., Rastogi, T., Janga, V. Reddy, Sabater, J., Sakurikar, P., Seifert, M., Sherbert, L. E., Sherwood-Taylor, H., Shih, A. Y., Sick, J., Silbiger, M. T., Singanamalla, S., Singer, L. P., Sladen, P. H., Sooley, K. A., Sornarajah, S., Streicher, O., Teuben, P., Thomas, S. W., Tremblay, G. R., Turner, J. E. H., Terrón, V., van Kerkwijk, M. H., de la Vega, A., Watkins, L. L., Weaver, B. A., Whitmore, J. B., Woillez, J., and Zabalza, V.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Astropy project supports and fosters the development of open-source and openly-developed Python packages that provide commonly-needed functionality to the astronomical community. A key element of the Astropy project is the core package Astropy, which serves as the foundation for more specialized projects and packages. In this article, we provide an overview of the organization of the Astropy project and summarize key features in the core package as of the recent major release, version 2.0. We then describe the project infrastructure designed to facilitate and support development for a broader ecosystem of inter-operable packages. We conclude with a future outlook of planned new features and directions for the broader Astropy project., Comment: Minor changes to author list and title. Comments and feedback welcome through the paper source repository: https://github.com/astropy/astropy-v2.0-paper For more information about Astropy, see http://www.astropy.org/
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- 2018
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30. Man arrested, charged in Georgette Crawford`s stabbing death
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Murder ,Clothing ,Wounds ,Homicide ,Detention ,Business, international ,Law - Abstract
A man allegedly stabbed a woman to death in her house.The suspect, identified as Anthony Nealy, 53, is charged with first degree homicide.Gadsden County Sheriff`s Office contacted the Leon County [...]
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- 2018
31. First cosmology results using Type Ia supernova from the Dark Energy Survey: simulations to correct supernova distance biases
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Kessler, R, Brout, D, D’Andrea, CB, Davis, TM, Hinton, SR, Kim, AG, Lasker, J, Lidman, C, Macaulay, E, Möller, A, Sako, M, Scolnic, D, Smith, M, Sullivan, M, Zhang, B, Andersen, P, Asorey, J, Avelino, A, Calcino, J, Carollo, D, Challis, P, Childress, M, Clocchiatti, A, Crawford, S, Filippenko, AV, Foley, RJ, Glazebrook, K, Hoormann, JK, Kasai, E, Kirshner, RP, Lewis, GF, Mandel, KS, March, M, Morganson, E, Muthukrishna, D, Nugent, P, Pan, Y-C, Sommer, NE, Swann, E, Thomas, RC, Tucker, BE, Uddin, SA, Abbott, TMC, Allam, S, Annis, J, Avila, S, Banerji, M, Bechtol, K, Bertin, E, Brooks, D, Buckley-Geer, E, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Crocce, M, da Costa, LN, Davis, C, De Vicente, J, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Doel, P, Eifler, TF, Flaugher, B, Fosalba, P, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gaztanaga, E, Gerdes, DW, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gutierrez, G, Hartley, WG, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Johnson, MWG, Johnson, MD, Krause, E, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lahav, O, Li, TS, Lima, M, Marshall, JL, Martini, P, Menanteau, F, Miller, CJ, Miquel, R, Nord, B, Plazas, AA, Roodman, A, Sanchez, E, Scarpine, V, Schindler, R, Schubnell, M, Serrano, S, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, and Soares-Santos, M
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Space Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,techniques ,cosmology ,supernovae ,(cosmology:) dark energy ,astro-ph.CO ,astro-ph.IM ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We describe catalogue-level simulations of Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) light curves in the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program (DES-SN) and in low-redshift samples from the Center for Astrophysics (CfA) and the Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP). These simulations are used to model biases from selection effects and light-curve analysis and to determine bias corrections for SN Ia distance moduli that are used to measure cosmological parameters. To generate realistic light curves, the simulation uses a detailed SN Ia model, incorporates information from observations (point spread function, sky noise, zero-point), and uses summary information (e.g. detection efficiency versus signal-to-noise ratio) based on 10 000 fake SN light curves whose fluxes were overlaid on images and processed with our analysis pipelines. The quality of the simulation is illustrated by predicting distributions observed in the data. Averaging within redshift bins, we find distance modulus biases up to 0.05 mag over the redshift ranges of the low-z and DES-SN samples. For individual events, particularly those with extreme red or blue colour, distance biases can reach 0.4 mag. Therefore, accurately determining bias corrections is critical for precision measurements of cosmological parameters. Files used to make these corrections are available at https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/sn.
