49 results on '"Cano, J. P."'
Search Results
2. The Aegis orbit determination and impact monitoring system and services of the ESA NEOCC web portal: The Aegis orbit determination and impact monitoring system...
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Fenucci, M., Faggioli, L., Gianotto, F., Bracali Cioci, D., Cano, J. L., Conversi, L., Devogèle, M., Di Girolamo, G., Drury, C., Föhring, D., Gisolfi, L., Kresken, R., Micheli, M., Moissl, R., Ocaña, F., Oliviero, D., Porru, A., Ramirez-Moreta, P., Rudawska, R., Bernardi, F., Bertolucci, A., Dimare, L., Guerra, F., Baldisserotto, V., Ceccaroni, M., Cennamo, R., Chessa, A., Del Vigna, A., Koschny, D., Teodorescu, A. M., and Perozzi, E.
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- 2024
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3. Semi-dark Higgs decays: sweeping the Higgs neutrino floor
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Aguilar-Saavedra, J. A., Cano, J. M., No, J. M., and Cerdeño, D. G.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We study exotic Higgs decays $h \to Z X$, with $X$ an invisible beyond the Standard Model (SM) particle, resulting in a semi-dark final state. Such exotic Higgs decays may occur in theories of axion-like-particles (ALPs), dark photons or pseudoscalar mediators between the SM and dark matter. The SM process $h\to Z\nu\bar{\nu}$ represents an irreducible "neutrino floor" background to these new physics searches, providing also a target experimental sensitivity for them. We analyze $h \to Z + \text{invisible}$ searches at the LHC and a future ILC, showing that these exotic Higgs decays can yield sensitivity to unexplored regions of parameter space for ALPs and dark matter models., Comment: 11 pages with appendices, 7 figures
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- 2022
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4. More light on Higgs flavor at the LHC: Higgs couplings to light quarks through $h + \gamma$ production
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Aguilar-Saavedra, J. A., Cano, J. M., and No, J. M.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Higgs production in association with a photon at hadron colliders is a rare process, not yet observed at the LHC. We show that this process is sensitive to significant deviations of Higgs couplings to first and second generation SM quarks (particularly the up-type) from their SM values, and use a multivariate neural network analysis to derive the prospects of the High Luminosity LHC to probe deviations in the up and charm Higgs Yukawa couplings through $h + \gamma$ production., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 light paper, matches published version
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- 2020
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5. q-Algebraic Equations, their power series solutions, and the asymptotic behavior of their coefficients
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Barbe, Ph., Cano, J., Ayuso, P. Fortuny, and McCormick, W. P.
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Mathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEs ,Mathematics - Combinatorics ,39-02 (Primary) 05.02, 05A15, 05A16, 05A30, 39A13, 40-02, 41A60, 44A15, 68R05 (Secondary) - Abstract
We give a systematic study of q-algebraic equations. The questions of existence, uniqueness and regularity of the solutions are solved in the space of grid-based Hahn series. The regularity is understood in terms of asymptotic behavior of coefficients, and is the main focus of this work. The results and algorithms are illustrated by many examples., Comment: 306 pages, 65 figures
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- 2020
6. Data Driven Flavour Model
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Arias-Aragon, F., Bouthelier-Madre, C., Cano, J. M., and Merlo, L.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
A bottom-up approach has been adopted to identify a flavour model that agrees with present experimental measurements. The charged fermion mass hierarchies suggest that only the top Yukawa term should be present at the renormalisable level. Similarly, describing the lightness of the active neutrinos through the type-I Seesaw mechanism, right-handed neutrino mass terms should also be present at the renormalisable level. The flavour symmetry of the Lagrangian including the fermionic kinetic terms and only the top Yukawa is then a combination of $U(2)$ and $U(3)$ factors. Once considering the Majorana neutrino terms, the associated symmetry is $O(3)$. Lighter charged fermion and active neutrino masses and quark and lepton mixings arise considering specific spurion fields {\it \`a la} Minimal Flavour Violation. The associated phenomenology is investigated and the model turns out to have almost the same flavour protection as the Minimal Flavour Violation in both quark and lepton sectors. Promoting the spurions to dynamical fields, the associated scalar potential is also studied and a minimum is identified such that fermion masses and mixings are correctly reproduced. Very precise predictions for the Majorana phases follow from the minimisation of the scalar potential and thus the neutrinoless-double-beta decay may represent a smoking gun for the model., Comment: 39 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in EPJ C
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- 2020
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7. Mott insulators with boundary zeros
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Wagner, N., Crippa, L., Amaricci, A., Hansmann, P., Klett, M., König, E. J., Schäfer, T., Sante, D. Di, Cano, J., Millis, A. J., Georges, A., and Sangiovanni, G.
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- 2023
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8. Retraction Note: P38MAPK is a major determinant of the balance between apoptosis and autophagy triggered by 5-fluorouracil: implication in resistance
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de la Cruz-Morcillo, M. A., Valero, M. L. L., Callejas-Valera, J. L., Arias-González, L., Melgar-Rojas, P., Galán-Moya, E. M., García-Gil, E., García-Cano, J., and Sánchez-Prieto, R.
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- 2024
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9. A giant exoplanet orbiting a very low-mass star challenges planet formation models
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Morales, J. C., Mustill, A. J., Ribas, I., Davies, M. B., Reiners, A., Bauer, F. F., Kossakowski, D., Herrero, E., Rodríguez, E., López-González, M. J., Rodríguez-López, C., Béjar, V. J. S., González-Cuesta, L., Luque, R., Pallé, E., Perger, M., Baroch, D., Johansen, A., Klahr, H., Mordasini, C., Anglada-Escudé, G., Caballero, J. A., Cortés-Contreras, M., Dreizler, S., Lafarga, M., Nagel, E., Passegger, V. M., Reffert, S., Rosich, A., Schweitzer, A., Tal-Or, L., Trifonov, T., Zechmeister, M., Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Guenther, E. W., Hagen, H. -J., Henning, T., Jeffers, S. V., Kaminski, A., Kürster, M., Montes, D., Seifert, W., Abellán, F. J., Abril, M., Aceituno, J., Aceituno, F. J., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Antona, R., Arroyo-Torres, B., Azzaro, M., Barrado, D., Becerril-Jarque, S., Benítez, D., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergond, G., Brinkmöller, M., del Burgo, C., Burn, R., Calvo-Ortega, R., Cano, J., Cárdenas, M. C., Guillén, C. Cardona, Carro, J., Casal, E., Casanova, V., Casasayas-Barris, N., Chaturvedi, P., Cifuentes, C., Claret, A., Colomé, J., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Dorda, R., Emsenhuber, A., Fernández, M., Fernández-Martín, A., Ferro, I. M., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., Cava, I. Gallardo, Vargas, M. L. García, Garcia-Piquer, A., Gesa, L., González-Álvarez, E., Hernández, J. I. González, González-Peinado, R., Guàrdia, J., Guijarro, A., de Guindos, E., Hatzes, A. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Hedrosa, R. P., Hermelo, I., Arabi, R. Hernández, Otero, F. Hernández, Hintz, D., Holgado, G., Huber, A., Huke, P., Johnson, E. N., de Juan, E., Kehr, M., Kemmer, J., Kim, M., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Labarga, F., Labiche, N., Lalitha, S., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Launhardt, R., Lázaro, F. J., Lizon, J. -L., Llamas, M., Lodieu, N., del Fresno, M. López, Salas, J. F. López, López-Santiago, J., Madinabeitia, H. Magán, Mall, U., Mancini, L., Mandel, H., Marfil, E., Molina, J. A. Marín, Martín, E. L., Martín-Fernández, P., Martín-Ruiz, S., Martínez-Rodríguez, H., Marvin, C. J., Mirabet, E., Moya, A., Naranjo, V., Nelson, R. P., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Ofir, A., Pascual, J., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Medialdea, D. Pérez, Pérez-Calpena, A., Perryman, M. A. C., Rabaza, O., Ballesta, A. Ramón, Rebolo, R., Redondo, P., Rix, H. -W., Rodler, F., Trinidad, A. Rodríguez, Sabotta, S., Sadegi, S., Salz, M., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Carrasco, M. A. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Sarmiento, L. F., Schäfer, S., Schlecker, M., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schöfer, P., Solano, E., Sota, A., Stahl, O., Stock, S., Stuber, T., Stürmer, J., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Tulloch, S. M., Veredas, G., Vico-Linares, J. I., Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Winkler, J., Wolthoff, V., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Statistical analyses from exoplanet surveys around low-mass stars indicate that super-Earth and Neptune-mass planets are more frequent than gas giants around such stars, in agreement with core accretion theory of planet formation. Using precise radial velocities derived from visual and near-infrared spectra, we report the discovery of a giant planet with a minimum mass of 0.46 Jupiter masses in an eccentric 204-day orbit around the very low-mass star GJ 3512. Dynamical models show that the high eccentricity of the orbit is most likely explained from planet-planet interactions. The reported planetary system challenges current formation theories and puts stringent constraints on the accretion and migration rates of planet formation and evolution models, indicating that disc instability may be more efficient in forming planets than previously thought., Comment: Manuscript author version. 41 pages, 11 figures
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- 2019
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10. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. Two temperate Earth-mass planet candidates around Teegarden's Star
