1,249 results on '"A Robotham"'
Search Results
2. Importance of organizational volunteer retention and communication with volunteers during the COVID-19 pandemic
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Suzanna Windon, Daniel Robotham, and Ann Echols
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Sociology and Political Science ,Geography, Planning and Development - Published
- 2023
3. Working toward a National Coordinated Soil Moisture Monitoring Network: Vision, Progress, and Future Directions
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C. Bruce Baker, Michael Cosh, John Bolten, Mark Brusberg, Todd Caldwell, Stephanie Connolly, Iliyana Dobreva, Nathan Edwards, Peter E. Goble, Tyson E. Ochsner, Steven M. Quiring, Michael Robotham, Marina Skumanich, Mark Svoboda, W. Alex White, and Molly Woloszyn
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Atmospheric Science - Abstract
Soil moisture is a critical land surface variable, impacting the water, energy, and carbon cycles. While in situ soil moisture monitoring networks are still developing, there is no cohesive strategy or framework to coordinate, integrate, or disseminate these diverse data sources in a synergistic way that can improve our ability to understand climate variability at the national, state, and local levels. Thus, a national strategy is needed to guide network deployment, sustainable network operation, data integration and dissemination, and user-focused product development. The National Coordinated Soil Moisture Monitoring Network (NCSMMN) is a federally led, multi-institution effort that aims to address these needs by capitalizing on existing wide-ranging soil moisture monitoring activities, increasing the utility of observational data, and supporting their strategic application to the full range of decision-making needs. The goals of the NCSMMN are to 1) establish a national “network of networks” that effectively demonstrates data integration and operational coordination of diverse in situ networks; 2) build a community of practice around soil moisture measurement, interpretation, and application—a “network of people” that links data providers, researchers, and the public; and 3) support research and development (R&D) on techniques to merge in situ soil moisture data with remotely sensed and modeled hydrologic data to create user-friendly soil moisture maps and associated tools. The overarching mission of the NCSMMN is to provide coordinated high-quality, nationwide soil moisture information for the public good by supporting applications like drought and flood monitoring, water resource management, agricultural and forestry planning, and fire danger ratings.
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- 2022
4. Deep investigation of neutral gas origins (DINGO): H <scp>i</scp> stacking experiments with early science data
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Jonghwan Rhee, Martin Meyer, Attila Popping, Sabine Bellstedt, Simon P Driver, Aaron S G Robotham, Matthew Whiting, Ivan K Baldry, Sarah Brough, Michael J I Brown, John D Bunton, Richard Dodson, Benne W Holwerda, Andrew M Hopkins, Bärbel S Koribalski, Karen Lee-Waddell, Ángel R López-Sánchez, Jon Loveday, Elizabeth Mahony, Sambit Roychowdhury, Kristóf Rozgonyi, and Lister Staveley-Smith
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present early science results from Deep Investigation of Neutral Gas Origins (DINGO), an HI survey using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). Using ASKAP sub-arrays available during its commissioning phase, DINGO early science data were taken over $\sim$ 60 deg$^{2}$ of the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) 23 h region with 35.5 hr integration time. We make direct detections of six known and one new sources at $z < 0.01$. Using HI spectral stacking, we investigate the HI gas content of galaxies at $0.04 < z< 0.09$ for different galaxy colours. The results show that galaxy morphology based on optical colour is strongly linked to HI gas properties. To examine environmental impacts on the HI gas content of galaxies, three sub-samples are made based on the GAMA group catalogue. The average HI mass of group central galaxies is larger than those of satellite and isolated galaxies, but with a lower HI gas fraction. We derive a variety of HI scaling relations for physical properties of our sample, including stellar mass, stellar mass surface density, $NUV-r$ colour, specific star formation rate, and halo mass. We find that the derived HI scaling relations are comparable to other published results, with consistent trends also observed to $\sim$0.5 dex lower limits in stellar mass and stellar surface density. The cosmic HI densities derived from our data are consistent with other published values at similar redshifts. DINGO early science highlights the power of HI spectral stacking techniques with ASKAP., 27 pages, 25 figures, 10 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2022
5. Virtual Reality Therapy for the Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia (V-NeST): A pilot randomised feasibility trial
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Matteo Cella, Paul Tomlin, Daniel Robotham, Patrick Green, Helena Griffiths, Daniel Stahl, and Lucia Valmaggia
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Research Design ,Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy ,Schizophrenia ,Humans ,Feasibility Studies ,Pilot Projects ,Biological Psychiatry - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Negative symptoms are typically observed in people with schizophrenia and indicate a loss or reduction of normal function (e.g. reduced motivation and affect display). Despite obstructing people's recovery, intervention development has received limited attention. This study tests the feasibility and acceptability of a novel Virtual Reality Supported Therapy for the Negative Symptoms of Schizophrenia (V-NeST).METHOD: A single (rater) blind randomised study with two conditions; V-NeST plus treatment as-usual (TAU) vs. TAU alone, recruiting people with schizophrenia experiencing debilitating negative symptoms. Assessment was at baseline and 3-month post-randomisation. The pre-specified primary outcome was participants' goal attainment, secondary outcomes were negative symptoms and functioning. The study assessed feasibility and acceptability parameters including recruitment, eligibility, treatment adherence and retention. Acceptability was also evaluated qualitatively using a post-therapy feedback interview. Explorative therapy effect on outcomes was estimated.RESULTS: The study recruited to its pre-specified target of 30 participants (15 randomised to V-Nest). Two participants in each trial arm disengaged and did not complete the study. Therapy engagement for those randomised to V-NeST was appropriate and research procedures were feasible. The experience with therapy and VR was described as positive and useful. Preliminary analysis suggested the therapy may have a large effect on participants goals and a possible effect on negative symptoms.CONCLUSION: V-NeST is a feasible and acceptable intervention. This therapy has the potential to support people with schizophrenia achieving their recovery goals and may reduce negative symptoms. The efficacy results need to be evaluated in an appropriately powered efficacy study.
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- 2022
6. Identifying the disc, bulge, and intra-halo light of simulated galaxies through structural decomposition
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Proctor, Katy L., Lagos, Claudia del P., Ludlow, Aaron D., and Robotham, Aaron S. G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We perform a structural decomposition of galaxies identified in three cosmological hydrodynamical simulations by applying Gaussian Mixture Models (GMMs) to the kinematics of their stellar particles. We study the resulting disc, bulge, and intra-halo light (IHL) components of galaxies whose host dark matter haloes have virial masses in the range $M_{200}=10^{11}$-- $10^{15}\,{\rm M_\odot}$. Our decomposition technique isolates galactic discs whose mass fractions, $f_{\rm disc}$, correlate strongly with common alternative morphology indicators; for example, $f_{\rm disc}$ is approximately equal to $\kappa_{{\rm co}}$, the fraction of stellar kinetic energy in co-rotation. The primary aim of our study, however, is to characterise the IHL of galaxies in a consistent manner and over a broad mass range, and to analyse its properties from the scale of galactic stellar haloes up to the intra-cluster light. Our results imply that the IHL fraction, $f_{\rm IHL}$, has appreciable scatter and is strongly correlated with galaxy morphology: at fixed stellar mass, the IHL of disc galaxies is typically older and less massive than that of spheroids. Above $M_{200}\approx 10^{13}\,{\rm M_\odot}$, we find, on average, $f_{\rm IHL}\approx 0.45$, albeit with considerable scatter. The transition radius beyond which the IHL dominates the stellar mass of a galaxy is roughly $30\,{\rm kpc}$ for $M_{200}\lesssim 10^{12.8}\,{\rm M_\odot}$, but increases strongly towards higher masses. However, we find that no alternative IHL definitions -- whether based on the ex-situ stellar fraction, or the stellar mass outside a spherical aperture -- reproduce our dynamically-defined IHL fractions., Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRAS
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- 2023
7. JWST's PEARLS: Mothra, a new kaiju star at z=2.091 extremely magnified by MACS0416, and implications for dark matter models
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Diego, J. M., Sun, Bangzheng, Yan, Haojing, Furtak, Lukas J., Zackrisson, Erik, Dai, Liang, Kelly, Patrick, Nonino, Mario, Adams, Nathan, Meena, Ashish K., Willner, S. P., Zitrin, Adi, Cohen, Seth H., Silva, Jordan C. J. D, Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Rutkowski, Michael J., Ryan, Russell E., Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Bhatawdekar, Rachana
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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of Mothra, an extremely magnified monster star, likely a binary system of two supergiant stars, in one of the strongly lensed galaxies behind the galaxy cluster MACS0416. The star is in a galaxy with spectroscopic redshift $z=2.091$ in a portion of the galaxy that is parsecs away from the cluster caustic. The binary star is observed only on the side of the critical curve with negative parity but has been detectable for at least eight years, implying the presence of a small lensing perturber. Microlenses alone cannot explain the earlier observations of this object made with the Hubble Space Telescope. A larger perturber with a mass of at least $10^4$\,\Msun\ offers a more satisfactory explanation. Based on the lack of perturbation on other nearby sources in the same arc, the maximum mass of the perturber is $M< 2.5\times10^6$\,\Msun, making it the smallest substructure constrained by lensing above redshift 0.3. The existence of this millilens is fully consistent with the expectations from the standard cold dark matter model. On the other hand, the existence of such small substructure in a cluster environment has implications for other dark matter models. In particular, warm dark matter models with particle masses below 8.7\,keV are excluded by our observations. Similarly, axion dark matter models are consistent with the observations only if the axion mass is in the range $0.5\times10^{-22}\, {\rm eV} < m_a < 5\times10^{-22}\, {\rm eV}$., 26 pages and 27 figures
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- 2023
8. EPOCHS VII: Discovery of high redshift ($6.5 < z < 12$) AGN candidates in JWST ERO and PEARLS data
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Juodžbalis, Ignas, Conselice, Christopher J., Singh, Maitrayee, Adams, Nathan, Ormerod, Katherine, Harvey, Thomas, Austin, Duncan, Volonteri, Marta, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Koekemoer, Anton M., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Nonino, Mario, Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Ortiz III, Rafael, Tompkins, Scott, Willmer, Christopher N. A., and Yan, Haojing
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of a sample of robust high redshift galaxies selected photometrically from the `blank' fields of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization Science (PEARLS) survey and Early Release Observations (ERO) data of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) with the aim of selecting candidate high redshift active galactic nuclei (AGN). Sources were identified from the parent sample using a threefold selection procedure, which includes spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting to identify sources that are best fitted by AGN SED templates, a further selection based on the relative performance of AGN and non-AGN models, and finally morphological fitting to identify compact sources of emission, resulting in a purity-oriented procedure. Using this procedure, we identify a sample of nine AGN candidates at $6.5 < z < 12$, from which we constrain their physical properties as well as measure a lower bound on the AGN fraction in this redshift range of $5 \pm 1$\%. As this is an extreme lower limit due to our focus on purity and our SEDs being calibrated for unobscured Type 1 AGN, this demonstrates that AGN are perhaps quite common at this early epoch. The rest-frame UV colors of our candidate objects suggest that these systems are potentially candidate obese black hole galaxies (OBG), or AGN with very little galaxy component. We also investigate emission from our sample sources from fields overlapping with Chandra and VLA surveys, allowing us to place X-ray and 3 GHz radio detection limits on our candidates. Of note is a $z = 11.9$ candidate source exhibiting an abrupt morphological shift in the reddest band as compared to the bluer bands, indicating a potential merger or an unusually strong outflow., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS, 12 pages, 11 figures, typos corrected
- Published
- 2023
9. Resolving cosmic star formation histories of present-day bulges, disks, and spheroids with ProFuse
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Bellstedt, Sabine, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Driver, Simon P., Lagos, Claudia del P., Davies, Luke J. M., and Cook, Robin H. W.