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- 2019
32. 3D Printed, Do-It-Yourself Ultrasound- Guided Femoral Nerve Block Task Trainer
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Crawford, S, Palacios, P, Nordquist, E, and Monks, S
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- 2019
33. Publicly funded healthcare costs associated with orofacial clefts for children born in Alberta, Canada between 2002 and 2018.
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Bedard T, Lowry RB, Crawford S, Wang TG, Bakal J, Metcalfe A, Harrop AR, Grevers X, and Thomas MA
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- Child, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Alberta epidemiology, Health Care Costs, Cleft Lip epidemiology, Cleft Palate epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Orofacial clefts (OFCs) include cleft palate (CP), cleft lip (CL), and cleft lip with cleft palate (CLP) and require multidisciplinary healthcare services. Alberta, Canada has a publicly funded, universal access healthcare system. This study determined publicly funded healthcare costs for children with an OFC and compared these costs to children without congenital anomalies., Methods: This retrospective population-based cohort analysis used the Alberta Congenital Anomalies Surveillance System to identify children born between 2002 and 2018 with an isolated OFC. They were matched 1:1 to a reference cohort based on sex and year of birth. The study population included 1614 children, from birth to 17 years of age linked to administrative databases to estimate annual inpatient and outpatient costs. Average annual all-cause costs were compared using two-sample independent t tests., Results: The mean total cleft-related costs per patient were highest for children with CLP ($74,138 CAD, standard deviation (SD) $43,447 CAD), followed by CP ($53,062 CAD, SD $74,366 CAD), and CL ($35,288 CAD, SD $49,720 CAD). The mean total all-cause costs per child were statistically significantly higher (p < .001) in children with an OFC ($56,305 CAD, SD $57,744 CAD) compared to children without a congenital anomaly ($18,600 CAD, SD $61,300 CAD)., Conclusions: Despite public health strategies to mitigate risk factors, the trend for OFCs has remained stable in Alberta, Canada for over 20 years. The costs reported are useful to other jurisdictions for comparison, and to families, healthcare professionals, service planners, and policy makers., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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34. Measurements of the ionization efficiency of protons in methane
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Balogh, L., Beaufort, C., Brossard, A., Caron, J.-F., Chapellier, M., Coquillat, J.-M., Corcoran, E. C., Crawford, S., Dastgheibi-Fard, A., Deng, Y., Dering, K., Durnford, D., Garrah, C., Gerbier, G., Giomataris, I., Giroux, G., Gorel, P., Gros, M., Gros, P., Guillaudin, O., Hoppe, E. W., Katsioulas, I., Kelly, F., Knights, P., Langrock, S., Lautridou, P., Manthos, I., Martin, R. D., Matthews, J., Mols, J.-P., Muraz, J.-F., Neep, T., Nikolopoulos, K., O’Brien, P., Piro, M.-C., Santos, D., Savvidis, G., Savvidis, I., Vazquez de Sola Fernandez, F. A., Vidal, M., Ward, R., and Zampaolo, M.