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Zechmeister, M., Dreizler, S., Ribas, I., Reiners, A., Caballero, J. A., Bauer, F. F., Béjar, V. J. S., González-Cuesta, L., Herrero, E., Lalitha, S., López-González, M. J., Luque, R., Morales, J. C., Pallé, E., Rodríguez, E., López, C. Rodríguez, Tal-Or, L., Anglada-Escudé, G., Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Abril, M., Aceituno, F. J., Aceituno, J., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Jiménez, R. Antona, Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arroyo-Torres, B., Azzaro, M., Baroch, D., Barrado, D., Becerril, S., Benítez, D., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergond, G., Bluhm, P., Brinkmöller, M., del Burgo, C., Ortega, R. Calvo, Cano, J., Guillén, C. Cardona, Carro, J., Vázquez, M. C. Cárdenas, Casal, E., Casasayas-Barris, N., Casanova, V., Chaturvedi, P., Cifuentes, C., Claret, A., Colomé, J., Cortés-Contreras, M., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Dorda, R., Fernández, M., Fernández-Martín, A., Ferro, I. M., Fuhrmeister, B., Fukui, A., Galadí-Enríquez, D., Cava, I. Gallardo, de la Fuente, J. Garcia, Garcia-Piquer, A., Vargas, M. L. García, Gesa, L., Rueda, J. Góngora, González-Álvarez, E., Hernández, J. I. González, González-Peinado, R., Grözinger, U., Guàrdia, J., Guijarro, A., de Guindos, E., Hatzes, A. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Hedrosa, R. P., Helmling, J., Henning, T., Hermelo, I., Arabi, R. Hernández, Castaño, L. Hernández, Otero, F. Hernández, Hintz, D., Huke, P., Huber, A., Jeffers, S. V., Johnson, E. N., de Juan, E., Kaminski, A., Kemmer, J., Kim, M., Klahr, H., Klein, R., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Kossakowski, D., Kürster, M., Labarga, F., Lafarga, M., Llamas, M., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Launhardt, R., Lázaro, F. J., Lodieu, N., del Fresno, M. López, López-Comazzi, A., López-Puertas, M., Salas, J. F. López, López-Santiago, J., Madinabeitia, H. Magán, Mall, U., Mancini, L., Mandel, H., Marfil, E., Molina, J. A. Marín, Fernández, D. Maroto, Martín, E. L., Martín-Fernández, P., Martín-Ruiz, S., Marvin, C. J., Mirabet, E., Montañés-Rodríguez, P., Montes, D., Moreno-Raya, M. E., Nagel, E., Naranjo, V., Narita, N., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Ofir, A., Oshagh, M., Panduro, J., Parviainen, H., Pascual, J., Passegger, V. M., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Pérez-Calpena, A., Medialdea, D. Pérez, Perger, M., Perryman, M. A. C., Rabaza, O., Ballesta, A. Ramón, Rebolo, R., Redondo, P., Reffert, S., Reinhardt, S., Rhode, P., Rix, H. -W., Rodler, F., Trinidad, A. Rodríguez, Rosich, A., Sadegi, S., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Carrasco, M. A. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Sarmiento, L. F., Schäfer, S., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schöfer, P., Schweitzer, A., Seifert, W., Shulyak, D., Solano, E., Sota, A., Stahl, O., Stock, S., Strachan, J. B. P., Stuber, T., Stürmer, J., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Pinto, M. Tala, Trifonov, T., Veredas, G., Linares, J. I. Vico, Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Wolthoff, V., Xu, W., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. Teegarden's Star is the brightest and one of the nearest ultra-cool dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood. For its late spectral type (M7.0V), the star shows relatively little activity and is a prime target for near-infrared radial velocity surveys such as CARMENES. Aims. As part of the CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs, we obtained more than 200 radial-velocity measurements of Teegarden's Star and analysed them for planetary signals. Methods. We find periodic variability in the radial velocities of Teegarden's Star. We also studied photometric measurements to rule out stellar brightness variations mimicking planetary signals. Results. We find evidence for two planet candidates, each with $1.1M_\oplus$ minimum mass, orbiting at periods of 4.91 and 11.4 d, respectively. No evidence for planetary transits could be found in archival and follow-up photometry. Small photometric variability is suggestive of slow rotation and old age. Conclusions. The two planets are among the lowest-mass planets discovered so far, and they are the first Earth-mass planets around an ultra-cool dwarf for which the masses have been determined using radial velocities., Comment: A&A 627, A49. 26 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables. Press release available at http://www.astro.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~zechmeister/teegarden/teegarden.html. v2: two authors and one reference added
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- 2019
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11. Perioperative and oncologic outcomes of interval colectomy performed by acute care surgeons after stenting as a bridge to surgery for left-sided malignant colonic obstruction are non-inferior to the outcomes of colorectal surgeons in the elective setting: single center experience
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Aranda-Narváez, J. M., González-Cano, J., González-Sánchez, A. J., Titos-García, A., Cabrera-Serna, I., Romacho-López, L., González-Poveda, I., Mera-Velasco, S, Vázquez-Pedreño, L., and Santoyo-Santoyo, J.
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- 2022
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12. Stellar populations of galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey up to $z \sim 1$. III. The stellar content of the quiescent galaxy population during the last $8$ Gyr
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Díaz-García, L. A., Cenarro, A. J., López-Sanjuan, C., Ferreras, I., Fernández-Soto, A., Delgado, R. M. González, Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Roman, I. San, Viironen, K., Bonoli, S., Cerviño, M., Moles, M., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Husillos, C., Infante, L., Aguerri, J. A. L., Martínez, V. J., Molino, A., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We aim at constraining the stellar population properties of quiescent galaxies. These properties reveal how these galaxies evolved and assembled since $z\sim1$ up to the present time. Combining the ALHAMBRA multi-filter photo-spectra with the SED-fitting code MUFFIT, we build a complete catalogue of quiescent galaxies via the dust-corrected stellar mass vs colour diagram. This catalogue includes stellar population properties, such as age, metallicity, extinction, stellar mass and photometric redshift, retrieved from the analysis of composited populations based on two independent sets of SSP models. We develop and apply a novel methodology to provide, for the first time, the analytic probability distribution functions (PDFs) of mass-weighted age, metallicity, and extinction of quiescent galaxies as a function of redshift and stellar mass. We adopt different star formation histories to discard potential systematics in the analysis. The number density of quiescent galaxies is found to increase since $z\sim1$, with a more substantial variation at lower mass. Quiescent galaxies feature extinction $A_V<0.6$, with median values in the range $A_V = 0.15\mathrm{-}0.3$. At increasing stellar mass, quiescent galaxies are older and more metal rich since $z\sim1$. A detailed analysis of the PDFs reveals that the evolution of quiescent galaxies is not compatible with passive evolution and a slight decrease is hinted at median metallicity $0.1\mathrm{-}0.2$~dex. The intrinsic dispersion of the age and metallicity PDFs show a dependence with stellar mass and/or redshift. These results are consistent with both sets of SSP models and the alternative SFH assumptions explored. Consequently, the quiescent population must undergo an evolutive pathway including mergers and/or remnants of star formation to reconcile the observed trends, where the `progenitor' bias should also be taken into account., Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, 9 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2018
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13. The QUIJOTE Experiment: Prospects for CMB B-MODE polarization detection and foregrounds characterization
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Poidevin, F., Rubino-Martin, J. A., Genova-Santos, R., Rebolo, R., Aguiar, M., Gomez-Renasco, F., Guidi., F., Gutierrez, C., Hoyland, R. J., Lopez-Caraballo, C., Carreras, A. Oria, Pelaez-Santos, A. E., Perez-De-Taoro, M. R., Ruiz-Granados, B., Tramonte, D., Vega-Moreno, A., Viera-Curbelo, T., Vignaga, R., Martinez-Gonzalez, E., Barreiro, R. B., Casaponsa, B., Casas, F. J., Diego, J. M., Fernandez-Cobos, R., Herranz, D., Lopez-Caniego, M., Ortiz, D., Vielva, P., Artal, E., Aja, B., Cagigas, J., Cano, J. L., De La Fuente, L., Mediavilla, A., Teran, J. V., Villa, E., Piccirillo, L., Dickinson, C., Grainge, K., Harper, S., Mcculloch, M., Melhuish, S., Pisano, G., Watson, R. A., Lasenby, A., Ashdown, M., Perrott, Y., Razavi-Ghods, N., Titterington, D., and Scott, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
QUIJOTE (Q-U-I JOint TEnerife) is an experiment designed to achieve CMB B-mode polarization detection and sensitive enough to detect a primordial gravitational-wave component if the B-mode amplitude is larger than r = 0.05. It consists in two telescopes and three instruments observing in the frequency range 10-42 GHz installed at the Teide Observatory in the Canary Islands, Spain. The observing strategy includes three raster scan deep integration fields for cosmology, a nominal wide survey covering the Northen Sky and specific raster scan deep integration observations in regions of specific interest. The main goals of the project are presented and the first scientific results obtained with the first instrument are reviewed., Comment: 8 pages, 1 logo, 6 figures
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- 2018
14. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs - HD 147379b: A nearby Neptune in the temperate zone of an early-M dwarf