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first look at star formation histories of galaxy components using ProFuse, a new technique to model the 2D distribution of light across multiple wavelengths using simultaneous spectral and spatial fitting of purely imaging data. We present a number of methods to classify galaxies structurally/morphologically, showing the similarities and discrepancies between these schemes. Rather than identifying the best-performing scheme, we use the spread of classifications to quantify uncertainty in our results. We study the cosmic star formation history (CSFH), forensically derived using ProFuse with a sample of ~7,000 galaxies from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. Remarkably, the forensic CSFH recovered via both our method (ProFuse) and traditional SED fitting (ProSpect) are not only exactly consistent with each other over the past 8 Gyr, but also with the in-situ CSFH measured using ProSpect. Furthermore, we separate the CSFH by contributions from spheroids, bulges and disks. While the vast majority (70%) of present-day star formation takes place in the disk population, we show that 50% of the stars that formed at cosmic noon (8-12 Gyr ago) now reside in spheroids, and present-day bulges are composed of stars that were primarily formed in the very early Universe, with half their stars already formed ~12 Gyr ago., 22 pages, 19 figures, submitted to MNRAS, comments welcome
- Published
- 2023
10. SimSpin v2.5.1 -- Constructing synthetic spectral IFU cubes for comparison with observational surveys
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Harborne, K. E., Serene, A., Davies, E. J. A., Derkenne, C., Vaughan, S., Burdon, A. I., Lagos, C. del P., McDermid, R., O'Toole, S., Power, C., Robotham, A. S. G., Santucci, G., and Tobar, R.
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In this work, we present a methodology and a corresponding code-base for constructing mock integral field spectrograph (IFS) observations of simulated galaxies in a consistent and reproducible way. Such methods are necessary to improve the collaboration and comparison of observation and theory results, and accelerate our understanding of how the kinematics of galaxies evolve over time. This code, SimSpin, is an open-source package written in R, but also with an API interface such that the code can be interacted with in any coding language. Documentation and individual examples can be found at the open-source website connected to the online repository. SimSpin is already being utilised by international IFS collaborations, including SAMI and MAGPI, for generating comparable data sets from a diverse suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations., 18 pages, 16 figures, 2 tables. Submitted to PASA. Comments welcome
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- 2023
11. A CHO stable pool production platform for rapid clinical development of trimeric SARS‐CoV‐2 spike subunit vaccine antigens
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Simon Joubert, Matthew Stuible, Simon Lord‐Dufour, Linda Lamoureux, François Vaillancourt, Sylvie Perret, Manon Ouimet, Alex Pelletier, Louis Bisson, Rohan Mahimkar, Phuong Lan Pham, Helene L′Ecuyer‐Coelho, Marjolaine Roy, Robert Voyer, Jason Baardsnes, Janelle Sauvageau, Frank St‐Michael, Anna Robotham, John Kelly, Andrea Acel, Joseph D. Schrag, Majida El Bakkouri, and Yves Durocher
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SARS‐CoV‐2 spike protei ,CHO clones ,quality attributes ,Bioengineering ,product comparability ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,CHO pools ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Protein expression from stably transfected Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) clones is an established but time-consuming method for manufacturing therapeutic recombinant proteins. The use of faster, alternative approaches, such as non-clonal stable pools, has been restricted due to lower productivity and longstanding regulatory guidelines. Recently, the performance of stable pools has improved dramatically, making them a viable option for quickly producing drug substance for GLP-toxicology and early-phase clinical trials in scenarios such as pandemics that demand rapid production timelines. Compared to stable CHO clones which can take several months to generate and characterize, stable pool development can be completed in only a few weeks. Here, we compared the productivity and product quality of trimeric SARS-CoV-2 spike protein ectodomains produced from stable CHO pools or clones. Using a set of biophysical and biochemical assays we show that product quality is very similar and that CHO pools demonstrate sufficient productivity to generate vaccine candidates for early clinical trials. Based on these data, we propose that regulatory guidelines should be updated to permit production of early clinical trial material from CHO pools to enable more rapid and cost-effective clinical evaluation of potentially life-saving vaccines.
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- 2023
12. GAMA/DEVILS: Cosmic star formation and AGN activity over 12.5 billion years
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D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Driver, Simon P., Lagos, Claudia D. P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Bellstedt, Sabine, Davies, Luke J. M., Thorne, Jessica E., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, Bravo, Matias, Holwerda, Benne, Phillipps, Steven, Seymour, Nick, Siudek, Malgorzata, and Windhorst, Rogier A.
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) and the Deep Extragalactic Visible Legacy Survey (DEVILS) observational data sets to calculate the cosmic star formation rate (SFR) and active galactic nuclei (AGN) bolometric luminosity history (CSFH/CAGNH) over the last 12.5 billion years. SFRs and AGN bolometric luminosities were derived using the spectral energy distribution fitting code ProSpect, which includes an AGN prescription to self consistently model the contribution from both AGN and stellar emission to the observed rest-frame ultra-violet to far-infrared photometry. We find that both the CSFH and CAGNH evolve similarly, rising in the early Universe up to a peak at look-back time $\approx 10$~Gyr ($z \approx 2$), before declining toward the present day. The key result of this work is that we find the ratio of CAGNH to CSFH has been flat ($\approx 10^{42.5}\mathrm{erg \, s^{-1}M_{\odot}^{-1}yr}$) for $11$~Gyr up to the present day, indicating that star formation and AGN activity have been coeval over this time period. We find that the stellar masses of the galaxies that contribute most to the CSFH and CAGNH are similar, implying a common cause, which is likely gas inflow. The depletion of the gas supply suppresses cosmic star formation and AGN activity equivalently to ensure that they have experienced similar declines over the last 10 Gyr. These results are an important milestone for reconciling the role of star formation and AGN activity in the life cycle of galaxies., 16 pages, 10 figures. Figures 9 and 10 are the main results. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2023
13. Magellanic System Stars Identified in the SMACS J0723.3-7327 JWST ERO Images
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Summers, Jake, Windhorst, Rogier A., Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf A., Carleton, Timothy, Kamieneski, Patrick S., Holwerda, Benne W., Conselice, Christopher J., Adams, Nathan J., Frye, Brenda, Diego, Jose M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Ortiz, Rafael, Cheng, Cheng, Pigarelli, Alex, Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Grogin, Norman, Koekemoer, Anton, Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, and Ryan, Russell E.