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- 2022
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35. Follow up of GW170817 and its electromagnetic counterpart by Australian-led observing programs
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Andreoni, I., Ackley, K., Cooke, J., Acharyya, A., Allison, J. R., Anderson, G. E., Ashley, M. C. B., Baade, D., Bailes, M., Bannister, K., Beardsley, A., Bessell, M. S., Bian, F., Bland, P. A., Boer, M., Booler, T., Brandeker, A., Brown, I. S., Buckley, D., Chang, S. -W., Coward, D. M., Crawford, S., Crisp, H., Crosse, B., Cucchiara, A., Cupák, M., de Gois, J. S., Deller, A., Devillepoix, H. A. R., Dobie, D., Elmer, E., Emrich, D., Farah, W., Farrell, T. J., Franzen, T., Gaensler, B. M., Galloway, D. K., Gendre, B., Giblin, T., Goobar, A., Green, J., Hancock, P. J., Hartig, B. A. D., Howell, E. J., Horsley, L., Hotan, A., Howie, R. M., Hu, L., Hu, Y., James, C. W., Johnston, S., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasliwal, M., Keane, E. F., Kenney, D., Klotz, A., Lau, R., Laugier, R., Lenc, E., Li, X., Liang, E., Lidman, C., Luvaul, L. C., Lynch, C., Ma, B., Macpherson, D., Mao, J., McClelland, D. E., McCully, C., Möller, A., Morales, M. F., Morris, D., Murphy, T., Noysena, K., Onken, C. A., Orange, N. B., Oslowski, S., Pallot, D., Paxman, J., Potter, S. B., Pritchard, T., Raja, W., Ridden-Harper, R., Romero-Colmenero, E., Sadler, E. M., Sansom, E. K., Scalzo, R. A., Schmidt, B. P., Scott, S. M., Seghouani, N., Shang, Z., Shannon, R. M., Shao, L., Shara, M. M., Sharp, R., Sokolowski, M., Sollerman, J., Staff, J., Steele, K., Sun, T., Suntzeff, N. B., Tao, C., Tingay, S., Towner, M. C., Thierry, P., Trott, C., Tucker, B. E., Väisänen, P., Krishnan, V. Venkatraman, Walker, M., Wang, L., Wang, X., Wayth, R., Whiting, M., Williams, A., Williams, T., Wolf, C., Wu, C., Wu, X., Yang, J., Yuan, X., Zhang, H., Zhou, J., and Zovaro, H.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The discovery of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave signal has generated follow-up observations by over 50 facilities world-wide, ushering in the new era of multi-messenger astronomy. In this paper, we present follow-up observations of the gravitational wave event GW170817 and its electromagnetic counterpart SSS17a/DLT17ck (IAU label AT2017gfo) by 14 Australian telescopes and partner observatories as part of Australian-based and Australian-led research programs. We report early- to late-time multi-wavelength observations, including optical imaging and spectroscopy, mid-infrared imaging, radio imaging, and searches for fast radio bursts. Our optical spectra reveal that the transient source afterglow cooled from approximately 6400K to 2100K over a 7-day period and produced no significant optical emission lines. The spectral profiles, cooling rate, and photometric light curves are consistent with the expected outburst and subsequent processes of a binary neutron star merger. Star formation in the host galaxy probably ceased at least a Gyr ago, although there is evidence for a galaxy merger. Binary pulsars with short (100 Myr) decay times are therefore unlikely progenitors, but pulsars like PSR B1534+12 with its 2.7 Gyr coalescence time could produce such a merger. The displacement (about 2.2 kpc) of the binary star system from the centre of the main galaxy is not unusual for stars in the host galaxy or stars originating in the merging galaxy, and therefore any constraints on the kick velocity imparted to the progenitor are poor., Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, 15 tables
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- 2017
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36. Reverberation Mapping of PG 0934+013 with the Southern African Large Telescope
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Park, S., Woo, J. -H., Romero-Colmenero, E., Crawford, S. M., Park, D., Cho, H., Jeon, Y., Choi, C., Barth, A. J., Pei, L., Hickox, R. C., Sung, H. -I., and Im, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the variability and time lag measurements of PG 0934+013 based on a photometric and spectroscopic monitoring campaign over a two year period. We obtained 46 epochs of data from the spectroscopic campaign, which was carried out using the Southern African Large Telescope with $\sim$1 week cadence over two sets of 4 month-long observing period, while we obtained 80 epochs of \textit{B}-band imaging data using a few 1-m class telescopes. Due to the seven month gap between the two observing periods, we separately measured the time lags of broad emission lines including H$\beta$, by comparing the emission line light curve with the \textit{B}-band continuum light curve using the cross-correlation function techniques. We determined the H$\beta$ lag, $\tau_{\rm cent} = 8.46^{+2.08}_{-2.14}$ days in the observed-frame based on Year 2 data, while the time lag from Year 1 data was not reliably determined. Using the rms spectrum of Year 2 data, we measured the \Hb\ line dispersion \sigmaline = 668 $\pm$ 44 \kms\ after correcting for the spectral resolution. Adopting a virial factor f = 4.47 from Woo et al. 2015, we determined the black hole mass M$_{BH}$ = $3.13 ^{+0.91} _{-0.93} \times 10^{6}$ \msun based on the \Hb\ time lag and velocity., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, ApJ in press
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- 2017
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37. bRing: An observatory dedicated to monitoring the $\beta$ Pictoris b Hill sphere transit