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Reiners, A., Ribas, I., Zechmeister, M., Caballero, J. A., Trifonov, T., Dreizler, S., Morales, J. C., Tal-Or, L., Lafarga, M., Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Kaminski, A., Jeffers, S. V., Aceituno, J., Béjar, V. J. S., Guàrdia, J., Guenther, E. W., Hagen, H. -J., Montes, D., Passegger, V. M., Seifert, W., Schweitzer, A., Cortés-Contreras, M., Abril, M., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Antona, R., Anglada-Escudé, G., Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arroyo-Torres, B., Azzaro, M., Baroch, D., Barrado, D., Bauer, F. F., Becerril, S., Benítez, D., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergond, G., Blümcke, M., Brinkmöller, M., del Burgo, C., Cano, J., Vázquez, M. C. Cárdenas, Casal, E., Cifuentes, C., Claret, A., Colomé, J., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Feiz, C., Fernández, M., Ferro, I. M., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., Garcia-Piquer, A., Vargas, M. L. García, Gesa, L., Galera, V. Gómez, Hernández, J. I. González, González-Peinado, R., Grözinger, U., Grohnert, S., Guijarro, A., de Guindos, E., Gutiérrez-Soto, J., Hatzes, A. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Hedrosa, R. P., Helmling, J., Henning, Th., Hermelo, I., Arabí, R. Hernández, Castaño, L. Hernández, Hernando, F. Hernández, Herrero, E., Huber, A., Huke, P., Johnson, E. N., de Juan, E., Kim, M., Klein, R., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Kürster, M., Labarga, F., Lamert, A., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Laun, W., Lemke, U., Lenzen, R., Launhardt, R., del Fresno, M. López, López-González, M. J., López-Puertas, M., Salas, J. F. López, López-Santiago, J., Luque, R., Madinabeitia, H. Magán, Mall, U., Mancini, L., Mandel, H., Marfil, E., Molina, J. A. Marín, Fernández, D. Maroto, Martín, E. L., Martín-Ruiz, S., Marvin, C. J., Mathar, R. J., Mirabet, E., Moreno-Raya, M. E., Moya, A., Mundt, R., Nagel, E., Naranjo, V., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Ofir, A., Oreiro, R., Pallé, E., Panduro, J., Pascual, J., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Pérez-Calpena, A., Medialdea, D. Pérez, Perger, M., Perryman, M. A. C., Pluto, M., Rabaza, O., Ramón, A., Rebolo, R., Redondo, P., Reffert, S., Reinhart, S., Rhode, P., Rix, H. -W., Rodler, F., Rodríguez, E., Rodríguez-López, C., Trinidad, A. Rodríguez, Rohloff, R. -R., Rosich, A., Sadegi, S., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Carrasco, M. A. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Sarmiento, L. F., Schäfer, S., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schiller, J., Schöfer, P., Solano, E., Stahl, O., Strachan, J. B. P., Stürmer, J., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Tala, M., Tulloch, S. M., Ulbrich, R. -G., Veredas, G., Linares, J. I. Vico, Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Winkler, J., Wolthoff, V., Xu, W., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the first star discovered to host a planet detected by radial velocity (RV) observations obtained within the CARMENES survey for exoplanets around M dwarfs. HD 147379 ($V = 8.9$ mag, $M = 0.58 \pm 0.08$ M$_{\odot}$), a bright M0.0V star at a distance of 10.7 pc, is found to undergo periodic RV variations with a semi-amplitude of $K = 5.1\pm0.4$ m s$^{-1}$ and a period of $P = 86.54\pm0.06$ d. The RV signal is found in our CARMENES data, which were taken between 2016 and 2017, and is supported by HIRES/Keck observations that were obtained since 2000. The RV variations are interpreted as resulting from a planet of minimum mass $m_{\rm p}\sin{i} = 25 \pm 2$ M$_{\oplus}$, 1.5 times the mass of Neptune, with an orbital semi-major axis $a = 0.32$ au and low eccentricity ($e < 0.13$). HD 147379b is orbiting inside the temperate zone around the star, where water could exist in liquid form. The RV time-series and various spectroscopic indicators show additional hints of variations at an approximate period of 21.1d (and its first harmonic), which we attribute to the rotation period of the star., Comment: accepted for publication as A&A Letter
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- 2017
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15. High redshift galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey: II. strengthening the evidence of bright-end excess in UV luminosity functions at 2.5 <= z <= 4.5 by PDF analysis
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Viironen, K., López-Sanjuan, C., Hernández-Monteagudo, C., Chaves-Montero, J., Ascaso, B., Bonoli, S., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Díaz-García, L. A., Fernández-Soto, A., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Pović, M., Varela, J., Cenarro, A. J., Aguerri, J. A. L., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Martínez, V. J., Moles, M., Molino, A., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context. Knowing the exact shape of the UV luminosity function of high-redshift galaxies is important in order to understand the star formation history of the early universe. However, the uncertainties, especially at the faint and bright ends of the LFs, are still significant. Aims. In this paper, we study the UV luminosity function of redshift z = 2.5 - 4.5 galaxies in 2.38 deg^2 of ALHAMBRA data with I <= 24. Thanks to the large area covered by ALHAMBRA, we particularly constrain the bright end of the luminosity function. We also calculate the cosmic variance and the corresponding bias values for our sample and derive their host dark matter halo masses. Methods. We use a novel methodology based on redshift and magnitude probability distribution functions (PDFs). This methodology robustly takes into account the uncertainties due to redshift and magnitude errors, shot noise and cosmic variance, and models the luminosity function in two dimensions (z; M_UV ). Results. We find an excess of bright ~ M*_UV galaxies as compared to the studies based on broad-band photometric data. However, our results agree well with the luminosity function of the magnitude-selected spectroscopic VVDS data. We measure high bias values, b ~ 8 - 10, that are compatible with the previous measurements considering the redshifts and magnitudes of our galaxies and further reinforce the real high-redshift nature of our bright galaxies. Conclusions. We call into question the shape of the luminosity function at its bright end; is it a double power-law as suggested by the recent broad-band photometric studies or rather a brighter Schechter function, as suggested by our multi-filter analysis and the spectroscopic VVDS data., Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures
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- 2017
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16. Stellar populations of galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey up to $z \sim 1$. II. Stellar content of quiescent galaxies within the dust-corrected stellar mass$-$colour and the $UVJ$ colour$-$colour diagrams
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Díaz-García, L. A., Cenarro, A. J., López-Sanjuan, C., Ferreras, I., Cerviño, M., Fernández-Soto, A., Márquez, I., Pović, M., Roman, I. San, Viironen, K., Moles, M., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Aguerri, J. A. L., Masegosa, J., Molino, A., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Prada, F., Quintana, J. M., and Martínez, V. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Our aim is to determine the distribution of stellar population parameters (extinction, age, metallicity, and star formation rate) of quiescent galaxies within the rest-frame stellar mass$-$colour and $UVJ$ colour$-$colour diagrams corrected for extinction up to $z\sim1$. These novel diagrams reduce the contamination in samples of quiescent galaxies owing to dust-reddened galaxies, and they provide useful constraints on stellar population parameters. We set constraints on the stellar population parameters of quiescent galaxies combining the ALHAMBRA multi-filter photo-spectra with our SED-fitting code MUFFIT, making use of composite stellar population models. The extinction obtained by MUFFIT allowed us to remove dusty star-forming (DSF) galaxies from the sample of red $UVJ$ galaxies. The distributions of stellar population parameters across these rest-frame diagrams are revealed after the dust correction and are fitted by the LOESS method to reduce uncertainty effects. Quiescent galaxy samples defined via classical $UVJ$ diagrams are typically contaminated by a $\sim20$% fraction of DSF galaxies. A significant part of the galaxies in the green valley are actually obscured star-forming galaxies ($\sim30-65$%). Consequently, the transition of galaxies from the blue cloud to the red sequence, and hence the related mechanisms for quenching, seems to be much more efficient and faster than previously reported. The rest-frame stellar mass$-$colour and $UVJ$ colour$-$colour diagrams are useful for constraining the age, metallicity, extinction, and star formation rate of quiescent galaxies by only their redshift, rest-frame colours, and/or stellar mass. Dust correction plays an important role in understanding how quiescent galaxies are distributed in these diagrams and is key to performing a pure selection of quiescent galaxies via intrinsic colours., Comment: (37 pages, 29 figures, accepted for publication in A&A)
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- 2017
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17. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs: High-resolution optical and near-infrared spectroscopy of 324 survey stars
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Reiners, A., Zechmeister, M., Caballero, J. A., Ribas, I., Morales, J. C., Jeffers, S. V., Schöfer, P., Tal-Or, L., Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Kaminski, A., Seifert, W., Abril, M., Aceituno, J., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Antona, R., Anglada-Escudé, G., Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arroyo-Torres, B., Azzaro, M., Baroch, D., Barrado, D., Bauer, F. F., Becerril, S., Béjar, V. J. S., Benítez, D., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergond, G., Blümcke, M., Brinkmöller, M., del Burgo, C., Cano, J., Vázquez, M. C. Cárdenas, Casal, E., Cifuentes, C., Claret, A., Colomé, J., Cortés-Contreras, M., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Dreizler, S., Feiz, C., Fernández, M., Ferro, I. M., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., Garcia-Piquer, A., Vargas, M. L. García, Gesa, L., Gómez, V., Galera, Hernández, J. I. González, González-Peinado, R., Grözinger, U., Grohnert, S., Guàrdia, J., Guenther, E. W., Guijarro, A., de Guindos, E., Gutiérrez-Soto, J., Hagen, H. -J., Hatzes, A. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Hedrosa, R. P., Helmling, J., Henning, Th., Hermelo, I., Arabí, R. Hernández, Castaño, L. Hernández, Hernando, F. Hernández, Herrero, E., Huber, A., Huke, P., Johnson, E., de Juan, E., Kim, M., Klein, R., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Kürster, M., Lafarga, M., Lamert, A., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Laun, W., Lemke, U., Lenzen, R., Launhardt, R., del Fresno, M. López, López-González, J., López-Puertas, M., Salas, J. F. López, López-Santiago, J., Luque, R., Madinabeitia, H. Magán, Mall, U., Mancini, L., Mandel, H., Marfil, E., Molina, J. A. Marín, Maroto, D., Fernández, Martín, E. L., Martín-Ruiz, S., Marvin, C. J., Mathar, R. J., Mirabet, E., Montes, D., Moreno-Raya, M. E., Moya, A., Mundt, R., Nagel, E., Naranjo, V., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Ofir, A., Oreiro, R., Pallé, E., Panduro, J., Pascual, J., Passegger, V. M., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Pérez-Calpena, A., Medialdea, D. Pérez, Perger, M., Perryman, M. A. C., Pluto, M., Rabaza, O., Ramón, A., Rebolo, R., Redondo, P., Reffert, S., Reinhart, S., Rhode, P., Rix, H. -W., Rodler, F., Rodríguez, E., Rodríguez-López, C., Trinidad, A. Rodríguez, Rohloff, R. -R., Rosich, A., Sadegi, S., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Carrasco, M. A. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Sarmiento, L. F., Schäfer, S., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schiller, J., Schweitzer, A., Solano, E., Stahl, O., Strachan, J. B. P., Stürmer, J., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Tala, M., Trifonov, T., Tulloch, S. M., Ulbrich, R. G., Veredas, G., Linares, J. I. Vico, Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Winkler, J., Wolthoff, V., Xu, W., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The CARMENES radial velocity (RV) survey is observing 324 M dwarfs to search for any orbiting planets. In this paper, we present the survey sample by publishing one CARMENES spectrum for each M dwarf. These spectra cover the wavelength range 520--1710nm at a resolution of at least $R > 80,000$, and we measure its RV, H$\alpha$ emission, and projected rotation velocity. We present an atlas of high-resolution M-dwarf spectra and compare the spectra to atmospheric models. To quantify the RV precision that can be achieved in low-mass stars over the CARMENES wavelength range, we analyze our empirical information on the RV precision from more than 6500 observations. We compare our high-resolution M-dwarf spectra to atmospheric models where we determine the spectroscopic RV information content, $Q$, and signal-to-noise ratio. We find that for all M-type dwarfs, the highest RV precision can be reached in the wavelength range 700--900nm. Observations at longer wavelengths are equally precise only at the very latest spectral types (M8 and M9). We demonstrate that in this spectroscopic range, the large amount of absorption features compensates for the intrinsic faintness of an M7 star. To reach an RV precision of 1ms$^{-1}$ in very low mass M dwarfs at longer wavelengths likely requires the use of a 10m class telescope. For spectral types M6 and earlier, the combination of a red visual and a near-infrared spectrograph is ideal to search for low-mass planets and to distinguish between planets and stellar variability. At a 4m class telescope, an instrument like CARMENES has the potential to push the RV precision well below the typical jitter level of 3-4ms$^{-1}$., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A, 13 pages plus 40 pages spectral atlas, first 10 atlas pages are reduced in quality to fit arXiv size limit; one CARMENES spectrum for each of the 324 stars is published in electronic format at http://carmenes.cab.inta-csic.es/
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- 2017
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18. The CARMENES search for exoplanets around M dwarfs. First visual-channel radial-velocity measurements and orbital parameter updates of seven M-dwarf planetary systems
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Trifonov, T., Kürster, M., Zechmeister, M., Tal-Or, L., Caballero, J. A., Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Ribas, I., Reiners, A., Reffert, S., Dreizler, S., Hatzes, A. P., Kaminski, A., Launhardt, R., Henning, Th., Montes, D., Béjar, V. J. S., Mundt, R., Pavlov, A., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Seifert, W., Morales, J. C., Nowak, G., Jeffers, S. V., Rodríguez-López, C., del Burgo, C., Anglada-Escudé, G., López-Santiago, J., Mathar, R. J., Eiff, M. Ammler-von, Guenther, E. W., Barrado, D., Hernández, J. I. González, Mancini, L., Stürmer, J., Abril, M., Aceituno, J., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Antona, R., Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arroyo-Torres, B., Azzaro, M., Baroch, D., Bauer, F. F., Becerril, S., Benítez, D., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergond, G., Blümcke, M., Brinkmöller, M., Cano, J., Vázquez, M. C. Cárdenas, Casal, E., Cifuentes, C., Claret, A., Colomé, J., Cortés-Contreras, M., Czesla, S., Díez-Alonso, E., Feiz, C., Fernández, M., Ferro, I. M., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., Garcia-Piquer, A., Vargas, M. L. García, Gesa, L., Galera, V. Gómez, González-Peinado, R., Grözinger, U., Grohnert, S., Guàrdia, J., Guijarro, A., de Guindos, E., Gutiérrez-Soto, J., Hagen, H. -J., Hauschildt, P. H., Hedrosa, R. P., Helmling, J., Hermelo, I., Arabí, R. Hernández, Castaño, L. Hernández, Hernando, F. Hernández, Herrero, E., Huber, A., Huke, P., Johnson, E., de Juan, E., Kim, M., Klein, R., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Lafarga, M., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Laun, W., Lemke, U., Lenzen, R., del Fresno, M. López, López-González, J., López-Puertas, M., Salas, J. F. López, Luque, R., Madinabeitia, H. Magán, Mall, U., Mandel, H., Marfil, E., Molina, J. A. Marín, Fernández, D. Maroto, Martín, E. L., Martín-Ruiz, S., Marvin, C. J., Mirabet, E., Moya, A., Moreno-Raya, M. E., Nagel, E., Naranjo, V., Nortmann, L., Ofir, A., Oreiro, R., Pallé, E., Panduro, J., Pascual, J., Passegger, V. M., Pedraz, S., Pérez-Calpena, A., Medialdea, D. Pérez, Perger, M., Perryman, M. A. C., Pluto, M., Rabaza, O., Ramón, A., Rebolo, R., Redondo, P., Reinhardt, S., Rhode, P., Rix, H. -W., Rodler, F., Rodríguez, E., Trinidad, A. Rodríguez, Rohloff, R. -R., Rosich, A., Sadegi, S., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Carrasco, M. A. Sánchez, Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Sarmiento, L. F., Schäfer, S., Schiller, J., Schöfer, P., Schweitzer, A., Solano, E., Stahl, O., Strachan, J. B. P., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Tala, M., Tulloch, S. M., Veredas, G., Linares, J. I. Vico, Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Winkler, J., Wolthoff, V., Xu, W., Yan, F., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Context: The main goal of the CARMENES survey is to find Earth-mass planets around nearby M-dwarf stars. Seven M-dwarfs included in the CARMENES sample had been observed before with HIRES and HARPS and either were reported to have one short period planetary companion (GJ15A, GJ176, GJ436, GJ536 and GJ1148) or are multiple planetary systems (GJ581 and GJ876). Aims: We aim to report new precise optical radial velocity measurements for these planet hosts and test the overall capabilities of CARMENES. Methods: We combined our CARMENES precise Doppler measurements with those available from HIRES and HARPS and derived new orbital parameters for the systems. Bona-fide single planet systems are fitted with a Keplerian model. The multiple planet systems were analyzed using a self-consistent dynamical model and their best fit orbits were tested for long-term stability. Results: We confirm or provide supportive arguments for planets around all the investigated stars except for GJ15A, for which we find that the post-discovery HIRES data and our CARMENES data do not show a signal at 11.4 days. Although we cannot confirm the super-Earth planet GJ15Ab, we show evidence for a possible long-period ($P_{\rm c}$ = 7025$_{-629}^{+972}$ d) Saturn-mass ($m_{\rm c} \sin i$ = 51.8$_{-5.8}^{+5.5}M_\oplus$) planet around GJ15A. In addition, based on our CARMENES and HIRES data we discover a second planet around GJ1148, for which we estimate a period $P_{\rm c}$ = 532.6$_{-2.5}^{+4.1}$ d, eccentricity $e_{\rm c}$ = 0.34$_{-0.06}^{+0.05}$ and minimum mass $m_{\rm c} \sin i$ = 68.1$_{-2.2}^{+4.9}M_\oplus$. Conclusions: The CARMENES optical radial velocities have similar precision and overall scatter when compared to the Doppler measurements conducted with HARPS and HIRES. We conclude that CARMENES is an instrument that is up to the challenge of discovering rocky planets around low-mass stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 24 pages, 16 figures, 14 tables
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- 2017
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19. The ALHAMBRA survey: 2-D analysis of the stellar populations in massive early-type galaxies at z < 0.3
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Roman, I. San, Cenarro, A. J., Díaz-García, L. A., López-Sanjuan, C., Varela, J., Delgado, R. M. González, Sánchez-Blázquez, P., Alfaro, E. J., Ascaso, B., Bonoli, S., Borlaff, A., Castander, F. J., Cerviño, M., Fernández-Soto, A., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Muniesa, D., Povic, M., Viironen, K., Aguerri, J. A. L., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Cepa, J., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Infante, L., Martínez, V. J., Moles, M., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a technique that permits the analysis of stellar population gradients in a relatively low cost way compared to IFU surveys analyzing a vastly larger samples as well as out to larger radii. We developed a technique to analyze unresolved stellar populations of spatially resolved galaxies based on photometric multi-filter surveys. We derived spatially resolved stellar population properties and radial gradients by applying a Centroidal Voronoi Tesselation and performing a multi-color photometry SED fitting. This technique has been applied to a sample of 29 massive (M$_{\star}$ > 10$^{10.5}$ M$_{\odot}$), early-type galaxies at $z$ < 0.3 from the ALHAMBRA survey. We produced detailed 2D maps of stellar population properties (age, metallicity and extinction). Radial structures have been studied and luminosity-weighted and mass-weighted gradients have been derived out to 2 - 3.5 R$_\mathrm{eff}$. We find the gradients of early-type galaxies to be on average flat in age ($\nabla$log Age$_\mathrm{L}$ = 0.02 $\pm$ 0.06 dex/R$_\mathrm{eff})$ and negative in metallicity ($\nabla$[Fe/H]$_\mathrm{L}$ = - 0.09 $\pm$ 0.06 dex/R$_\mathrm{eff}$). Overall, the extinction gradients are flat ($\nabla$A$_\mathrm{v}$ = - 0.03 $\pm$ 0.09 mag/R$_\mathrm{eff}$ ) with a wide spread. These results are in agreement with previous studies that used standard long-slit spectroscopy as well as with the most recent integral field unit (IFU) studies. According to recent simulations, these results are consistent with a scenario where early-type galaxies were formed through major mergers and where their final gradients are driven by the older ages and higher metallicity of the accreted systems. We demonstrate the scientific potential of multi-filter photometry to explore the spatially resolved stellar populations of local galaxies and confirm previous spectroscopic trends from a complementary technique., Comment: 25 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2017
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20. Apparent regional differences in the spectrum of BARD1 pathogenic variants in Spanish population and importance of copy number variants
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Benito-Sánchez, B., Barroso, A., Fernández, V., Mercadillo, F., Núñez-Torres, R., Pita, G., Pombo, L., Morales-Chamorro, R., Cano-Cano, J. M., Urioste, M., González-Neira, A., and Osorio, A.