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We identify 68 distant stars in JWST/NIRCam ERO images of the field of galaxy cluster SMACS J0723.3-7327 (SMACS 0723). Given the relatively small ($\sim$$10^{\circ}$) angular separation between SMACS 0723 and the Large Magellanic Cloud, it is likely that these stars are associated with the LMC outskirts or Leading Arm. This is further bolstered by a spectral energy distribution analysis, which suggests an excess of stars at a physical distance of $40-100$ kpc, consistent with being associated with or located behind the Magellanic system. In particular, we find that the overall surface density of stars brighter than 27.0 mag in the field of SMACS 0723 is $\sim$2.3 times that of stars in a blank field with similar galactic latitude (the North Ecliptic Pole Time Domain Field), and that the density of stars in the SMACS 0723 field with SED-derived distances consistent with the Magellanic system is $\sim$7.3 times larger than that of the blank field. The candidate stars at these distances are consistent with a stellar population at the same distance modulus with [Fe/H] $= -1.0$ and an age of $\sim$$5.0$ Gyr. On the assumption that all of the 68 stars are associated with the LMC, then the stellar density of the LMC at the location of the SMACS 0723 field is $\sim$$710$ stars kpc$^{-3}$, which helps trace the density of stars in the LMC outskirts., Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome
- Published
- 2023
14. FLASH pilot survey: detections of associated 21 cm H <scp>i</scp> absorption in GAMA galaxies at 0.42 < z < 1.00
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Renzhi Su, Elaine M Sadler, James R Allison, Elizabeth K Mahony, Vanessa A Moss, Matthew T Whiting, Hyein Yoon, J N H S Aditya, Sabine Bellstedt, Aaron S G Robotham, Lilian Garratt-Smithson, Minfeng Gu, Bärbel S Koribalski, Roberto Soria, and Simon Weng
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of a search for associated 21 cm HI absorption at redshift 0.42 < z < 1.00 in radio-loud galaxies from three Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey fields. These observations were carried out as part of a pilot survey for the ASKAP First Large Absorption Survey in HI (FLASH). From a sample of 326 radio sources with 855.5 MHz peak flux density above 10 mJy we detected two associated HI absorption systems, in SDSS J090331+010847 at z= 0.522 and SDSS J113622+004852 at z= 0.563. Both galaxies are massive (stellar mass > 10$^{11}$ M$_{sun}$) and have optical spectra characteristic of luminous red galaxies,though SED fitting implies that SDSS J113622+004852 contains a dust-obscured starburst with SFR ~ 69 M$_{sun}$ yr$^{-1}$. The HI absorption lines have a high optical depth, with $\tau_{pk}$ of 1.77 $\pm$ 0.16 for SDSS J090331+010847 (the highest value for any z > 0.1 associated system found to date) and 0.14 $\pm$ 0.01 for SDSS J113622+004852. In the redshift range probed by our ASKAP observations, the detection rate for associated HI absorption lines (with $\tau_{pk}$ > 0.1 and at least 3$\sigma$ significance) is 2.9 (+9.7 -2.6) percent. Although the current sample is small, this rate is consistent with a trend seen in other studies for a lower detection rate of associated 21 cm HI absorption systems at higher redshift. We also searched for OH absorption lines at 0.67 < z < 1.34, but no detection was made in the 145 radio sources searched., Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2022
15. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): bulge-disc decomposition of KiDS data in the nearby Universe
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Sarah Casura, Jochen Liske, Aaron S G Robotham, Sarah Brough, Simon P Driver, Alister W Graham, Boris Häußler, Benne W Holwerda, Andrew M Hopkins, Lee S Kelvin, Amanda J Moffett, Dan S Taranu, and Edward N Taylor
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
We derive single S\'ersic fits and bulge-disk decompositions for 13096 galaxies at redshifts z < 0.08 in the GAMA II equatorial survey regions in the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS) g, r and i bands. The surface brightness fitting is performed using the Bayesian two-dimensional profile fitting code ProFit. We fit three models to each galaxy in each band independently with a fully automated Markov-chain Monte Carlo analysis: a single S\'ersic model, a S\'ersic plus exponential and a point source plus exponential. After fitting the galaxies, we perform model selection and flag galaxies for which none of our models are appropriate (mainly mergers/Irregular galaxies). The fit quality is assessed by visual inspections, comparison to previous works, comparison of independent fits of galaxies in the overlap regions between KiDS tiles and bespoke simulations. The latter two are also used for a detailed investigation of systematic error sources. We find that our fit results are robust across various galaxy types and image qualities with minimal biases. Errors given by the MCMC underestimate the true errors typically by factors 2-3. Automated model selection criteria are accurate to > 90 % as calibrated by visual inspection of a subsample of galaxies. We also present g-r component colours and the corresponding colour-magnitude diagram, consistent with previous works despite our increased fit flexibility. Such reliable structural parameters for the components of a diverse sample of galaxies across multiple bands will be integral to various studies of galaxy properties and evolution. All results are integrated into the GAMA database., Comment: 36 pages, 33 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2022
16. You Said Digital First! A Five-Dimensional Definition According to Journalists from Three Swiss Newspapers
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Andrew T. Robotham and Nathalie Pignard-Cheynel
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Communication - Published
- 2022
17. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The group HI mass as a function of halo mass
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Ajay Dev, Simon P Driver, Martin Meyer, Sambit Roychowdhury, Jonghwan Rhee, Adam R H Stevens, P Claudia del Lagos, Joss Bland-Hawthorn, Barbara Catinella, A M Hopkins, Jonathan Loveday, Danail Obreschkow, Steven Phillipps, and Aaron S G Robotham
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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We determine the atomic hydrogen (HI) to halo mass relation (HIHM) using Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA survey HI data at the location of optically selected groups from the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. We make direct HI detections for 37 GAMA groups. Using HI group spectral stacking of 345 groups, we study the group HI content as function of halo mass across a halo mass range of $10^{11} - 10^{14.7}\text{ M}_\odot$. We also correct our results for Eddington bias. We find that the group HI mass generally rises as a function of halo mass from $1.3\%$ of the halo mass at $10^{11.6} \text{M}_\odot$ to $0.4\%$ at $10^{13.7} \text{M}_\odot$ with some indication of flattening towards the high-mass end. Despite the differences in optical survey limits, group catalogues, and halo mass estimation methods, our results are consistent with previous group HI-stacking studies. Our results are also consistent with mock observations from SHARK and IllustrisTNG., Accepted in MNRAS; 18 pages, 12 figures
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- 2023
18. The Long and the Short of It: The Benefits and Leverage of Ultraviolet-Radio Galaxy Fitting
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Jessica E Thorne, Aaron S G Robotham, Sabine Bellstedt, and Luke J M Davies
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Traditionally, the far ultraviolet (FUV) to far-infrared (FIR) and radio spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of galaxies have been considered separately despite the common physical process shaping them. In this work, we explore the utility of simultaneously fitting FUV-radio SEDs using an extended version of the ProSpect SED fitting code considering contributions from both free-free and synchrotron emission. We use a small sample of galaxies from the Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS) and the Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: a Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel (KINGFISH) where high-quality and robust FUV-radio data are available to provide an ideal sample for testing a radio extension of ProSpect. As the parameterisation of the radio extension links the radio continuum to the FIR emission, we explore the benefit of using radio continuum measurements as a constraint on the energy balance between dust attenuation and emission. We find that for situations where MIR-FIR photometry is unavailable, including a 1.4 GHz continuum measurement allows for improved accuracy in recovered star formation rates and dust luminosities of galaxies reducing the median uncertainty by 0.1 and 0.2 dex respectively. We also demonstrate that incorporating 3 and 10 GHz measurements allows for further constraint on the energy balance and therefore the star formation rate and dust luminosity. This demonstrates the advantage of extending FUV-FIR SED fitting techniques to radio frequencies, especially as we move into an era where FIR surveys will remain limited and radio data become abundant (i.e. with the SKA and precursors)., Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2023
19. Two congruent cues are better than one: Impact of ITD–ILD combinations on reaction time for sound lateralization
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Neeraj Kumar Sharma, Ünal Ege Gaznepoglu, Thomas Robotham, and Emanuël A. P. Habets
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
This letter presents a reaction time analysis of a sound lateralization test. Sounds from various directions were synthesized using interaural time–level difference (ITD–ILD) combinations, and human subjects performed left/right detection. Stimuli from the sides yielded quicker reactions and better class accuracy than from the front. Congruent ITD–ILD cues significantly improved both metrics. For opposing ITD–ILD cues, subjects' choices were mostly driven by the ITD, and the responses were significantly slower. The findings, obtained with an easily accessible methodology, corroborate the integrated processing of the binaural cues and promote the use of multiple congruent binaural cues in headphone reproduction.
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- 2023
20. EPOCHS Paper II: The Ultraviolet Luminosity Function from $7.5<z<13.5$ using 110 square arcminutes of deep, blank-field data from the PEARLS Survey and Public Science Programmes
- Author
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Adams, Nathan J., Conselice, Christopher J., Austin, Duncan, Harvey, Thomas, Ferreira, Leonardo, Trussler, James, Juodzbalis, Ignas, Li, Qiong, Windhorst, Rogier, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf, Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Ryan, Jr., Russell E., Maksym, W. Peter, Rutkowski, Michael J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Hammel, Heidi B., Nonino, Mario, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Wilkins, Stephen M., Willner, Steven P., Bradley, Larry D., Broadhurst, Tom, Cheng, Cheng, Dole, Herve, Hathi, Nimish P., and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) and star formation rate density of distant galaxies ($7.5 < z < 13.5$) in the `blank' fields of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization Science (PEARLS) survey combined with Early Release Science (ERS) data from the CEERS, GLASS and NGDEEP surveys/fields. We use a combination of SED fitting tools and quality cuts to obtain a reliable selection and characterisation of high-redshift ($z>6.5$) galaxies from a consistently processed set of deep, near-infrared imaging. Within an area of 110 arcmin$^{2}$, we identify 214 candidate galaxies at redshifts $z>6.5$ and we use this sample to study the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) in four redshift bins between $7.5, Comment: 28 Pages, 4 Tables, 9 Figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2023
21. Epistemic injustice and mental health research: A pragmatic approach to working with lived experience expertise
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Celestin Okoroji, Tanya Mackay, Dan Robotham, Davino Beckford, and Vanessa Pinfold
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry - Abstract
“Epistemic injustice” refers to how people from marginalized groups are denied opportunities to create knowledge and derive meaning from their experiences. In the mental health field, epistemic injustice occurs in both research and service delivery systems and particularly impacts people from racialized communities. Lived experience involvement and leadership are often proposed as methods of combatting epistemic injustice, a tool for ensuring the views of people at the center of an issue are heard and can inform decision-making. However, this approach is not without challenges. In this paper, we draw on our work as intermediary organizations that center lived experience perspectives to challenge epistemic injustice. We highlight two problems we have identified in working in the mental health research field: “elite capture” and “epistemic exploitation”. We believe that these problems are barriers to the radical and structural change required for epistemic justice to occur. We propose a pragmatic approach to addressing these issues. Based on our work we suggest three considerations for researchers and our own organizations to consider when involving people with lived experience. These include reflecting on the purpose of creating knowledge, with a focus on impact. Embedding lived experience roles, with appropriate employment, support and remuneration, and acknowledging that it may be necessary to work alongside existing systems as a “critical friend” while developing new spaces and structures for alternative forms of knowledge. Finally, the mental health research system needs to change. We believe these three considerations will help us better move toward epistemic justice in mental health research.