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Stuik, R., Bailey III, J. I., Dorval, P., Talens, G. J. J., Laginja, I., Mellon, S. N., Lomberg, B. B. D., Crawford, S. M., Ireland, M. J., Mamajek, E. E., and Kenworthy, M. A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims. We describe the design and first light observations from the $\beta$ Pictoris b Ring ("bRing") project. The primary goal is to detect photometric variability from the young star $\beta$ Pictoris due to circumplanetary material surrounding the directly imaged young extrasolar gas giant planet \bpb. Methods. Over a nine month period centred on September 2017, the Hill sphere of the planet will cross in front of the star, providing a unique opportunity to directly probe the circumplanetary environment of a directly imaged planet through photometric and spectroscopic variations. We have built and installed the first of two bRing monitoring stations (one in South Africa and the other in Australia) that will measure the flux of $\beta$ Pictoris, with a photometric precision of $0.5\%$ over 5 minutes. Each station uses two wide field cameras to cover the declination of the star at all elevations. Detection of photometric fluctuations will trigger spectroscopic observations with large aperture telescopes in order to determine the gas and dust composition in a system at the end of the planet-forming era. Results. The first three months of operation demonstrate that bRing can obtain better than 0.5\% photometry on $\beta$ Pictoris in five minutes and is sensitive to nightly trends enabling the detection of any transiting material within the Hill sphere of the exoplanet.
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- 2017
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38. Long-term optical and X-ray variability of the Be/X-ray binary H 1145-619: discovery of an on-going retrograde density wave
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Alfonso-Garzón, J., Fabregat, J., Reig, P., Kajava, J. J. E., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Townsend, L. J., Mas-Hesse, J. M., Crawford, S. M., Kretschmar, P., and Coe, M. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Multiwavelength monitoring of Be/X-ray binaries is crucial to understand the mechanisms producing their outbursts. H 1145-619 is one of these systems, which has recently displayed X-ray activity. We investigate the correlation between the optical emission and the X-ray activity to predict the occurrence of new X-ray outbursts from the inferred state of the circumstellar disc. We have performed a multiwavelength study of H 1145-619 from 1973 to 2017 and present here a global analysis of its variability over the last 40 years. We have used optical spectra from the SAAO, SMARTS and SALT telescopes and optical photometry from INTEGRAL/OMC and ASAS. We also used X-ray observations from INTEGRAL/JEM-X, and IBIS to generate the light curves and combined them with Swift/XRT to extract the X-ray spectra. In addition, we have compiled archival observations and measurements from the literature to complement these data. Comparing the evolution of the optical continuum emission with the Halpha line variability, we have identified three different patterns of optical variability: Global increases and decreases of the optical brightness (observed from 1982 to 1994 and from 2009 to 2017) that can be explained by the dissipation and replenishment of the circumstellar disc, superorbital variations with a period of Psuperorb~590 days (observed in 2002-2009) which seems to be related with the circumstellar disc, and optical outbursts (observed in 1998-1999 and 2002-2005) that we interpret as mass ejections. We have discovered the presence of a retrograde one-armed density wave, which appeared in 2016 and is still present in the circumstellar disc. We have carried out the most complete long-term optical study of the Be/X-ray binary H 1145-619 in correlation with its X-ray activity. We found for the fist time the presence of a retrograde density perturbation in the circumstellar disc of a Be/X-ray binary., Comment: Accepted on 2 September 2017, 13 pages, 12 figures
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- 2017
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39. Star-forming Galaxies in Intermediate Redshift Clusters: Stellar vs. Dynamical Masses of Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies
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Randriamampandry, S. M., Crawford, S. M., Bershady, M. A., Wirth, G. D., and Cress, C. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the stellar masses of the class of star-forming objects known as Luminous Compact Blue Galaxies (LCBGs) by studying a sample of galaxies in the distant cluster MS$~$0451.6-0305 at $z\approx0.54$ with ground-based multicolor imaging and spectroscopy. For a sample of 16 spectroscopically-confirmed cluster LCBGs (colour $B-V < 0.5$, surface brightness $\mu_B < 21$ mag arcsec$^{-2}$, and magnitude $M_B < -18.5$), we measure stellar masses by fitting spectral energy distribution (SED) models to multiband photometry, and compare with dynamical masses (determined from velocity dispersion between 10 $<$ $\sigma_v (\rm km~ s^{-1})$ $<$ 80), we previously obtained from their emission-line spectra. We compare two different stellar population models that measure stellar mass in star-bursting galaxies, indicating correlations between the stellar age, extinction, and stellar mass derived from the two different SED models. The stellar masses of cluster LCBGs are distributed similarly to those of field LCBGs, but the cluster LCBGs show lower dynamical-to-stellar mass ratios ($\rm M_{dyn}/M_{\ast} = 2.6$) than their field LCBG counterparts ($\rm M_{dyn}/M_{\ast}=4.8$), echoing trends noted previously in low-redshift dwarf elliptical galaxies. Within this limited sample, the specific star formation rate declines steeply with increasing mass, suggesting that these cluster LCBGs have undergone vigorous star formation., Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