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- 2022
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21. Power Series Solutions of Non-linear q-Difference Equations and the Newton–Puiseux Polygon
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Cano, J. and Fortuny Ayuso, P.
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- 2022
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22. The ALHAMBRA survey : $B-$band luminosity function of quiescent and star-forming galaxies at $0.2 \leq z < 1$ by PDF analysis
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López-Sanjuan, C., Tempel, E., Benítez, N., Molino, A., Viironen, K., Díaz-García, L. A., Fernández-Soto, A., Santos, W. A., Varela, J., Cenarro, A. J., Moles, M., Arnalte-Mur, P., Ascaso, B., Montero-Dorta, A. D., Pović, M., Martínez, V. J., Nieves-Seoane, L., Stefanon, M., Hurtado-Gil, Ll., Márquez, I., Perea, J., Aguerri, J. A. L., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Masegosa, J., del Olmo, A., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Our goal is to study the evolution of the $B-$band luminosity function (LF) since $z=1$ using ALHAMBRA data. We used the photometric redshift and the $I-$band selection magnitude probability distribution functions (PDFs) of those ALHAMBRA galaxies with $I\leq24$ mag to compute the posterior LF. We statistically studied quiescent and star-forming galaxies using the template information encoded in the PDFs. The LF covariance matrix in redshift-magnitude-galaxy type space was computed, including the cosmic variance. That was estimated from the intrinsic dispersion of the LF measurements in the 48 ALHAMBRA sub-fields. The uncertainty due to the photometric redshift prior is also included in our analysis. We modelled the LF with a redshift-dependent Schechter function affected by the same selection effects than the data. The measured ALHAMBRA LF at $0.2\leq z<1$ and the evolving Schechter parameters both for quiescent and star-forming galaxies agree with previous results in the literature. The estimated redshift evolution of $M_B^* \propto Qz$ is $Q_{\rm SF}=-1.03\pm0.08$ and $Q_{\rm Q}=-0.80\pm0.08$, and of $\log \phi^* \propto Pz$ is $P_{\rm SF}=-0.01\pm0.03$ and $P_{\rm Q}=-0.41\pm0.05$. The measured faint-end slopes are $\alpha_{\rm SF}=-1.29\pm0.02$ and $\alpha_{\rm Q}=-0.53\pm0.04$. We find a significant population of faint quiescent galaxies, modelled by a second Schechter function with slope $\beta=-1.31\pm0.11$. We find a factor $2.55\pm0.14$ decrease in the luminosity density $j_B$ of star-forming galaxies, and a factor $1.25\pm0.16$ increase in the $j_B$ of quiescent ones since $z=1$, confirming the continuous build-up of the quiescent population with cosmic time. The contribution of the faint quiescent population to $j_B$ increases from 3% at $z=1$ to 6% at $z=0$. The developed methodology will be applied to future multi-filter surveys such as J-PAS., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 25 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables
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- 2016
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23. A $K_s$-band selected catalogue of objects in the ALHAMBRA survey
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Nieves-Seoane, L., Fernandez-Soto, A., Arnalte-Mur, P., Molino, A., Stefanon, M., Ferreras, I., Ascaso, B., Ballesteros, F. J., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., López-Sanjuán, C., Hurtado-Gil, Ll., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Aguerri, J. A. L., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Martínez, V. J., Moles, M., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Pović, M., Prada, F., Quintana, J. M., Troncoso-Iribarren, P., and Viironen, K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The original ALHAMBRA catalogue contained over 400,000 galaxies selected using a synthetic F814W image, to the magnitude limit AB(F814W)$\approx$24.5. Given the photometric redshift depth of the ALHAMBRA multiband data (
=0.86) and the approximately $I$-band selection, there is a noticeable bias against red objects at moderate redshift. We avoid this bias by creating a new catalogue selected in the $K_s$ band. This newly obtained catalogue is certainly shallower in terms of apparent magnitude, but deeper in terms of redshift, with a significant population of red objects at $z>1$. We select objects using the $K_s$ band images, which reach an approximate AB magnitude limit $K_s \approx 22$. We generate masks and derive completeness functions to characterize the sample. We have tested the quality of the photometry and photometric redshifts using both internal and external checks. Our final catalogue includes $\approx 95,000$ sources down to $K_s \approx 22$, with a significant tail towards high redshift. We have checked that there is a large sample of objects with spectral energy distributions that correspond to that of massive, passively evolving galaxies at $z > 1$, reaching as far as $z \approx 2.5$. We have tested the possibility of combining our data with deep infrared observations at longer wavelengths, particularly Spitzer IRAC data., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 19 pages, 21 figures - Published
- 2016
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24. The ALHAMBRA survey: evolution of galaxy spectral segregation
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Hurtado-Gil, Ll., Arnalte-Mur, P., Martínez, V. J., Fernández-Soto, A., Stefanon, M., Ascaso, B., López-Sanjuan, C., Márquez, I., Povic, M., Viironen, K., Aguerri, J. A. L., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Masegosa, J., Moles, M., Molino, A., del Olmo, A., Paredes, S., Perea, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the clustering of galaxies as a function of spectral type and redshift in the range $0.35 < z < 1.1$ using data from the Advanced Large Homogeneous Area Medium Band Redshift Astronomical (ALHAMBRA) survey. The data cover 2.381 deg$^2$ in 7 fields, after applying a detailed angular selection mask, with accurate photometric redshifts [$\sigma_z < 0.014(1+z)$] down to $I_{AB} < 24$. From this catalog we draw five fixed number density, redshift-limited bins. We estimate the clustering evolution for two different spectral populations selected using the ALHAMBRA-based photometric templates: quiescent and star-forming galaxies. For each sample, we measure the real-space clustering using the projected correlation function. Our calculations are performed over the range $[0.03,10.0] h^{-1}$ Mpc, allowing us to find a steeper trend for $r_p \lesssim 0.2 h^{-1}$ Mpc, which is especially clear for star-forming galaxies. Our analysis also shows a clear early differentiation in the clustering properties of both populations: star-forming galaxies show weaker clustering with evolution in the correlation length over the analysed redshift range, while quiescent galaxies show stronger clustering already at high redshifts, and no appreciable evolution. We also perform the bias calculation where similar segregation is found, but now it is among the quiescent galaxies where a growing evolution with redshift is clearer. These findings clearly corroborate the well known colour-density relation, confirming that quiescent galaxies are mainly located in dark matter halos that are more massive than those typically populated by star-forming galaxies., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted by ApJ
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- 2016
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25. The ALHAMBRA survey : Estimation of the clustering signal encoded in the cosmic variance
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López-Sanjuan, C., Cenarro, A. J., Hernández-Monteagudo, C., Arnalte-Mur, P., Varela, J., Viironen, K., Fernández-Soto, A., Martínez, V. J., Alfaro, E., Ascaso, B., del Olmo, A., Díaz-García, L. A., Hurtado-Gil, Ll., Moles, M., Molino, A., Perea, J., Pović, M., Aguerri, J. A. L., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Delgado, R. M. González, Husillos, C., Infante, L., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The relative cosmic variance ($\sigma_v$) is a fundamental source of uncertainty in pencil-beam surveys and, as a particular case of count-in-cell statistics, can be used to estimate the bias between galaxies and their underlying dark-matter distribution. Our goal is to test the significance of the clustering information encoded in the $\sigma_v$ measured in the ALHAMBRA survey. We measure the cosmic variance of several galaxy populations selected with $B-$band luminosity at $0.35 \leq z < 1.05$ as the intrinsic dispersion in the number density distribution derived from the 48 ALHAMBRA subfields. We compare the observational $\sigma_v$ with the cosmic variance of the dark matter expected from the theory, $\sigma_{v,{\rm dm}}$. This provides an estimation of the galaxy bias $b$. The galaxy bias from the cosmic variance is in excellent agreement with the bias estimated by two-point correlation function analysis in ALHAMBRA. This holds for different redshift bins, for red and blue subsamples, and for several $B-$band luminosity selections. We find that $b$ increases with the $B-$band luminosity and the redshift, as expected from previous work. Moreover, red galaxies have a larger bias than blue galaxies, with a relative bias of $b_{\rm rel} = 1.4 \pm 0.2$. Our results demonstrate that the cosmic variance measured in ALHAMBRA is due to the clustering of galaxies and can be used to characterise the $\sigma_v$ affecting pencil-beam surveys. In addition, it can also be used to estimate the galaxy bias $b$ from a method independent of correlation functions., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press. 9 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables