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- 2023
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22. Toward an experimental system for the examination of protein mannosylation in Actinobacteria
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Hirak Saxena, Nakita Buenbrazo, Won-Yong Song, Connie Li, Denis Brochu, Anna Robotham, Wen Ding, Luc Tessier, Rui Chen, John Kelly, and Warren Wakarchuk
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Biochemistry - Abstract
The Actinobacterial species Cellulomonas fimi ATCC484 has long been known to secrete mannose-containing proteins, but a closer examination of glycoproteins associated with the cell has never been reported. Using ConA lectin chromatography and mass spectrometry, we have surveyed the cell-associated glycoproteome from C. fimi and collected detailed information on the glycosylation sites of 19 cell-associated glycoproteins. In addition, we have expressed a previously known C. fimi secreted cellulase, Celf_3184 (formerly CenA), a putative peptide prolyl-isomerase, Celf_2022, and a penicillin-binding protein, Celf_0189, in the mannosylation capable host, Corynebacterium glutamicum. We found that the glycosylation machinery in C. glutamicum was able to use the recombinant C. fimi proteins as substrates and that the glycosylation matched closely that found in the native proteins when expressed in C. fimi. We are pursuing this observation as a prelude to dissecting the biosynthetic machinery and biological consequences of this protein mannosylation.
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- 2023
23. Are JWST/NIRCam color gradients in the lensed z=2.3 dusty star-forming galaxy El Anzuelo due to central dust attenuation or inside-out galaxy growth?
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Kamieneski, Patrick S., Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Cohen, Seth H., Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Yun, Min S., Cheng, Cheng, Summers, Jake S., Carleton, Timothy, Harrington, Kevin C., Diego, Jose M., Yan, Haojing, Koekemoer, Anton M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Petric, Andreea, Furtak, Lukas J., Foo, Nicholas, Conselice, Christopher J., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Ryan Jr., Russell E., and Tompkins, Scott
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Gradients in the mass-to-light ratio of distant galaxies impede our ability to characterize their size and compactness. The long-wavelength filters of $JWST$'s NIRCam offer a significant step forward. For galaxies at Cosmic Noon ($z\sim2$), this regime corresponds to the rest-frame near-infrared, which is less biased towards young stars and captures emission from the bulk of a galaxy's stellar population. We present an initial analysis of an extraordinary lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at $z=2.3$ behind the $El~Gordo$ cluster ($z=0.87$), named $El~Anzuelo$ ("The Fishhook") after its partial Einstein-ring morphology. The FUV-NIR SED suggests an intrinsic star formation rate of $81^{+7}_{-2}~M_\odot~{\rm yr}^{-1}$ and dust attenuation $A_V\approx 1.6$, in line with other DSFGs on the star-forming main sequence. We develop a parametric lens model to reconstruct the source-plane structure of dust imaged by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, far-UV to optical light from $Hubble$, and near-IR imaging with 8 filters of $JWST$/NIRCam, as part of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science (PEARLS) program. The source-plane half-light radius is remarkably consistent from $\sim 1-4.5~\mu$m, despite a clear color gradient where the inferred galaxy center is redder than the outskirts. We interpret this to be the result of both a radially-decreasing gradient in attenuation and substantial spatial offsets between UV- and IR-emitting components. A spatial decomposition of the SED reveals modestly suppressed star formation in the inner kiloparsec, which suggests that we are witnessing the early stages of inside-out quenching., Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
24. Paper 1: The JWST PEARLS View of the El Gordo Galaxy Cluster and of the Structure It Magnifies
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Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Foo, Nicholas, Leimbach, Reagen, Garuda, Nikhil, Robles, Paulina Soto, Summers, Jake, Diaz, Carlos, Kamieneski, Patrick, Furtak, Lukas, Cohen, Seth, Diego, Jose, Beauchesne, Benjamin, Windhorst, Rogier, Willner, Steve, Koekemoer, Anton M., Zitrin, Adi, Caminha, Gabriel, Caputi, Karina, Coe, Dan, Conselice, Christopher J., Dai, Liang, Dole, Herve, Driver, Simon, Grogin, Norman, Harrington, Kevin, Jansen, Rolf A., Kneib, Jean-Paul, Lehnert, Matt, Lowenthal, James, Marshall, Madeline A., Menanteau, Felipe, Pampleiga, Belen Alcalde, Pirzkal, Nor, Polletta, Mari, Richard, Johan, Robotham, Aaron, Ryan, Russell E., Rutkowski, Michael J., Sifon, Christobal, Tompkins, Scott, Wang, Daniel, Yan, Haojing, and Yun, Min S.
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The massive galaxy cluster El Gordo (z=0.87) imprints multitudes of gravitationally lensed arcs onto James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) images. Eight bands of NIRCam imaging were obtained in the ``Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science'' (``PEARLS'') program. PSF-matched photometry across Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and NIRCam filters supplies new photometric redshifts. A new light-traces-mass lens model based on 56 image multiplicities identifies the two mass peaks and yields a mass estimate within 500 kpc of ~(7.0 +/- 0.30) x 10^14 Msun. A search for substructure in the 140 cluster members with spectroscopic redshifts confirms the two main mass components. The southeastern mass peak that contains the BCG is more tightly bound than the northwestern one. The virial mass within 1.7 Mpc is (5.1 +/- 0.60) x 10^14 Msun, lower than the lensing mass. A significant transverse velocity component could mean the virial mass is underestimated. We contribute one new member to the previously known z=4.32 galaxy group. Intrinsic (delensed) positions of the five secure group members span a physical extent of ~60 kpc. Thirteen additional candidates selected by spectroscopic/photometric constraints are small and faint with a mean intrinsic luminosity ~2.2 mag fainter than L*. NIRCam imaging admits a fairly wide range of brightnesses and morphologies for the group members, suggesting a more diverse galaxy population in this galaxy overdensity., 24 pages, accepted by ApJ
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- 2023
25. An investigation into the impact of retrieval practice strategies on science teachers and students
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Robotham, P
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Education - Abstract
This project describes an investigation into the effect of retrieval practice on student performance in AO1 questions. Analysis of student performance in AO1questions in chemistry showed their mean average to be lower than their performance in AO2 and AO3 questions, when compared to similar centres. A review of the literature on retrieval practice shows how testing can improve student learning outcomes. Interviews with teachers at the start of the project revealed that knowledge of key facts was assumed to be taking place across the science department without explicit strategies to support learning. Interviews also revealed that teacher understanding and use of retrieval practice strategies was limited. An intervention was designed to improve student performance in AO1 questions through the use of retrieval practice strategies. Weekly retrieval practice quizzes were developed using interleaved questions from different topics, focussing on AO1 questions as identified by the exam board. Analysis of student data at the end of the intervention showed an increase in performance in not only AO1 questions, but also in AO2 and AO3 questions, compared to a previous cohort. Feedback from students post intervention suggested that the introduction of regular testing also reduced their test anxiety.
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- 2023
26. Pupillary Light Reflex Correction for Robust Pupillometry in Virtual Reality
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Marie Eckert, Thomas Robotham, Emanuël A. P. Habets, and Olli S. Rummukainen
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Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Virtual reality (VR) headsets with an integrated eye tracker enable the measurement of pupil size fluctuations correlated with cognition during a VR experience. We present a method to correct for the light-induced pupil size changes, otherwise masking the more subtle cognitively-driven effects, such as cognitive load and emotional state. We explore multiple calibration sequences to find individual mapping functions relating the luminance to pupil dilation that can be employed in real-time during a VR experience. The resulting mapping functions are evaluated in a VR-based n-back task and in free exploration of a six-degrees-of-freedom VR scene. Our results show estimating luminance from a weighted average of the fixation area and the background yields the best performance. Calibration sequence composed of either solid gray or realistic scene brightness levels shown for 6 s in a pseudo-random order proved most robust.
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- 2022
27. Deep extragalactic visible legacy survey (DEVILS): the emergence of bulges and decline of disc growth since z = 1
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Abdolhosein Hashemizadeh, Simon P Driver, Luke J M Davies, Aaron S G Robotham, Sabine Bellstedt, Caroline Foster, Benne W Holwerda, Matt Jarvis, Steven Phillipps, Malgorzata Siudek, Jessica E Thorne, Rogier A Windhorst, and Christian Wolf
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a complete structural analysis of the ellipticals (E), diffuse bulges (dB), compact bulges (cB), and discs (D) within a redshift range 0 < z < 1, and stellar mass log10(M*/M⊙) ≥ 9.5 volume-limited sample drawn from the combined DEVILS and HST-COSMOS region. We use the profit code to profile over ∼35 000 galaxies for which visual classification into single or double component was pre-defined in Paper-I. Over this redshift range, we see a growth in the total stellar mass density (SMD) of a factor of 1.5. At all epochs we find that the dominant structure, contributing to the total SMD, is the disc, and holds a fairly constant share of $\sim 60{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ of the total SMD from z = 0.8 to z = 0.2, dropping to $\sim 30{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ at z = 0.0 (representing $\sim 33{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$ decline in the total disc SMD). Other classes (E, dB, and cB) show steady growth in their numbers and integrated stellar mass densities. By number, the most dramatic change across the full mass range is in the growth of diffuse bulges. In terms of total SMD, the biggest gain is an increase in massive elliptical systems, rising from 20 per cent at z = 0.8 to equal that of discs at z = 0.0 (30 per cent) representing an absolute mass growth of a factor of 2.5. Overall, we see a clear picture of the emergence and growth of all three classes of spheroids over the past 8 Gyr, and infer that in the later half of the Universe’s timeline spheroid-forming processes and pathways (secular evolution, mass-accretion, and mergers) appear to dominate mass transformation over quiescent disc growth.