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40. Swift monitoring of NGC 4151: Evidence for a Second X-ray/UV Reprocessing
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Edelson, R., Gelbord, J., Cackett, E., Connolly, S., Done, C., Fausnaugh, M., Gardner, E., Gehrels, N., Goad, M., Horne, K., McHardy, I., Peterson, B. M., Vaughan, S., Vestergaard, M., Breeveld, A., Barth, A. J., Bentz, M., Bottorff, M., Brandt, W. N., Crawford, S. M., Bonta, E. Dalla, Emmanoulopoulos, D., Evans, P., Jaimes, R. Figuera, Filippenko, A. V., Ferland, G., Grupe, D., Joner, M., Kennea, J., Korista, K. T., Krimm, H. A., Kriss, G., Leonard, D. C., Mathur, S., Netzer, H., Nousek, J., Page, K., Romero-Colmenero, E., Siegel, M., Starkey, D. A., Treu, T., Vogler, H. A., Winkler, H., and Zheng, W.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Swift monitoring of NGC 4151 with ~6 hr sampling over a total of 69 days in early 2016 is used to construct light curves covering five bands in the X-rays (0.3-50 keV) and six in the ultraviolet (UV)/optical (1900-5500 A). The three hardest X-ray bands (>2.5 keV) are all strongly correlated with no measurable interband lag while the two softer bands show lower variability and weaker correlations. The UV/optical bands are significantly correlated with the X-rays, lagging ~3-4 days behind the hard X-rays. The variability within the UV/optical bands is also strongly correlated, with the UV appearing to lead the optical by ~0.5-1 day. This combination of >~3 day lags between the X-rays and UV and <~1 day lags within the UV/optical appears to rule out the "lamp-post" reprocessing model in which a hot, X-ray emitting corona directly illuminates the accretion disk, which then reprocesses the energy in the UV/optical. Instead, these results appear consistent with the Gardner & Done picture in which two separate reprocessings occur: first, emission from the corona illuminates an extreme-UV-emitting toroidal component that shields the disk from the corona; this then heats the extreme-UV component which illuminates the disk and drives its variability., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 7 tables. To appear in ApJ April 2017 issue. This version incorporates minor revisions to conform to published version and corrects the links to the author names above
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- 2017
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41. Age-dating Luminous Red Galaxies observed with the Southern African Large Telescope
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Ratsimbazafy, A. L., Loubser, S. I., Crawford, S. M., Cress, C. M., Bassett, B. A., Nichol, R. C., and Väisänen, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We measure a value for the cosmic expansion of $H(z) = 89 \pm 23$(stat) $\pm$ 44(syst) km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$ at a redshift of $z \simeq 0.47$ based on the differential age technique. This technique, also known as cosmic chronometers, uses the age difference between two redshifts for a passively evolving population of galaxies to calculate the expansion rate of the Universe. Our measurement is based on analysis of high quality spectra of Luminous Red Galaxies (LRGs) obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) in two narrow redshift ranges of $z \simeq 0.40$ and $z \simeq 0.55$ as part of an initial pilot study. Ages were estimated by fitting single stellar population models to the observed spectra. This measurement presents one of the best estimates of $H(z)$ via this method at $z\sim0.5$ to date., Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, fixed typos on H(z) values for figure 4, also for section 4
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- 2017
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42. High-Resolution Altitude Profiles of the Atmospheric Turbulence with PML at the Sutherland Observatory
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Catala, L., Ziad, A., Fantei-Caujolle, Y., Crawford, S. M., Buckley, D. A. H., Borgnino, J., Blary, F., Nickola, M., and Pickering, T.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
With the prospect of the next generation of ground-based telescopes, the extremely large telescopes (ELTs), increasingly complex and demanding adaptive optics (AO) systems are needed. This is to compensate for image distortion caused by atmospheric turbulence and fully take advantage of mirrors with diameters of 30 to 40 m. This requires a more precise characterization of the turbulence. The PML (Profiler of Moon Limb) was developed within this context. The PML aims to provide high-resolution altitude profiles of the turbulence using differential measurements of the Moon limb position to calculate the transverse spatio-angular covariance of the Angle of Arrival fluctuations. The covariance of differential image motion for different separation angles is sensitive to the altitude distribution of the seeing. The use of the continuous Moon limb provides a large number of separation angles allowing for the high-resolution altitude of the profiles. The method is presented and tested with simulated data. Moreover a PML instrument was deployed at the Sutherland Observatory in South Africa in August 2011. We present here the results of this measurement campaign.