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- 2015
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26. The impact from survey depth and resolution on the morphological classification of galaxies
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Pović, M., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Perea, J., del Olmo, A., Simpson, C., Aguerri, J. A. L., Ascaso, B., Jiménez-Teja, Y., López-Sanjuan, C., Molino, A., Pérez-García, A. M., Viironen, K., Husillos, C., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Caldwell, C., Benítez, N., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Cepa, J., Cerviño, M., Fernández-Soto, A., Delgado, R. M. González, Infante, L., Martínez, V. J., Moles, M., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We consistently analyse for the first time the impact of survey depth and spatial resolution on the most used morphological parameters for classifying galaxies through non-parametric methods: Abraham and Conselice-Bershady concentration indices, Gini, M20 moment of light, asymmetry, and smoothness. Three different non-local datasets are used, ALHAMBRA and SXDS (examples of deep ground-based surveys), and COSMOS (deep space-based survey). We used a sample of 3000 local, visually classified galaxies, measuring their morphological parameters at their real redshifts (z ~ 0). Then we simulated them to match the redshift and magnitude distributions of galaxies in the non-local surveys. The comparisons of the two sets allow to put constraints on the use of each parameter for morphological classification and evaluate the effectiveness of the commonly used morphological diagnostic diagrams. All analysed parameters suffer from biases related to spatial resolution and depth, the impact of the former being much stronger. When including asymmetry and smoothness in classification diagrams, the noise effects must be taken into account carefully, especially for ground-based surveys. M20 is significantly affected, changing both the shape and range of its distribution at all brightness levels.We suggest that diagnostic diagrams based on 2 - 3 parameters should be avoided when classifying galaxies in ground-based surveys, independently of their brightness; for COSMOS they should be avoided for galaxies fainter than F814 = 23.0. These results can be applied directly to surveys similar to ALHAMBRA, SXDS and COSMOS, and also can serve as an upper/lower limit for shallower/deeper ones., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS; 25 pages, 19 figures, 5 tables
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- 2015
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27. Stellar populations of galaxies in the ALHAMBRA survey up to $z \sim 1$. I. MUFFIT: A Multi-Filter Fitting code for stellar population diagnostics
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Díaz-García, L. A., Cenarro, A. J., López-Sanjuan, C., Ferreras, I., Varela, J., Viironen, K., Cristóbal-Hornillos, D., Moles, M., Marín-Franch, A., Arnalte-Mur, P., Ascaso, B., Cerviño, M., González-Delgado, R. M., Márquez, I., Masegosa, J., Molino, A., Pović, M., Alfaro, E., Aparicio-Villegas, T., Benítez, N., Broadhurst, T., Cabrera-Caño, J., Castander, F. J., Fernández-Soto, A., Husillos, C., Infante, L., Aguerri, J. A. L., Martínez, V. J., del Olmo, A., Perea, J., Prada, F., and Quintana, J. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present MUFFIT, a new generic code optimized to retrieve the main stellar population parameters of galaxies in photometric multi-filter surveys, and we check its reliability and feasibility with real galaxy data from the ALHAMBRA survey. Making use of an error-weighted $\chi^2$-test, we compare the multi-filter fluxes of galaxies with the synthetic photometry of mixtures of two single stellar populations at different redshifts and extinctions, to provide through a Monte Carlo method the most likely range of stellar population parameters (mainly ages and metallicities), extinctions, redshifts, and stellar masses. To improve the diagnostic reliability, MUFFIT identifies and removes from the analysis those bands that are significantly affected by emission lines. We highlight that the retrieved age-metallicity locus for a sample of $z \le 0.22$ early-type galaxies in ALHAMBRA at different stellar mass bins are in very good agreement with the ones from SDSS spectroscopic diagnostics. Moreover, a one-to-one comparison between the redshifts, ages, metallicities, and stellar masses derived spectroscopically for SDSS and by MUFFIT for ALHAMBRA reveals good qualitative agreements in all the parameters. In addition, and using as input the results from photometric-redshift codes, MUFFIT improves the photometric-redshift accuracy by $\sim 10$-$20\%$, and it also detects nebular emissions in galaxies, providing physical information about their strengths. Our results show the potential of multi-filter galaxy data to conduct reliable stellar population studies with the appropiate analysis techniques, as MUFFIT., Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2015
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28. The QUIJOTE experiment: project overview and first results
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Génova-Santos, R., Rubiño-Martín, J. A., Rebolo, R., Aguiar, M., Gómez-Reñasco, F., Gutiérrez, C., Hoyland, R. J., López-Caraballo, C., Peláez-Santos, A. E., de Taoro, M. R. Pérez, Poidevin, F., de la Rosa, V. Sánchez, Tramonte, D., Vega-Moreno, A., Viera-Curbelo, T., Vignaga, R., Martínez-González, E., Barreiro, R. B., Casaponsa, B., Casas, F. J., Diego, J. M., Fernández-Cobos, R., Herranz, D., López-Caniego, M., Ortiz, D., Vielva, P., Artal, E., Aja, B., Cagigas, J., Cano, J. L., de la Fuente, L., Mediavilla, A., Terán, J. V., Villa, E., Piccirillo, L., Davies, Davis, R. J., Dickinson, C., Grainge, K., Harper, S., Maffei, B., McCulloch, M., Melhuish, S., Pisano, G., Watson, R. A., Lasenby, A., Ashdown, M., Hobson, M., Perrott, Y., Razavi-Ghods, N., Saunders, R., Titterington, D., and Scott, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
QUIJOTE (Q-U-I JOint TEnerife) is a new polarimeter aimed to characterize the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background and other Galactic and extragalactic signals at medium and large angular scales in the frequency range 10-40 GHz. The multi-frequency (10-20~GHz) instrument, mounted on the first QUIJOTE telescope, saw first light on November 2012 from the Teide Observatory (2400~m a.s.l). During 2014 the second telescope has been installed at this observatory. A second instrument at 30~GHz will be ready for commissioning at this telescope during summer 2015, and a third additional instrument at 40~GHz is now being developed. These instruments will have nominal sensitivities to detect the B-mode polarization due to the primordial gravitational-wave component if the tensor-to-scalar ratio is larger than r=0.05., Comment: To appear in "Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics VIII", Proceedings of the XI Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society, Teruel, Spain (2014)
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- 2015
29. SEOM clinical guideline for secondary prevention (2019)
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Santaballa, A., Pinto, Á., Balanyà, R. P., Ramírez Merino, N., Martín, I. R., Grau, S. S., Fombella, J. P. B., Cano, J. M., González, C. H., and Bayo, J.
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- 2020
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30. Multiple hereditary osteochondromatosis with spinal cord compression: case report
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García-González, Oscar, Mireles-Cano, J. Nicolás, Sánchez-Zavala, Natalia, Chagolla-Santillan, Miguel A., Orozco-Ramirez, Segio M., Silva-Cerecedo, Pedro, Murguia-Perez, Mario, and Rueda-Franco, Fernando
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- 2018
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31. Anthracycline-based triplets do not improve the efficacy of platinum-fluoropyrimidine doublets in first-line treatment of advanced gastric cancer: real-world data from the AGAMEMON National Cancer Registry
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Carmona-Bayonas, A., Jiménez-Fonseca, P., Custodio, A., Sánchez Cánovas, M., Hernández, R., Pericay, C., Echavarria, I., Lacalle, A., Visa, L., Rodríguez Palomo, A., Mangas, M., Cano, J. M., Buxo, E., Álvarez-Manceñido, F., García, T., Lorenzo, J. E., Ferrer-Cardona, M., Viudez, A., Azkarate, A., Ramchandani, A., Arias, D., Longo, F., López, C., Sánchez Bayona, R., Limón, M. L., Díaz-Serrano, A., Fernández Montes, A., Sala, P., Cerdá, P., Rivera, F., Gallego, J., and AGAMENON study group
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- 2018
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32. Objective Bayesian model selection approach to the two way analysis of variance
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Cano, J. A., Carazo, C., and Salmerón, D.