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- 2022
28. Characterizing the N- and O-linked glycans of the PGF-CTERM sorting domain-containing S-layer protein of Methanoculleus marisnigri
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John Kelly, Evgeny Vinogradov, Anna Robotham, Luc Tessier, Susan M Logan, and Ken F Jarrell
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Membrane Glycoproteins ,Polysaccharides ,Prostaglandins F ,Methanomicrobiaceae ,Trisaccharides ,Biochemistry - Abstract
The glycosylation of structural proteins is a widespread posttranslational modification in Archaea. Although only a handful of archaeal N-glycan structures have been determined to date, it is evident that the diversity of structures expressed is greater than in the other domains of life. Here, we report on our investigation of the N- and O-glycan modifications expressed by Methanoculleus marisnigri, a mesophilic methanogen from the Order Methanomicrobiales. Unusually, mass spectrometry (MS) analysis of purified archaella revealed no evidence for N- or O-glycosylation of the constituent archaellins, In contrast, the S-layer protein, identified as a PGF-CTERM sorting domain-containing protein encoded by MEMAR_RS02690, is both N- and O-glycosylated. Two N-glycans were identified by NMR and MS analysis: a trisaccharide α-GlcNAc-4-β-GlcNAc3NGaAN-4-β-Glc-Asn where the second residue is 2-N-acetyl, 3-N-glyceryl-glucosamide and a disaccharide β-GlcNAc3NAcAN-4-β-Glc-Asn, where the terminal residue is 2,3 di-N-acetyl-glucosamide. The same trisaccharide was also found N-linked to a type IV pilin. The S-layer protein is also extensively modified in the threonine-rich region near the C-terminus with O-glycans composed exclusively of hexoses. While the S-layer protein has a predicted PGF-CTERM processing site, no evidence of a truncated and lipidated C-terminus, the expected product of processing by an archaeosortase, was found. Finally, NMR also identified a polysaccharide expressed by M. marisnigri and composed of a repeating tetrasaccharide unit of [−2-β-Ribf-3-α-Rha2OMe-3-α-Rha − 2-α-Rha-]. This is the first report of N- and O-glycosylation in an archaeon from the Order Methanomicrobiales.
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- 2022
29. ProFuse: physical multiband structural decomposition of galaxies and the mass–size–age plane
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Sabine Bellstedt, Aaron Robotham, and Simon Driver
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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the new ProFuse R package, a simultaneous spectral (ultraviolet to far infrared) and spatial structural decomposition tool that produces physical models of galaxies and their components. This combines the functionality of the recently released ProFound (for automatic source extraction), ProFit (for extended source profiling) and ProSpect (for stellar population modelling) software packages. The key novelty of ProFuse is that it generates images using a self-consistent model for the star formation and metallicity history of the bulge and disk separately, and uses target images across a range of wavelengths to define the model likelihood and optimise our physical galaxy reconstruction. The first part of the paper explores the ProFuse approach in detail, and compares results to published structural and stellar population properties. The latter part of the paper applies ProFuse to 6,664 z < 0.06 GAMA galaxies. Using re-processed ugriZYJHKs imaging we extract structural and stellar population properties for bulges and disks in parallel. As well as producing true stellar mass based mass-size relationships, we further extend this correlation to explore the third dimensions of age and gas phase metallicity. The disks in particular demonstrate strong co-dependency between mass-size-age in a well defined plane, where at a given disk stellar mass younger disks tend to be larger. These findings are in broad agreement with work at higher redshift suggesting disks that formed earlier are physically smaller., Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 29 Pages, 37 Figures, 2 Tables
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- 2022
30. Factores que inciden en la actitud hacia el aprendizaje de las matemáticas en primer año de ingeniería
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Paula Villar Sánchez, Sara Arancibia-Carvajal, Hugo Robotham, and Felipe González
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Education - Abstract
Introducción. Que la actitud hacia el aprendizaje de los estudiantes presenta impacto sobre el aprendizaje y el rendimiento académico ha sido ampliamente demostrado. Determinar los factores que influyen sobre la actitud de los estudiantes hacia el aprendizaje resulta muy relevante para cambiar actitudes negativas o generar actitudes positivas, que favorezcan su disposición para aprender y rendimiento. El presente estudio tiene por objetivo determinar los factores que influyen en la actitud hacia el aprendizaje en asignaturas de matemáticas en primer año de la carrera de Ingeniería, en una universidad chilena. Método. El método utilizado contempló el desarrollo de un instrumento de medición de factores relevantes previamente reportados en la literatura, el cual se aplicó a 873 estudiantes de primer año de la Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias de la Universidad Diego Portales en Chile, que cursaron las asignaturas de Cálculo 1 y Álgebra y Geometría. Se formula un modelo conceptual que es analizado mediante las herramientas de Ecuaciones estructurales, bajo el método Mínimos Cuadrados Parciales (Partial Least Squares: PLS). Resultados. Los resultados obtenidos indican que los factores, según su grado de influencia: Motivación por aprender, Metodología de aprendizaje, Idoneidad del profesor y percepción de Utilidad de la asignatura, influyen positivamente en la Actitud hacia el aprendizaje, la que influye a su vez en el rendimiento académico, a través de un factor que captura el Aprendizaje autodeclarado del estudiante. Discusión. Se enfatiza en la importancia de conocer los factores que influyen sobre la actitud hacia el aprendizaje, para establecer acciones que influyan sobre estos factores que podrían favorecer el aprendizaje y un mejor rendimiento.
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- 2022
31. The evolution of community peer support values: reflections from three UK mental health project teams
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Tanya Mackay, Nisba Ahmed, Humma Andleeb, Julie Billsborough, Richard Currie, Raj Hazzard, Fozia Haider, Naima Iqbal, Ffion Matthews, Andreja Mesarič, Jennie Parker, Vanessa Pinfold, Laura Richmond, Dan Robotham, and Rose Thompson
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Psychiatry and Mental health - Published
- 2022
32. The XXL Survey. XLII. The LX − σv relation of galaxy groups and clusters detected in the XXL and GAMA surveys
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P A Giles, A Robotham, M E Ramos-Ceja, B J Maughan, M Sereno, S McGee, S Phillipps, A Iovino, D J Turner, C Adami, S Brough, L Chiappetti, S P Driver, A E Evrard, A Farahi, F Gastaldello, B W Holwerda, A M Hopkins, E Koulouridis, F Pacaud, M Pierre, K A Pimbblet, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM), and Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
galaxies: groups: general ,[SDU]Sciences of the Universe [physics] ,Space and Planetary Science ,X-rays: galaxies: clusters ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,X-rays: general - Abstract
International audience; The XXL Survey is the largest homogeneous survey carried out with XMM-Newton. Covering an area of 50 deg2, the survey contains several hundred galaxy clusters out to a redshift of ≍2, above an X-ray flux limit of ~6 × 10-15 er g cm-2 s-1. The GAMA spectroscopic survey of ~300 000 galaxies covers ≍286 deg2, down to an r-band magnitude of r < 19.8 mag. The region of overlap of these two surveys (covering 14.6 deg2) represents an ideal opportunity to study clusters selected via two independent selection criteria. Generating two independently selected samples of clusters, one drawn from XXL (spanning a redshift range 0.05 ≤ z ≤ 0.3) and another from GAMA (0.05 ≤ z ≤ 0.2), both spanning 0.2 ≲ M500 ≲ 5 × 1014 M⊙, we investigate the relationship between X-ray luminosity and velocity dispersion (LX - σv relation). Comparing the LX - σv relation between the X-ray selected and optically selected samples, when not accounting for the X-ray selection, we find that the scatter of the X-ray selected sample is 2.7 times higher than the optically selected sample (at the 3.7σ level). Accounting for the X-ray selection to model the LX - σv relation, we find that the difference in the scatter increases (with the X-ray selected sample having a scatter 3.4 times larger than the optically selected sample). Although the scatter of the optically selected sample is lower, we find 13 optically selected GAMA groups undetected in X-rays. Inspection of the difference in magnitude between the first and second brightest galaxies in the cluster, and a stacked X-ray image of these 13 groups, suggests that these are young systems still in the process of forming.
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- 2022
33. The X-ray invisible Universe. A look into the halos undetected by eROSITA
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Popesso, P., Biviano, A., Bulbul, E., Merloni, A., Comparat, J., Clerc, N., Igo, Z., Liu, A., Driver, S., Salvato, M., Brusa, M., Bahar, Y. E., Malavasi, N., Ghirardini, V., Ponti, G., Robotham, A., Liske, J., and Grandis, S.