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- 2017
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43. Crawford, S&R and Dorsey & Whitney lead on IndusInd QIP
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Morgan Stanley ,Dorsey and Whitney L.L.P. ,Law firms ,Securities industry ,Securities industry ,Law - Abstract
The Hinduja Group-promoted IndusInd Bank has raised Rs. 2000 crore ($366 million) through Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP). Morgan Stanley, JM Financial, CLSA and HSBC, were the book running lead managers [...]
- Published
- 2013
44. Cindy Crawford`s, as we all know, is a top model and a business woman
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General interest ,History ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
MARIA SHRIVER (NBC News Special Correspondent): Good morning to you. Well, Cindy Crawford`s, as we all know, is a top model and a business woman. But her first job is [...]
- Published
- 2014
45. Fire Safety & Disability Access Upgrade Works To Residential Care Dwelling At Crawford~s Street (r516), Bruff, Co. Limerick
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Fire prevention ,Business, international - Abstract
Tenders are invited for expressions of interest only sought for construction / refurbishment works. expressions to be in written hard copy only, delivered by hand or post, before 12:00pm noon [...]
- Published
- 2017
46. Prenatal findings in 11 cases with craniofacial microsomia using the Alberta Congenital Anomalies Surveillance System, 1997-2019.
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Thomas MA, Bedard T, Crawford S, and Lowry RB
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- Humans, Female, Pregnancy, Male, Alberta epidemiology, Prenatal Diagnosis, Adult, Infant, Newborn, Cleft Lip epidemiology, Cleft Lip pathology, Cleft Lip genetics, Cleft Lip diagnosis, Cleft Lip diagnostic imaging, Ultrasonography, Prenatal, Abnormalities, Multiple epidemiology, Abnormalities, Multiple genetics, Abnormalities, Multiple pathology, Abnormalities, Multiple diagnosis, Goldenhar Syndrome genetics, Goldenhar Syndrome epidemiology, Goldenhar Syndrome diagnosis, Goldenhar Syndrome pathology
- Abstract
Craniofacial microsomia (CFM) primarily includes specific head and neck anomalies that co-occur more frequently than expected. The anomalies are usually asymmetric and affect craniofacial features; however, there are frequently additional anomalies of variable severity. Published prenatal findings for CFM are limited. This study contributes 11 cases with CFM and their anomalies identified prenatally. Cases born between January 1, 1997 and December 31, 2019 with CFM were abstracted from the Alberta Congenital Anomalies Surveillance System, which is a population-based program ascertaining congenital anomalies for livebirths, stillbirths, and termination of pregnancies for fetal anomalies. There were 11 cases ascertained with prenatal findings including facial anomalies: one each with left cleft lip, right microtia, and bilateral microphthalmia. Two cases had vertebral anomalies. In addition, anomalies of the kidneys, brain, heart, and radial ray were identified. Six (55%) had a single umbilical artery, five (45%) were small for gestational age, and three (27%) were from a twin pregnancy that were discordant for anomalies. Four (36%) overlapped another proposed recurrent constellations of embryonic malformation condition. This study describes prenatal findings for 11 cases with CFM. Comparable to prior published cases, there were recurring anomalies on prenatal imaging, including anomalies of the brain, eye, heart, kidneys, and radial ray, which may aid in the prenatal diagnosis of CFM., (© 2024 The Authors. American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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47. The Herschel-ATLAS: a sample of 500{\mu}m-selected lensed galaxies over 600 square degrees