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- 2017
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33. New and interesting chaetothyrialean fungi from Spain
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Madrid, H., Hernández-Restrepo, M., Gené, J., Cano, J., Guarro, J., and Silva, V.
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- 2016
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34. GEINOFOTE: efficacy and safety of fotemustine in patients with high-grade recurrent gliomas and poor performance status
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Pérez-Segura, P., Manneh, R., Ceballos, I., García, A., Benavides, M., Fuster, J., Vaz, M. A., Cano, J. M., Berros, J. P., Covela, M., Moreno, V., Quintanar, T., García Bueno, J. M., Fernández, I., and Sepúlveda, J.
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- 2016
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35. Alkylglycerols reduce serum complement and plasma vascular endothelial growth factor in obese individuals
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Parri, A., Fitó, Montserrat, Torres, C. F., Muñoz-Aguayo, D., Schröder, H., Cano, J. F., Vázquez, L., Reglero, G., and Covas, María-Isabel
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- 2016
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36. Modulating gut microbiota in a mouse model of Graves’ orbitopathy and its impact on induced disease
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Diaz-Cano, Salvador J. and INDIGO consortium, S Moshkelgosha, H L Verhasselt, G Masetti, D Covelli, F Biscarini, M Horstmann, A Daser, A M Westendorf, C Jesenek, S Philipp, S Diaz-Cano, J P Banga, D Michael, S Plummer, J R Marchesi, A Eckstein, M Ludgate, U Berchner-Pfannschmidt
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endocrine system ,endocrine system diseases ,eye diseases - Abstract
Background Graves’ disease (GD) is an autoimmune condition in which autoantibodies to the thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) cause hyperthyroidism. About 50% of GD patients also have Graves’ orbitopathy (GO), an intractable disease in which expansion of the orbital contents causes diplopia, proptosis and even blindness. Murine models of GD/GO, developed in different centres, demonstrated significant variation in gut microbiota composition which correlated with TSHR-induced disease heterogeneity. To investigate whether correlation indicates causation, we modified the gut microbiota to determine whether it has a role in thyroid autoimmunity. Female BALB/c mice were treated with either vancomycin, probiotic bacteria, human fecal material transfer (hFMT) from patients with severe GO or ddH2O from birth to immunization with TSHR-A subunit or beta-galactosidase (βgal; age ~ 6 weeks). Incidence and severity of GD (TSHR autoantibodies, thyroid histology, thyroxine level) and GO (orbital fat and muscle histology), lymphocyte phenotype, cytokine profile and gut microbiota were analysed at sacrifice (~ 22 weeks). Results In ddH2O-TSHR mice, 84% had pathological autoantibodies, 67% elevated thyroxine, 77% hyperplastic thyroids and 70% orbital pathology. Firmicutes were increased, and Bacteroidetes reduced relative to ddH2O-βgal; CCL5 was increased. The random forest algorithm at the genus level predicted vancomycin treatment with 100% accuracy but 74% and 70% for hFMT and probiotic, respectively. Vancomycin significantly reduced gut microbiota richness and diversity compared with all other groups; the incidence and severity of both GD and GO also decreased; reduced orbital pathology correlated positively with Akkermansia spp. whilst IL-4 levels increased. Mice receiving hFMT initially inherited their GO donors’ microbiota, and the severity of induced GD increased, as did the orbital brown adipose tissue volume in TSHR mice. Furthermore, genus Bacteroides, which is reduced in GD patients, was significantly increased by vancomycin but reduced in hFMT-treated mice. Probiotic treatment significantly increased CD25⁺ Treg cells in orbital draining lymph nodes but exacerbated induced autoimmune hyperthyroidism and GO. Conclusions These results strongly support a role for the gut microbiota in TSHR-induced disease. Whilst changes to the gut microbiota have a profound effect on quantifiable GD endocrine and immune factors, the impact on GO cellular changes is more nuanced. The findings have translational potential for novel, improved treatments.
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- 2021
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37. [Translated article] Influence of claims on the management of an orthopaedic surgery and traumatology service
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Combalia, A., Torà-Rocamora, I., Diestre-Tomas, A., Muñoz-Mahamud, E., Grau-Cano, J., and Prat-Marín, A.
- Abstract
Claims constitute one of the main sources of information to evaluate the perceived quality in healthcare centres, being Orthopaedic and Traumatology Surgery (OTS) one of the specialties with greater probability of receiving them due to its high surgical demand generating long waiting lists.
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- 2022
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38. Study of Experimental and Calculated Flame Speed of Methane/Oxygen-Enriched Flame in Gas Turbine Conditions As a Function of Water Dilution: Application to CO2 Capture by Membrane Processes
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Cabot, G., primary, Chica Cano, J. P., additional, de Persis, S., additional, and Foucher, F., additional
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- 2017
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39. Development of low friction snake-inspired deterministic textured surfaces
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Cuervo, P, primary, López, D A, additional, Cano, J P, additional, Sánchez, J C, additional, Rudas, S, additional, Estupiñán, H, additional, Toro, A, additional, and Abdel-Aal, H A, additional
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- 2016
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40. CARMENES: high-resolution spectra and precise radial velocities in the red and infrared
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Evans, Christopher J., Simard, Luc, Takami, Hideki, Quirrenbach, A., Amado, P. J., Ribas, I., Reiners, A., Caballero, J. A., Seifert, W., Aceituno, J., Azzaro, M., Baroch, D., Barrado, D., Bauer, F., Becerril, S., Bèjar, V. J. S., Benítez, D., Brinkmöller, M., Cardona Guillén, C., Cifuentes, C., Colomé, J., Cortés-Contreras, M., Czesla, S., Dreizler, S., Frölich, K., Fuhrmeister, B., Galadí-Enríquez, D., González Hernández, J. I., González Peinado, R., Guenther, E. W., de Guindos, E., Hagen, H.-J., Hatzes, A. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Helmling, J., Henning, Th., Herbort, O., Hernández Castaño, L., Herrero, E., Hintz, D., Jeffers, S. V., Johnson, E. N., de Juan, E., Kaminski, A., Klahr, H., Kürster, M., Lafarga, M., Sairam, L., Lampón, M., Lara, L. M., Launhardt, R., López del Fresno, M., López-Puertas, M., Luque, R., Mandel, H., Marfil, E. G., Martín, E. L., Martín-Ruiz, S., Mathar, R. J., Montes, D., Morales, J. C., Nagel, E., Nortmann, L., Nowak, G., Pallé, E., Passegger, V.-M., Pavlov, A., Pedraz, S., Pérez-Medialdea, D., Perger, M., Rebolo, R., Reffert, S., Rodríguez, E., Rodríguez López, C., Rosich, A., Sabotta, S., Sadegi, S., Salz, M., Sánchez-López, A., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sarkis, P., Schäfer, S., Schiller, J., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schöfer, P., Schweitzer, A., Shulyak, D., Solano, E., Stahl, O., Tala Pinto, M., Trifonov, T., Zapatero Osorio, M. R., Yan, F., Zechmeister, M., Abellán, F. J., Abril, M., Alonso-Floriano, F. J., Ammler-von Eiff, M., Anglada-Escudé, G., Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arroyo-Torres, B., Berdiñas, Z. M., Bergondy, G., Blümcke, M., del Burgo, C., Cano, J., Carro, J., Cárdenas, M. C., Casal, E., Claret, A., Díez-Alonso, E., Doellinger, M., Dorda, R., Feiz, C., Fernández, M., Ferro, I. M., Gaisné, G., Gallardo, I., Gálvez-Ortiz, M. C., García-Piquer, A., García-Vargas, M. L., Garrido, R., Gesa, L., Gómez Galera, V., González-Álvarez, E., González-Cuesta, L., Grohnert, S., Grözinger, U., Guàrdia, J., Guijarro, A., Hedrosa, R. P., Hermann, D., Hermelo, I., Hernández Arabí, R., Hernández Hernando, F., Hidalgo, D., Holgado, G., Huber, A., Huber, K., Huke, P., Kehr, M., Kim, M., Klein, R., Klüter, J., Klutsch, A., Labarga, F., Labiche, N., Lamert, A., Laun, W., Lázaro, F. J., Lemke, U., Lenzen, R., Llamas, M., Lizon, J.-L., Lodieu, N., López González, M. J., López-Morales, M., López Salas, J. F., López-Santiago, J., Magán Madinabeitia, H., Mall, U., Mancini, L., Marín Molina, J. A., Martínez-Rodríguez, H., Maroto Fernández, D., Marvin, C. J., Mirabet, E., Moreno-Raya, M. E., Moya, A., Mundt, R., Naranjo, V., Panduro, J., Pascual, J., Pérez-Calpena, A., Perryman, M. A. C., Pluto, M., Ramón, A., Redondo, P., Reinhart, S., Rhode, P., Rix, H.-W., Rodler, F., Rohloff, R.-R., Sánchez-Blanco, E., Sánchez Carrasco, M. A., Sarmiento, L. F., Schmidt, C., Storz, C., Strachan, J. B. P., Stürmer, J., Suárez, J. C., Tabernero, H. M., Tal-Or, L., Tulloch, S. M., Ulbrich, R.-G., Veredas, G., Vico Linares, J. L., Vidal-Dasilva, M., Vilardell, F., Wagner, K., Winkler, J., Wolthoff, V., Xu, W., and Zhao, Z.