- Subjects
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The paper presents the analysis of GAMA spectroscopic groups and clusters detected and undetected in the SRG/eROSITA X-ray map of the eFEDS (eROSITA Final Equatorial Depth Survey) area, in the halo mass range $10^{13}-5x10^{14}$ $M_{\odot}$ and at $z < 0.2$. We compare the X-ray surface brightness profiles of the eROSITA detected groups with the mean stacked profile of the undetected low-mass halos. Overall, we find that the undetected groups exhibit less concentrated X-ray surface brightness, dark matter, and galaxy distributions with respect to the X-ray detected halos. Consistently with the low mass concentration, the magnitude gap indicates that these are younger systems. The later assembly time is confirmed by the bluer average color of the BCG and of the galaxy population with respect to the detected systems. They reside with a higher probability in filaments while X-ray detected low-mass halos favor the nodes of the Cosmic Web. Because of the suppressed X-ray central emission, the undetected systems tend to be X-ray under-luminous at fixed halo mass, and to lie below the $L_X-M_{halo}$ relation. Interestingly, the X-ray detected systems inhabiting the nodes scatter the less around the relation, while those in filaments tend to lie below it. We do not observe any strong relation between the properties of detected and undetected systems with the AGN activity. The fraction of optically selected AGN in the galaxy population is consistent in the two samples. More interestingly, the probability that the BCG hosts a radio AGN is lower in the undetected groups. We, thus, argue that the observed differences between X-ray detected and undetected groups are ascribable to the Cosmic Web, and its role in the halo assembly bias. Our results suggest that the X-ray selection is biased to favor the most concentrated and old systems located in the nodes of the Cosmic Web., 15 pages, 13 figures, Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2023
34. Learning to deliver LGBT+ aged care
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Trish Hafford-Letchfield, Alfonso Pezzella, Sandra Connell, Mojca Urek, Anže Jurček, Agnes Higgins, Brian Keogh, Nina Van de Vaart, Irma Rabelink, George Robotham, Elisa Bus, Charlotte Buitenkamp, and Sarah Lewis-Brooke
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- 2023
35. Print hegemony or just a(nother) platform ? : digital first production at daily newspapers
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Andrew Robotham
- Published
- 2023
36. Nature-based solutions enhance sediment and nutrient storage in an agricultural lowland catchment
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John Robotham, Gareth Old, Ponnambalam Rameshwaran, David Sear, Emily Trill, James Bishop, David Gasca‐Tucker, Joanne Old, and David McKnight
- Subjects
Geography, Planning and Development ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Hydrology ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
In this paper, nature-based solutions (NBS) include: (1) natural flood management (NFM) interventions with a primary function of flood risk reduction but with additional multiple benefits for water quality improvements through the mitigation of diffuse pollution; and (2) ponds with a primary function of water quality improvement. This study assesses the ability of these NBS to trap pollutants in run-off within two small (3.4 km2) agricultural catchments (Upper Thames, UK). The masses of sediment, phosphorus, and organic carbon trapped by 14 features (since construction 2–3 years previously) were quantified through sediment surveying and sampling. Streamflow and suspended sediment monitoring downstream of features enabled catchment yields to be calculated. The features trapped a total of 83 t sediment, 122 kg phosphorus, and 4.3 t organic carbon. Although the footprint of the features was
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- 2023
37. A New WISE Calibration of Stellar Mass
- Author
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Jarrett, T. H., Cluver, M. E., Taylor, Edward N., Bellstedt, Sabine, Robotham, A. S. G, and Yao, H. F. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We derive new empirical scaling relations between WISE mid-infrared galaxy photometry and well-determined stellar masses from SED modeling of a suite of optical-infrared photometry provided by the DR4 Catalogue of the GAMA-KiDS-VIKING survey of the southern G23 field. The mid-infrared source extraction and characterization are drawn from the WISE Extended Source Catalogue (WXSC) and the archival ALLWISE catalog, combining both resolved and compact galaxies in the G23 sample to a redshift of 0.15. Three scaling relations are derived: W1 3.4 micron luminosity versus stellar mass, and WISE W1-W2, W1-W3 colors versus mass-to-light ratio (sensitive to a variety of galaxy types from passive to star-forming). For each galaxy in the sample, we then derive the combined stellar mass from these scaling relations, producing Mstellar estimates with better than $\sim$25-30% accuracy for galaxies with $>$10$^{9}$ Msolar and $, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ)
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- 2023
38. EPOCHS Paper II: The Ultraviolet Luminosity Function from $7.5
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Adams, Nathan J., Conselice, Christopher J., Austin, Duncan, Harvey, Thomas, Ferreira, Leonardo, Trussler, James, Juodzbalis, Ignas, Li, Qiong, Windhorst, Rogier, Cohen, Seth H., Jansen, Rolf, Summers, Jake, Tompkins, Scott, Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron, D'Silva, Jordan C. J., Yan, Haojing, Coe, Dan, Frye, Brenda, Grogin, Norman A., Koekemoer, Anton M., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Ryan, Russell E., Maksym, W. Peter, Rutkowski, Michael J., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Hammel, Heidi B., Nonino, Mario, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Wilkins, Stephen M., Willner, Steven P., Bradley, Larry D., Broadhurst, Tom, Cheng, Cheng, Dole, Herve, Hathi, Nimish P., and Zitrin, Adi
- Subjects
Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences - Abstract
We present an analysis of the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) and star formation rate density of distant galaxies ($7.5 < z < 13.5$) in the `blank' fields of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization Science (PEARLS) survey combined with Early Release Science (ERS) data from the CEERS, GLASS and NGDEEP surveys/fields. We use a combination of SED fitting tools and quality cuts to obtain a reliable selection and characterisation of high-redshift ($z>6.5$) galaxies from a consistently processed set of deep, near-infrared imaging. Within an area of 110 arcmin$^{2}$, we identify 214 candidate galaxies at redshifts $z>6.5$ and we use this sample to study the ultraviolet luminosity function (UV LF) in four redshift bins between $7.5, 28 Pages, 4 Tables, 9 Figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2023
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39. Spectroscopy of the Supernova H0pe Host Galaxy at Redshift 1.78
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Polletta, M., Nonino, M., Frye, B., Gargiulo, A., Bisogni, S., Garuda, N., Thompson, D., Lehnert, M., Pascale, M., Willner, S. P., Kamieneski, P., Leimbach, R., Cheng, C., Coe, D., Cohen, S. H., Conselice, C. J., Dai, L., Diego, J., Dole, H., Driver, S. P., D'Silva, J. C. J., Fontana, A., Foo, N., Furtak, L. J., Grogin, N. A., Harrington, K., Hathi, N. P., Jansen, R. A., Kelly, P., Koekemoer, A. M., Mancini, C., Marshall, M. A., Pierel, J. D. R., Pirzkal, N., Robotham, A., Rutkowski, M. J., Ryan, Jr., R. E., Snigula, J. M., Summers, J., Tompkins, S., Willmer, C. N. A., Windhorst, R. A., Yan, H., Yun, M. S., Zitrin, A., Centre de Recherche Astrophysique de Lyon (CRAL), École normale supérieure de Lyon (ENS de Lyon)-Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Agence Spatiale Européenne = European Space Agency (ESA), Institut d'astrophysique spatiale (IAS), and Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National d’Études Spatiales [Paris] (CNES)
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Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Supernova (SN) H0pe was discovered as a new transient in James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) NIRCam images of the galaxy cluster PLCK G165.7+67.0 taken as part of the "Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science" (PEARLS) JWST GTO program (# 1176) on 2023 March 30 (AstroNote 2023-96; Frye et al. 2023). The transient is a compact source associated with a background galaxy that is stretched and triply-imaged by the cluster's strong gravitational lensing. This paper reports spectra in the 950-1370 nm observer frame of two of the galaxy's images obtained with Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) Utility Camera in the Infrared (LUCI) in longslit mode two weeks after the \JWST\ observations. The individual average spectra show the [OII] doublet and the Balmer and 4000 Angstrom breaks at redshift z=1.783+/-0.002. The CIGALE best-fit model of the spectral energy distribution indicates that SN H0pe's host galaxy is massive (Mstar~6x10^10 Msun after correcting for a magnification factor ~7) with a predominant intermediate age (~2 Gyr) stellar population, moderate extinction, and a magnification-corrected star formation rate ~13 Msun/yr, consistent with being below the main sequence of star formation. These properties suggest that H0pe might be a type Ia SN. Additional observations of SN H0pe and its host recently carried out with JWST (JWST-DD-4446; PI: B. Frye) will be able to both determine the SN classification and confirm its association with the galaxy analyzed in this work., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Letter accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2023
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40. sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683231152885 – Supplemental material for Developing a Modeling Framework for Quantifying the Health and Cost Implications of Antibiotic Resistance for Surgical Procedures
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Davies, Heather, Russell, Joel, Varghese, Angel, Holmes, Hayden, Soares, Marta O., Woods, B., Puig-Peiro, Ruth, Evans, Stephanie, Tierney, Rory, Mealing, Stuart, Sculpher, Mark, and Robotham, Julie V.
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111799 Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified ,FOS: Health sciences - Abstract
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683231152885 for Developing a Modeling Framework for Quantifying the Health and Cost Implications of Antibiotic Resistance for Surgical Procedures by Heather Davies, Joel Russell, Angel Varghese, Hayden Holmes, Marta O. Soares, B. Woods, Ruth Puig-Peiro, Stephanie Evans, Rory Tierney, Stuart Mealing, Mark Sculpher and Julie V. Robotham in MDM Policy & Practice
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- 2023
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41. Additional file 1 of Estimating the burden of antimicrobial resistance: a systematic literature review
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Naylor, Nichola R., Atun, Rifat, Zhu, Nina, Kulasabanathan, Kavian, Silva, Sachin, Chatterjee, Anuja, Knight, Gwenan M., and Robotham, Julie V.