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Negrello, M., Amber, S., Amvrosiadis, A., Cai, Z. -Y., Lapi, A., Gonzalez-Nuevo, J., De Zotti, G., Furlanetto, C., Maddox, S., Allen, M., Bakx, T., Bussmann, R. S., Cooray, A., Covone, G., Danese, L., Dannerbauer, H., Fu, H., Greenslade, J., Gurwell, M., Hopwood, R., Koopmans, L. V. E., Napolitano, N., Nayyeri, H., Omont, A., Petrillo, C. E., Riechers, D. A., Serjeant, S., Tortora, C., Valiante, E., Kleijn, G. Verdoes, Vernardos, G., Wardlow, J. L., Baes, M., Baker, A. J., Bourne, N., Clements, D., Crawford, S. M., Dye, S., Dunne, L., Eales, S., Ivison, R., Marchetti, L., Michałowski, M. J., Smith, M. W. L., Vaccari, M., and van der Werf, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a sample of 80 candidate strongly lensed galaxies with flux density above 100mJy at 500{\mu}m extracted from the Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS), over an area of 600 square degrees. Available imaging and spectroscopic data allow us to confirm the strong lensing in 20 cases and to reject it in one case. For other 8 objects the lensing scenario is strongly supported by the presence of two sources along the same line of sight with distinct photometric redshifts. The remaining objects await more follow-up observations to confirm their nature. The lenses and the background sources have median redshifts z_L = 0.6 and z_S = 2.5, respectively, and are observed out to z_L = 1.2 and z_S = 4.2. We measure the number counts of candidate lensed galaxies at 500{\mu}m and compare them with theoretical predictions, finding a good agreement for a maximum magnification of the background sources in the range 10-20. These values are consistent with the magnification factors derived from the lens modelling of individual systems. The catalogue presented here provides sub- mm bright targets for follow-up observations aimed at exploiting gravitational lensing to study with un-precedented details the morphological and dynamical properties of dusty star forming regions in z >~ 1.5 galaxies., Comment: 25 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2016
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48. Reverberation Mapping of Optical Emission Lines in Five Active Galaxies
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Fausnaugh, M. M., Grier, C. J., Bentz, M. C., Denney, K. D., De Rosa, G., Peterson, B. M., Kochanek, C. S., Pogge, R. W., Adams, S. M., Barth, A. J., Beatty, Thomas G., Bhattacharjee, A., Borman, G. A., Boroson, T. A., Bottorff, M. C., Brown, Jacob E., Brown, Jonathan S., Brotherton, M. S., Coker, C. T., Crawford, S. M., Croxall, K. V., Eftekharzadeh, Sarah, Eracleous, Michael, Joner, M. D., Henderson, C. B., Holoien, T. W. -S., Horne, Keith, Hutchison, T., Kaspi, Shai, Kim, S., King, Anthea L., Li, Miao, Lochhaas, Cassandra, Ma, Zhiyuan, MacInnis, F., Manne-Nicholas, E. R., Mason, M., Montuori, Carmen, Mosquera, Ana, Mudd, Dale, Musso, R., Nazarov, S. V., Nguyen, M. L., Okhmat, D. N., Onken, Christopher A., Ou-Yang, B., Pancoast, A., Pei, L., Penny, Matthew T., Poleski, Radoslaw, Rafter, Stephen, Romero-Colmenero, E., Runnoe, Jessie, Sand, David J., Schimoia, Jaderson S., Sergeev, S. G., Shappee, B. J., Simonian, Gregory V., Somers, Garrett, Spencer, M., Starkey, D., Stevens, Daniel J., Tayar, Jamie, Treu, T., Valenti, Stefano, Van Saders, J., Villanueva Jr., S., Villforth, C., Weiss, Yaniv, Winkler, H., and Zhu, W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results from an optical reverberation mapping campaign executed in 2014, targeting the active galactic nuclei (AGN) MCG+08-11-011, NGC 2617, NGC 4051, 3C 382, and Mrk 374. Our targets have diverse and interesting observational properties, including a "changing look" AGN and a broad-line radio galaxy. Based on continuum-H$\beta$ lags, we measure black hole masses for all five targets. We also obtain H$\gamma$ and He{\sc ii}\,$\lambda 4686$ lags for all objects except 3C 382. The He{\sc ii}\,$\lambda 4686$ lags indicate radial stratification of the BLR, and the masses derived from different emission lines are in general agreement. The relative responsivities of these lines are also in qualitative agreement with photoionization models. These spectra have extremely high signal-to-noise ratios (100--300 per pixel) and there are excellent prospects for obtaining velocity-resolved reverberation signatures., Comment: 34 pages, 12 figures, published in ApJ. For a video summarizing the main results, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaC-jPsIY0Q