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- 2018
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41. Early barriers to neonatal porcine islet engraftment in a dual transplant model
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Samy, K. P., Davis, R. P., Gao, Q., Martin, B. M., Song, M., Cano, J., Farris, A. B., McDonald, A., Gall, E. K., Dove, C. R., Leopardi, F. V., How, T., Williams, K. D., Devi, G. R., Collins, B. H., and Kirk, A. D.
- Abstract
Porcine islet xenografts have the potential to provide an inexhaustible source of islets for β cell replacement. Proof‐of‐concept has been established in nonhuman primates. However, significant barriers to xenoislet transplantation remain, including the poorly understood instant blood‐mediated inflammatory reaction and a thorough understanding of early xeno‐specific immune responses. A paucity of data exist comparing xeno‐specific immune responses with alloislet (AI) responses in primates. We recently developed a dual islet transplant model, which enables direct histologic comparison of early engraftment immunobiology. In this study, we investigate early immune responses to neonatal porcine islet (NPI) xenografts compared with rhesus islet allografts at 1 hour, 24 hours, and 7 days. Within the first 24 hours after intraportal infusion, we identified greater apoptosis (caspase 3 activity and TUNEL[terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling])‐positive cells) of NPIs compared with AIs. Macrophage infiltration was significantly greater at 24 hours compared with 1 hour in both NPI(wild‐type) and AIs. At 7 days, IgM and macrophages were highly specific for NPIs (α1,3‐galactosyltransferase knockout) compared with AIs. These findings demonstrate an augmented macrophage and antibody response toward xenografts compared with allografts. These data may inform future immune or genetic manipulations required to improve xenoislet engraftment. A nonhuman primate dual transplant model of islet transplantation compares allogeneic islets to porcine xenogeneic islets and demonstrates an augmented macrophage and antibody response toward xenografts and an early increase in xenograft cell death.
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- 2018
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42. An Integrated Example of Laboratories as a Service into Learning Management Systems.
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Tobarra, Ll., Ros, S., Pastor, R., Hernández, R., Castro, M., Al-Zoubi, A., Dmour, M., Robles-Gómez, A., Caminero, A. C., and Cano, J.
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LEARNING Management System ,DISTANCE education ,LEARNING ,INTEGRATION (Theory of knowledge) ,REMOTE sensing - Abstract
Remote practical experiences are nowadays essential in the context of distance education, because students cannot use face-to-face traditional laboratories. These remote laboratories can be used by faculty within virtual classrooms, so that students can carry out their on-line experiments in a ubiquitous way - from anywhere and at any time. But these activities cannot be isolated from the learning process of students. Therefore, the services provided by a remote laboratory must be integrated into the institutional Learning Management System (LMS), in order to be employed during the whole learning process. In this work, a fully-functional example of the integration of service- oriented remote laboratories into a LMS is presented, where the Moodle platform has been chosen as a representative LMS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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43. DRESS syndrome due to antibiotic therapy of osteoarticular infections in children: Two case reports.
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Ramírez, A., Abril, J.C., and Cano, J.
- Abstract
Copyright of Revista Española de Cirugía Ortopédica y Traumatologia (English Edition) is the property of Elsevier B.V. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2015
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44. The impact of a programme to improve quality of care for people with type 2 diabetes on hard to reach groups: The GEDAPS study.
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Bodicoat, Danielle H., Mundet, Xavier, Davies, Melanie J., Khunti, Kamlesh, Roura, Pilar, Franch, Josep, Mata-Cases, Manel, Cos, Xavier, and Cano, J. Franciso
- Abstract
Aims We investigated whether a continuous quality improvement programme in primary care for people with type 2 diabetes led to better care and outcomes in hard to reach groups. Methods GEDAPS was implemented in Catalonia, Spain between 1993 ( n = 2239) and 2002 ( n = 5819). Process (e.g. education), intermediate (e.g. HbA1c) and final (e.g. retinopathy) outcomes were compared between urban and rural areas, and between younger (≤74 years) and older (≥75 years) individuals as examples of harder to reach groups. Results In 1993, people in urban areas had significantly better or similar outcomes to rural areas; by 2002, most outcomes improved in urban and rural areas. For all outcomes, the improvement in rural areas was similar to or better than urban areas. Similarly, for most outcomes, the younger and older group improved, with the older group experiencing similar or better improvements than the younger group for all indicators, except coronary artery disease. Conclusions A quality improvement programme was associated with equivalent or better outcomes in hard to reach groups, regardless of whether they were specifically targeted. The ability to apply one programme to all populations could save time and money. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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45. Síndrome de DRESS como complicación de la antibioterapia en niños tratados por infecciones ortopédicas. A propósito de 2 casos
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Ramírez, A., Abril, J.C., and Cano, J.
- Abstract
La infección osteoarticular en el niño es frecuente por debajo de los 10 años. El tratamiento consiste en la administración de antibióticos y en algunos casos tratamiento quirúrgico. El tiempo de antibioterapia varía, desde 2 semanas para las artritis, hasta 6 semanas en casos de osteomielitis más abigarradas. Algunos de estos medicamentos poseen complicaciones individuales directas con baja repercusión clínica.
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- 2015
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46. Dual Islet Transplantation Modeling of the Instant Blood-Mediated Inflammatory Reaction
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Martin, B.M., Samy, K.P., Lowe, M.C., Thompson, P.W., Cano, J., Farris, A.B., Song, M., Dove, C.R., Leopardi, F.V., Strobert, E.A., Jenkins, J.B., Collins, B.H., Larsen, C.P., and Kirk, A.D.
- Abstract
Islet xenotransplantation is a potential treatment for diabetes without the limitations of tissue availability. Although successful experimentally, early islet loss remains substantial and attributed to an instant blood-mediated inflammatory reaction (IBMIR). This syndrome of islet destruction has been incompletely defined and characterization in pig-to-primate models has been hampered by logistical and statistical limitations of large animal studies. To further investigate IBMIR, we developed a novel in vivodual islet transplant model to precisely characterize IBMIR as proof-of-concept that this model can serve to properly control experiments comparing modified xenoislet preparations. WT and α1,3-galactosyltransferase knockout (GTKO) neonatal porcine islets were studied in nonimmunosuppressed rhesus macaques. Inert polyethylene microspheres served as a control for the effects of portal embolization. Digital analysis of immunohistochemistry targeting IBMIR mediators was performed at 1 and 24 h after intraportal islet infusion. Early findings observed in transplanted islets include complement and antibody deposition, and infiltration by neutrophils, macrophages and platelets. Insulin, complement, antibody, neutrophils, macrophages and platelets were similar between GTKO and WT islets, with increasing macrophage infiltration at 24 h in both phenotypes. This model provides an objective and internally controlled study of distinct islet preparations and documents the temporal histology of IBMIR.
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- 2015
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47. The spreading of Covid-19 in Mexico: A diffusional approach.
- Author
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Aguilar-Madera, Carlos G., Espinosa-Paredes, Gilberto, Herrera-Hernández, E.C., Briones Carrillo, Jorge A., Valente Flores-Cano, J., and Matías-Pérez, Víctor
- Abstract
In this work, we analyze the spreading of Covid-19 in Mexico using the spatial SEIRD epidemiologic model. We use the information of the 32 regions (States) that conform the country, such as population density, verified infected cases, and deaths in each State. We extend the SEIRD compartmental epidemiologic with diffusion mechanisms in the exposed and susceptible populations. We use the Fickian law with the diffusion coefficient proportional to the population density to encompass the diffusion effects. The numerical results suggest that the epidemiologic model demands time-dependent parameters to incorporate non-monotonous behavior in the actual data in the global dynamic. The diffusional model proposed in this work has great potential in predicting the virus spreading on different scales, i.e., local, national, and between countries, since the complete reduction in people mobility is impossible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Influencia de las reclamaciones en la gestión asistencial de un servicio de cirugía ortopédica y traumatología
- Author
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Combalia, A., Torà-Rocamora, I., Diestre-Tomas, A., Muñoz-Mahamud, E., Cano, J. Grau-, and Prat-Marín, A.
- Abstract
Las reclamaciones constituyen una de las principales fuentes de información para evaluar la calidad percibida en los centros asistenciales, siendo la cirugía ortopédica y traumatología (COT) una de las especialidades con mayor probabilidad de recibirlas por su elevada demanda quirúrgica que genera importantes listas de espera.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A Needs Assessment Among Transgender Patients at an LGBTQ Service Organization in Texas.
- Author
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Polizopoulos-Wilson N, Kindratt TB, Hansoti E, Pagels P, Cano JP, Day P, and Gimpel N
- Abstract
Purpose: Transgender adults have difficulty accessing health care due to multiple barriers. This study examined the health care-related needs of transgender patients in Dallas, Texas. Methods: This study examined cross-sectional data from a survey completed by 62 patients who identified as transgender. Results: Many participants reported depression (50%) and anxiety (51%). Over half did not receive preventive screenings (60%) or health care (61%) elsewhere. One-third of patients felt their primary care physician outside the clinic was not transgender-friendly. Conclusion: These findings provide evidence that transgender patients demonstrate increased reported mental health disorders and decreased access to medical care., Competing Interests: No competing financial interests exist., (Copyright 2021, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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