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Supplementary Material for the Systematic Literature Review. (DOCX 359 kb)
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- 2023
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42. Euclid preparation:XXVI. the Euclid Morphology Challenge: Towards structural parameters for billions of galaxies
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Euclid Collaboration, Bretonnière, H., Kuchner, U., Huertas-Company, M., Merlin, E., Castellano, M., Tuccillo, D., Buitrago, F., Conselice, C. J., Boucaud, A., Häußler, B., Kümmel, M., Hartley, W. G., Ayllon, A. Alvarez, Bertin, E., Ferrari, F., Ferreira, L., Gavazzi, R., Hernández-Lang, D., Lucatelli, G., Robotham, A. S. G., Schefer, M., Wang, L., Cabanac, R., Sánchez, H. Domínguez, Duc, P. -A., Fotopoulou, S., Kruk, S., La Marca, A., Margalef-Bentabol, B., Marleau, F. R., Tortora, C., Aghanim, N., Amara, A., Auricchio, N., Azzollini, R., Baldi, M., Bender, R., Bodendorf, C., Branchini, E., Brescia, M., Brinchmann, J., Camera, S., Capobianco, V., Carbone, C., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cavuoti, S., Cimatti, A., Cledassou, R., Congedo, G., Conversi, L., Copin, Y., Corcione, L., Courbin, F., Cropper, M., Da Silva, A., Degaudenzi, H., Dinis, J., Dubath, F., Duncan, C. A. J., Dupac, X., Dusini, S., Farrens, S., Ferriol, S., Frailis, M., Franceschi, E., Fumana, M., Galeotta, S., Garilli, B., Gillis, B., Giocoli, C., Grazian, A., Grupp, F., Haugan, S. V. H., Hoekstra, H., Holmes, W., Hormuth, F., Hornstrup, A., Hudelot, P., Jahnke, K., Kermiche, S., Kiessling, A., Kohley, R., Kunz, M., Kurki-Suonio, H., Ligori, S., Lilje, P. B., Lloro, I., Mansutti, O., Marggraf, O., Markovic, K., Marulli, F., Massey, R., McCracken, H. J., Medinaceli, E., Melchior, M., Meneghetti, M., Meylan, G., Moresco, M., Moscardini, L., Munari, E., Niemi, S. M., Padilla, C., Paltani, S., Pasian, F., Pedersen, K., Percival, W., Pettorino, V., Polenta, G., Poncet, M., Pozzetti, L., Raison, F., Rebolo, R., Renzi, A., Rhodes, J., Riccio, G., Romelli, E., Rosset, C., Rossetti, E., Saglia, R., Sapone, D., Sartoris, B., Schneider, P., Secroun, A., Seidel, G., Sirignano, C., Sirri, G., Skottfelt, J., Starck, J. -L., Tallada-Crespí, P., Taylor, A. N., Tereno, I., Toledo-Moreo, R., Tutusaus, I., Valentijn, E. A., Valenziano, L., Vassallo, T., Wang, Y., Weller, J., Zamorani, G., Zoubian, J., Andreon, S., Bardelli, S., Colodro-Conde, C., Di Ferdinando, D., Graciá-Carpio, J., Lindholm, V., Mauri, N., Mei, S., Scottez, V., Zucca, E., Baccigalupi, C., Ballardini, M., Bernardeau, F., Biviano, A., Borgani, S., Borlaff, A. S., Burigana, C., Cappi, A., Carvalho, C. S., Casas, S., Castignani, G., Cooray, A. R., Coupon, J., Courtois, H. M., Davini, S., De Lucia, G., Desprez, G., Escartin, J. A., Escoffier, S., Fabricius, M., Farina, M., Fontana, A., Ganga, K., Garcia-Bellido, J., George, K., Gozaliasl, G., Hildebrandt, H., Hook, I., Ilbert, O., Ilić, S., Joachimi, B., Kansal, V., Keihanen, E., Kirkpatrick, C. C., Loureiro, A., Macias-Perez, J., Magliocchetti, M., Maoli, R., Marcin, S., Martinelli, M., Martinet, N., Maturi, M., Monaco, P., Morgante, G., Nadathur, S., Nucita, A. A., Patrizii, L., Popa, V., Porciani, C., Potter, D., Pourtsidou, A., Pöntinen, M., Reimberg, P., Sánchez, A. G., Sakr, Z., Schirmer, M., Sefusatti, E., Sereno, M., Stadel, J., Teyssier, R., Valiviita, J., van Mierlo, S. E., Veropalumbo, A., Viel, M., Weaver, J. R., Scott, D., Institut d'astrophysique spatiale (IAS), Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National d’Études Spatiales [Paris] (CNES), AstroParticule et Cosmologie (APC (UMR_7164)), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Observatoire de Paris, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité), Laboratoire d'Etude du Rayonnement et de la Matière en Astrophysique et Atmosphères = Laboratory for Studies of Radiation and Matter in Astrophysics and Atmospheres (LERMA), École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS-PSL), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire de Paris, Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-CY Cergy Paris Université (CY), Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris (IAP), Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de recherche en astrophysique et planétologie (IRAP), Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (OMP), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Observatoire astronomique de Strasbourg (ObAS), Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3), Institut de Physique des 2 Infinis de Lyon (IP2I Lyon), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Astrophysique Interprétation Modélisation (AIM (UMR7158 / UMR_E_9005 / UM_112)), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre de Physique des Particules de Marseille (CPPM), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Physique Théorique - UMR CNRS 3681 (IPHT), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Joseph Louis LAGRANGE (LAGRANGE), Université Nice Sophia Antipolis (1965 - 2019) (UNS), COMUE Université Côte d'Azur (2015-2019) (COMUE UCA)-COMUE Université Côte d'Azur (2015-2019) (COMUE UCA)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur, COMUE Université Côte d'Azur (2015-2019) (COMUE UCA)-Université Côte d'Azur (UCA)-Université Côte d'Azur (UCA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire de Physique des 2 Infinis Irène Joliot-Curie (IJCLab), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie (LPSC), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA)-Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP ), Université Grenoble Alpes (UGA), and Euclid
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Galaxies: fundamental parameters ,Cosmology: observations ,Galaxies: evolution ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,evolution [Galaxies] ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Methods: data analysis ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,fundamental parameters [Galaxies] ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det] ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,observations [Cosmology] ,data analysis [Methods] ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
The various Euclid imaging surveys will become a reference for studies of galaxy morphology by delivering imaging over an unprecedented area of 15 000 square degrees with high spatial resolution. In order to understand the capabilities of measuring morphologies from Euclid-detected galaxies and to help implement measurements in the pipeline, we have conducted the Euclid Morphology Challenge, which we present in two papers. While the companion paper by Merlin et al. focuses on the analysis of photometry, this paper assesses the accuracy of the parametric galaxy morphology measurements in imaging predicted from within the Euclid Wide Survey. We evaluate the performance of five state-of-the-art surface-brightness-fitting codes DeepLeGATo, Galapagos-2, Morfometryka, Profit and SourceXtractor++ on a sample of about 1.5 million simulated galaxies resembling reduced observations with the Euclid VIS and NIR instruments. The simulations include analytic S\'ersic profiles with one and two components, as well as more realistic galaxies generated with neural networks. We find that, despite some code-specific differences, all methods tend to achieve reliable structural measurements (10% scatter on ideal S\'ersic simulations) down to an apparent magnitude of about 23 in one component and 21 in two components, which correspond to a signal-to-noise ratio of approximately 1 and 5 respectively. We also show that when tested on non-analytic profiles, the results are typically degraded by a factor of 3, driven by systematics. We conclude that the Euclid official Data Releases will deliver robust structural parameters for at least 400 million galaxies in the Euclid Wide Survey by the end of the mission. We find that a key factor for explaining the different behaviour of the codes at the faint end is the set of adopted priors for the various structural parameters., Comment: Accepted by A&A. 30 pages, 23+6 figures, Euclid pre-launch key paper. Companion paper: Euclid Collaboration XXV: Merlin et al. 2022 Minor corrections after journal review
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- 2023
43. Are $JWST$/NIRCam color gradients in the lensed $z=2.3$ dusty star-forming galaxy $El~Anzuelo$ due to central dust attenuation or inside-out galaxy growth?
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Kamieneski, Patrick S., Frye, Brenda L., Pascale, Massimo, Cohen, Seth H., Windhorst, Rogier A., Jansen, Rolf A., Yun, Min S., Cheng, Cheng, Summers, Jake S., Carleton, Timothy, Harrington, Kevin C., Diego, Jose M., Yan, Haojing, Koekemoer, Anton M., Willmer, Christopher N. A., Petric, Andreea, Furtak, Lukas J., Foo, Nicholas, Conselice, Christopher J., Coe, Dan, Driver, Simon P., Grogin, Norman A., Marshall, Madeline A., Pirzkal, Nor, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Ryan, Russell E., and Tompkins, Scott
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Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences - Abstract
Gradients in the mass-to-light ratio of distant galaxies impede our ability to characterize their size and compactness. The long-wavelength filters of $JWST$'s NIRCam offer a significant step forward. For galaxies at Cosmic Noon ($z\sim2$), this regime corresponds to the rest-frame near-infrared, which is less biased towards young stars and captures emission from the bulk of a galaxy's stellar population. We present an initial analysis of an extraordinary lensed dusty star-forming galaxy (DSFG) at $z=2.3$ behind the $El~Gordo$ cluster ($z=0.87$), named $El~Anzuelo$ ("The Fishhook") after its partial Einstein-ring morphology. The FUV-NIR SED suggests an intrinsic star formation rate of $81^{+7}_{-2}~M_\odot~{\rm yr}^{-1}$ and dust attenuation $A_V\approx 1.6$, in line with other DSFGs on the star-forming main sequence. We develop a parametric lens model to reconstruct the source-plane structure of dust imaged by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, far-UV to optical light from $Hubble$, and near-IR imaging with 8 filters of $JWST$/NIRCam, as part of the Prime Extragalactic Areas for Reionization and Lensing Science (PEARLS) program. The source-plane half-light radius is remarkably consistent from $\sim 1-4.5~μ$m, despite a clear color gradient where the inferred galaxy center is redder than the outskirts. We interpret this to be the result of both a radially-decreasing gradient in attenuation and substantial spatial offsets between UV- and IR-emitting components. A spatial decomposition of the SED reveals modestly suppressed star formation in the inner kiloparsec, which suggests that we are witnessing the early stages of inside-out quenching., 26 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2023
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44. Hydra I: An extensible multi-source-finder comparison and cataloguing tool
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Boyce, M. M., Hopkins, A. M., Riggi, S., Rudnick, L., Ramsay, M., Hale, C. L., Marvil, J., Whiting, M., Venkataraman, P., O'Dea, C. P., Baum, S. A., Gordon, Y. A., Vantyghem, A. N., Dionyssiou, M., Andernach, H., Collier, J. D., English, J., Koribalski, B. S., Leahy, D., Michałowski, M. J., Safi-Harb, S., Vaccari, M., Alexander, E., Cowley, M., Kapinska, A. D., Robotham, A. S. G., and Tang, H.