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- 2016
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49. Early observations of the nearby type Ia supernova SN 2015F
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Cartier, R., Sullivan, M., Firth, R., Pignata, G., Mazzali, P., Maguire, K., Childress, M. J., Arcavi, I., Ashall, C., Bassett, B., Crawford, S. M., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., Gal-Yam, A., Hosseinzadeh, G., Howell, D. A., Inserra, C., Johansson, J., Kasai, E. K., McCully, C., Prajs, S., Prentice, S., Schulze, S., Smartt, S. J., Smith, K. W., Smith, M., Valenti, S., and Young, D. R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present photometry and time-series spectroscopy of the nearby type Ia supernova (SN Ia) SN 2015F over $-16$ days to $+80$ days relative to maximum light, obtained as part of the Public ESO Spectroscopic Survey of Transient Objects (PESSTO). SN 2015F is a slightly sub-luminous SN Ia with a decline rate of $\Delta m15(B)=1.35 \pm 0.03$ mag, placing it in the region between normal and SN 1991bg-like events. Our densely-sampled photometric data place tight constraints on the epoch of first light and form of the early-time light curve. The spectra exhibit photospheric C II $\lambda 6580$ absorption until $-4$ days, and high-velocity Ca II is particularly strong at $<-10$ days at expansion velocities of $\simeq$23000\kms. At early times, our spectral modelling with syn++ shows strong evidence for iron-peak elements (Fe II, Cr II, Ti II, and V II) expanding at velocities $>14000$ km s$^{-1}$, suggesting mixing in the outermost layers of the SN ejecta. Although unusual in SN Ia spectra, including V II in the modelling significantly improves the spectral fits. Intriguingly, we detect an absorption feature at $\sim$6800 \AA\ that persists until maximum light. Our favoured explanation for this line is photospheric Al II, which has never been claimed before in SNe Ia, although detached high-velocity C II material could also be responsible. In both cases the absorbing material seems to be confined to a relatively narrow region in velocity space. The nucleosynthesis of detectable amounts of Al II would argue against a low-metallicity white dwarf progenitor. We also show that this 6800 \AA\ feature is weakly present in other normal SN Ia events, and common in the SN 1991bg-like sub-class., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2016
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50. First Gravitational-Wave Burst GW150914: Part II. MASTER Optical Follow-Up Observations
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Lipunov, V. M., Kornilov, V., Gorbovskoy, E., Tiurina, N., Balanutsa, P., Kuznetsov, A., Vladimirov, V., Vlasenko, D., Gorbunov, I., Chazov, V., Kuvshinov, D., Gabovich, A., Buckley, D. A. H., Potter, S. B., Kniazev, A., Crawford, S., Lopez, R. Rebolo, Ricart, M. Serra, Israelian, G., Lodieu, N., Gress, O. A., Budnev, N. M., Ivanov, K. I., Poleschuk, V., Yazev, S., Tlatov, A., Senik, V., Dormidontov, D., Parkhomenko, A., Yurkov, V., Sergienko, Yu., Podesta, R., Levato, H., Lopez, C., Saffe, C., and Mallamaci, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Advanced LIGO observatory recently reported the first direct detection of gravitational waves predicted by Einstein (1916). We report on the first optical observations of the Gravitational Wave (GW) source GW150914 error region with the Global MASTER Robotic Net. We detected several optical transients, which proved to be unconnected with the GW event. Our result is consistent with the assumption that gravitational waves were produced by a binary black hole merger. The detection of the event confirmed the main prediction of the population synthesis performed with the "Scenario Machine" formulated in Lipunov1997b., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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