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D.2.13 ,D.2.4 ,D.2.6 ,D.2.8 ,D.2.10 ,D.2.11 ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
The latest generation of radio surveys are now producing sky survey images containing many millions of radio sources. In this context it is highly desirable to understand the performance of radio image source finder (SF) software and to identify an approach that optimises source detection capabilities. We have created Hydra to be an extensible multi-SF and cataloguing tool that can be used to compare and evaluate different SFs. Hydra, which currently includes the SFs Aegean, Caesar, ProFound, PyBDSF, and Selavy, provides for the addition of new SFs through containerisation and configuration files. The SF input RMS noise and island parameters are optimised to a 90\% ''percentage real detections'' threshold (calculated from the difference between detections in the real and inverted images), to enable comparison between SFs. Hydra provides completeness and reliability diagnostics through observed-deep ($\mathcal{D}$) and generated-shallow ($\mathcal{S}$) images, as well as other statistics. In addition, it has a visual inspection tool for comparing residual images through various selection filters, such as S/N bins in completeness or reliability. The tool allows the user to easily compare and evaluate different SFs in order to choose their desired SF, or a combination thereof. This paper is part one of a two part series. In this paper we introduce the Hydra software suite and validate its $\mathcal{D/S}$ metrics using simulated data. The companion paper demonstrates the utility of Hydra by comparing the performance of SFs using both simulated and real images., Comment: Paper accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2023
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45. sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683231152885 – Supplemental material for Developing a Modeling Framework for Quantifying the Health and Cost Implications of Antibiotic Resistance for Surgical Procedures
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Davies, Heather, Russell, Joel, Varghese, Angel, Holmes, Hayden, Soares, Marta O., Woods, B., Puig-Peiro, Ruth, Evans, Stephanie, Tierney, Rory, Mealing, Stuart, Sculpher, Mark, and Robotham, Julie V.
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111799 Public Health and Health Services not elsewhere classified ,FOS: Health sciences - Abstract
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-mpp-10.1177_23814683231152885 for Developing a Modeling Framework for Quantifying the Health and Cost Implications of Antibiotic Resistance for Surgical Procedures by Heather Davies, Joel Russell, Angel Varghese, Hayden Holmes, Marta O. Soares, B. Woods, Ruth Puig-Peiro, Stephanie Evans, Rory Tierney, Stuart Mealing, Mark Sculpher and Julie V. Robotham in MDM Policy & Practice
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- 2023
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46. JWST’s PEARLS: A JWST/NIRCam View of ALMA Sources
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Cheng Cheng, Jia-Sheng Huang, Ian Smail, Haojing Yan, Seth H. Cohen, Rolf A. Jansen, Rogier A. Windhorst, Zhiyuan Ma, Anton Koekemoer, Christopher N. A. Willmer, S. P. Willner, Jose M. Diego, Brenda Frye, Christopher J. Conselice, Leonardo Ferreira, Andreea Petric, Min Yun, Hansung B. Gim, Maria del Carmen Polletta, Kenneth J. Duncan, Benne W. Holwerda, Huub J. A. Röttgering, Rachel Honor, Nimish P. Hathi, Patrick S. Kamieneski, Nathan J. Adams, Dan Coe, Tom Broadhurst, Jake Summers, Scott Tompkins, Simon P. Driver, Norman A. Grogin, Madeline A. Marshall, Nor Pirzkal, Aaron Robotham, and Russell E. Ryan
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the results of James Webb Space Telescope/NIRCam observations of 19 (sub)millimeter (submm/mm) sources detected by the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA). The accurate ALMA positions allowed unambiguous identifications of their NIRCam counterparts. Taking gravitational lensing into account, these represent 16 distinct galaxies in three fields and constitute the largest sample of its kind to date. The counterparts' spectral energy distributions from rest-frame ultraviolet to near infrared provide photometric redshifts ($110^{10.5}$ Msol), which are similar to sub-millimeter galaxy (SMG) hosts studied previously. However, our sample is fainter in submm/mm than the classic SMG samples are, and our sources exhibit a wider range of properties. They have dust-embedded star-formation rates as low as 10 Msol yr$^{-1}$, and the sources populate both the star-forming main sequence and the quiescent categories. The deep NIRCam data allow us to study the rest-frame near-IR morphologies. Excluding two multiply imaged systems and one quasar, the majority of the remaining sources are disk-like and show either little or no disturbance. This suggests that secular growth is a potential route for the assembly of high-mass disk galaxies. While a few hosts have large disks, the majority have small disks (median half-mass radius of 1.6 kpc). At this time, it is unclear whether this is due to the prevalence of small disks at these redshifts or some unknown selection effects of deep ALMA observations. A larger sample of ALMA sources with NIRCam observations will be able to address this question., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted by ApJL
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- 2023
47. Referee report. For: Automated news in practice: a cross-national ANT case study [version 1; peer review: 1 approved with reservations]
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Pignard-Cheynel, Nathalie and Robotham, Andrew
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- 2023
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48. Galaxy quenching timescales from a forensic reconstruction of their colour evolution
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Matías Bravo, Aaron S G Robotham, Claudia del P Lagos, Luke J M Davies, Sabine Bellstedt, and Jessica E Thorne
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Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The timescales on which galaxies move out of the blue cloud to the red sequence ($\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}$) provide insight into the mechanisms driving quenching. Here, we build upon previous work, where we showcased a method to reconstruct the colour evolution of observed low-redshift galaxies from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey based on spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting with ProSpect, together with a statistically-driven definition for the blue and red populations. We also use the predicted colour evolution from the SHARK semi-analytic model, combined with SED fits of our simulated galaxy sample, to study the accuracy of the measured $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}$ and gain physical insight into the colour evolution of galaxies. In this work, we measure $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}$ in a consistent approach for both observations and simulations. After accounting for selection bias, we find evidence for an increase in $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}$ in GAMA as a function of cosmic time (from $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}\sim1$ Gyr to $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}\sim2$ Gyr in the lapse of $\sim4$ Gyr), but not in SHARK ($\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}\lesssim1$ Gyr). Our observations and simulations disagree on the effect of stellar mass, with GAMA showing massive galaxies transitioning faster, but is the opposite in SHARK. We find that environment only impacts galaxies below $\sim10^{10}$ M$_\odot$ in GAMA, with satellites having shorter $\tau^{}_\mathrm{Q}$ than centrals by $\sim0.4$ Gyr, with SHARK only in qualitative agreement. Finally, we compare to previous literature, finding consistency with timescales in the order of couple Gyr, but with several differences that we discuss., Comment: 17 pages, 14 figures. Submitted to MNRAS. Updated to reflect changes addressing the referee's comments
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- 2023
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49. Hydra II: Characterisation of Aegean, Caesar, ProFound, PyBDSF, and Selavy source finders
- Author
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Boyce, M. M., Hopkins, A. M., Riggi, S., Rudnick, L., Ramsay, M., Hale, C. L., Marvil, J., Whiting, M., Venkataraman, P., O'Dea, C. P., Baum, S. A., Gordon, Y. A., Vantyghem, A. N., Dionyssiou, M., Andernach, H., Collier, J. D., English, J., Koribalski, B. S., Leahy, D., Michałowski, M. J., Safi-Harb, S., Vaccari, M., Alexander, E., Cowley, M., Kapinska, A. D., Robotham, A. S. G., and Tang, H.
- Subjects
FOS: Physical sciences ,D.2.8 ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
We present a comparison between the performance of a selection of source finders using a new software tool called Hydra. The companion paper, Paper~I, introduced the Hydra tool and demonstrated its performance using simulated data. Here we apply Hydra to assess the performance of different source finders by analysing real observational data taken from the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) Pilot Survey. EMU is a wide-field radio continuum survey whose primary goal is to make a deep ($20\mu$Jy/beam RMS noise), intermediate angular resolution ($15^{\prime\prime}$), 1\,GHz survey of the entire sky south of $+30^{\circ}$ declination, and expecting to detect and catalogue up to 40 million sources. With the main EMU survey expected to begin in 2022 it is highly desirable to understand the performance of radio image source finder software and to identify an approach that optimises source detection capabilities. Hydra has been developed to refine this process, as well as to deliver a range of metrics and source finding data products from multiple source finders. We present the performance of the five source finders tested here in terms of their completeness and reliability statistics, their flux density and source size measurements, and an exploration of case studies to highlight finder-specific limitations., Comment: Paper accepted for publication in PASA
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The cosmic radio background from 150 MHz--8.4 GHz, and its division into AGN and star-forming galaxy flux
- Author
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Scott A Tompkins, Simon P Driver, Aaron S G Robotham, Rogier A Windhorst, Claudia del P Lagos, T Vernstrom, and Andrew M Hopkins
- Subjects
Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a revised measurement of the extragalactic background light (EBL) at radio frequencies based on a near complete compendium of radio source counts. We present the radio-EBL at 150 MHz, 325 MHz, 610 MHz, 1.4 GHz, 3 GHz, 5 GHz, and 8.4 GHz. In all cases the contribution to the radio-EBL, per decade of flux, exhibits a two-humped distribution well matched to the active galactic nucleus (AGN) and star-forming galaxy (SFG) populations, and with each population contributing roughly equal energy. Only at 3 GHz are the source count contributions to the EBL fully convergent, and hence we report empirical lower limits to the radio-EBL in the remaining bands. Adopting predictions from the SHARK semi-analytic model for the form of the SFG population, we can fit the fainter source counts providing measurements of the total contribution to the radio-EBL for the SFG and the AGN populations separately. This constitutes an empirically constrained model-dependent measurement for the SFG contribution, but a fully empirical measurement of the AGN contribution. Using the ProSpect spectral energy distribution code we can model the ultraviolet-optical-infrared-mm-radio SFG EBL at all frequencies from the cosmic star-formation history and the adoption of a Chabrier initial mass function. However, significant discrepancy remains (5 ×) between our source-count estimates of the radio-EBL and the direct measurements reported from the Absolute Radiometer for Cosmology, Astrophysics, and Diffuse Emission-2 (ARCADE-2) experiment. We can rule out a significant missing discrete source radio population and suggest that the cause of the high ARCADE-2 radio-EBL values may need to be sought either in the foreground subtraction or as a yet unknown diffuse component in the radio sky.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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