868 results on '"Saunders, W."'
Search Results
2. Correction: Quasi-static mechanical evaluation of canine cementless total hip replacement broaches: effect of tooth design on broach and stem insertion
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Lawson, Zachary T., Hollenbeck, Danielle L., Silveira, Catrina J., Moreno, Michael R., Robbins, Andrew B., and Saunders, W. Brian
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- 2024
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3. Quasi-static mechanical evaluation of canine cementless total hip replacement broaches: effect of tooth design on broach and stem insertion
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Lawson, Zachary T., Hollenbeck, Danielle L., Silveira, Catrina J., Moreno, Michael R., Robbins, Andrew B., and Saunders, W. Brian
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- 2024
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4. Comparing commonly used aquatic habitat modeling methods for native fish
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Turney, Eryn K., Goodrum, Gregory C., Saunders, W. Carl, Walsworth, Timothy E., and Null, Sarah E.
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- 2025
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5. Realising the potential of land-use planning to reduce hazard risks in New Zealand
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Glavovic, Bruce C., Becker, J., and Saunders, W.
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- 2010
6. Sharing FAIR monitoring program data improves discoverability and reuse
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Bayer, Jennifer M., Scully, Rebecca A., Dlabola, Erin K., Courtwright, Jennifer L., Hirsch, Christine L., Hockman-Wert, David, Miller, Scott W., Roper, Brett B., Saunders, W. Carl, and Snyder, Marcía N.
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- 2023
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7. 4MOST: Project overview and information for the First Call for Proposals
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de Jong, R. S., Agertz, O., Berbel, A. Agudo, Aird, J., Alexander, D. A., Amarsi, A., Anders, F., Andrae, R., Ansarinejad, B., Ansorge, W., Antilogus, P., Anwand-Heerwart, H., Arentsen, A., Arnadottir, A., Asplund, M., Auger, M., Azais, N., Baade, D., Baker, G., Baker, S., Balbinot, E., Baldry, I. K., Banerji, M., Barden, S., Barklem, P., Barthélémy-Mazot, E., Battistini, C., Bauer, S., Bell, C. P. M., Bellido-Tirado, O., Bellstedt, S., Belokurov, V., Bensby, T., Bergemann, M., Bestenlehner, J. M., Bielby, R., Bilicki, M., Blake, C., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Boeche, C., Boland, W., Boller, T., Bongard, S., Bongiorno, A., Bonifacio, P., Boudon, D., Brooks, D., Brown, M. J. I., Brown, R., Brüggen, M., Brynnel, J., Brzeski, J., Buchert, T., Buschkamp, P., Caffau, E., Caillier, P., Carrick, J., Casagrande, L., Case, S., Casey, A., Cesarini, I., Cescutti, G., Chapuis, D., Chiappini, C., Childress, M., Christlieb, N., Church, R., Cioni, M. -R. L., Cluver, M., Colless, M., Collett, T., Comparat, J., Cooper, A., Couch, W., Courbin, F., Croom, S., Croton, D., Daguisé, E., Dalton, G., Davies, L. J. M., Davis, T., de Laverny, P., Deason, A., Dionies, F., Disseau, K., Doel, P., Döscher, D., Driver, S. P., Dwelly, T., Eckert, D., Edge, A., Edvardsson, B., Youssoufi, D. El, Elhaddad, A., Enke, H., Erfanianfar, G., Farrell, T., Fechner, T., Feiz, C., Feltzing, S., Ferreras, I., Feuerstein, D., Feuillet, D., Finoguenov, A., Ford, D., Fotopoulou, S., Fouesneau, M., Frenk, C., Frey, S., Gaessler, W., Geier, S., Fusillo, N. Gentile, Gerhard, O., Giannantonio, T., Giannone, D., Gibson, B., Gillingham, P., González-Fernández, C., Gonzalez-Solares, E., Gottloeber, S., Gould, A., Grebel, E. K., Gueguen, A., Guiglion, G., Haehnelt, M., Hahn, T., Hansen, C. J., Hartman, H., Hauptner, K., Hawkins, K., Haynes, D., Haynes, R., Heiter, U., Helmi, A., Aguayo, C. Hernandez, Hewett, P., Hinton, S., Hobbs, D., Hoenig, S., Hofman, D., Hook, I., Hopgood, J., Hopkins, A., Hourihane, A., Howes, L., Howlett, C., Huet, T., Irwin, M., Iwert, O., Jablonka, P., Jahn, T., Jahnke, K., Jarno, A., Jin, S., Jofre, P., Johl, D., Jones, D., Jönsson, H., Jordan, C., Karovicova, I., Khalatyan, A., Kelz, A., Kennicutt, R., King, D., Kitaura, F., Klar, J., Klauser, U., Kneib, J., Koch, A., Koposov, S., Kordopatis, G., Korn, A., Kosmalski, J., Kotak, R., Kovalev, M., Kreckel, K., Kripak, Y., Krumpe, M., Kuijken, K., Kunder, A., Kushniruk, I., Lam, M. I, Lamer, G., Laurent, F., Lawrence, J., Lehmitz, M., Lemasle, B., Lewis, J., Li, B., Lidman, C., Lind, K., Liske, J., Lizon, J. -L., Loveday, J., Ludwig, H. -G., McDermid, R. M., Maguire, K., Mainieri, V., Mali, S., Mandel, H., Mandel, K., Mannering, L., Martell, S., Delgado, D. Martinez, Matijevic, G., McGregor, H., McMahon, R., McMillan, P., Mena, O., Merloni, A., Meyer, M. J., Michel, C., Micheva, G., Migniau, J. -E., Minchev, I., Monari, G., Muller, R., Murphy, D., Muthukrishna, D., Nandra, K., Navarro, R., Ness, M., Nichani, V., Nichol, R., Nicklas, H., Niederhofer, F., Norberg, P., Obreschkow, D., Oliver, S., Owers, M., Pai, N., Pankratow, S., Parkinson, D., Parry, I., Paschke, J., Paterson, R., Pecontal, A., Phillips, D., Pillepich, A., Pinard, L., Pirard, J., Piskunov, N., Plank, V., Plüschke, D., Pons, E., Popesso, P., Power, C., Pragt, J., Pramskiy, A., Pryer, D., Quattri, M., Queiroz, A. B. de Andrade, Quirrenbach, A., Rahurkar, S., Raichoor, A., Ramstedt, S., Rau, A., Recio-Blanco, A., Reiss, R., Renaud, F., Revaz, Y., Rhode, P., Richard, J., Richter, A. D., Rix, H. -W., Robotham, A. S. G., Roelfsema, R., Romaniello, M., Rosario, D., Rothmaier, F., Roukema, B., Ruchti, G., Rupprecht, G., Rybizki, J., Ryde, N., Saar, A., Sadler, E., Sahlén, M., Salvato, M., Sassolas, B., Saunders, W., Saviauk, A., Sbordone, L., Schmidt, T., Schnurr, O., Scholz, R. -D., Schwope, A., Seifert, W., Shanks, T., Sheinis, A., Sivov, T., Skúladóttir, Á., Smartt, S., Smedley, S., Smith, G., Smith, R., Sorce, J., Spitler, L., Starkenburg, E., Steinmetz, M., Stilz, I., Storm, J., Sullivan, M., Sutherland, W., Swann, E., Tamone, A., Taylor, E. N., Teillon, J., Tempel, E., ter Horst, R., Thi, W. -F., Tolstoy, E., Trager, S., Traven, G., Tremblay, P. -E., Tresse, L., Valentini, M., van de Weygaert, R., Ancker, M. van den, Veljanoski, J., Venkatesan, S., Wagner, L., Wagner, K., Walcher, C. J., Waller, L., Walton, N., Wang, L., Winkler, R., Wisotzki, L., Worley, C. C., Worseck, G., Xiang, M., Xu, W., Yong, D., Zhao, C., Zheng, J., Zscheyge, F., and Zucker, D.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We introduce the 4-metre Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope (4MOST), a new high-multiplex, wide-field spectroscopic survey facility under development for the four-metre-class Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) at Paranal. Its key specifications are: a large field of view (FoV) of 4.2 square degrees and a high multiplex capability, with 1624 fibres feeding two low-resolution spectrographs ($R = \lambda/\Delta\lambda \sim 6500$), and 812 fibres transferring light to the high-resolution spectrograph ($R \sim 20\,000$). After a description of the instrument and its expected performance, a short overview is given of its operational scheme and planned 4MOST Consortium science; these aspects are covered in more detail in other articles in this edition of The Messenger. Finally, the processes, schedules, and policies concerning the selection of ESO Community Surveys are presented, commencing with a singular opportunity to submit Letters of Intent for Public Surveys during the first five years of 4MOST operations., Comment: Part of the 4MOST issue of The Messenger, published in preparation of 4MOST Community Workshop, see http://www.eso.org/sci/meetings/2019/4MOST.html
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- 2019
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8. Comment (Case 3703) — Response to a comment on the proposed designation of a neotype for Nautilus pompilius Linnaeus, 1758 (Mollusca, Cephalopoda, Nautilida)
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Nikolaeva, Svetlana V, Saunders, W. Bruce, Mapes, Royal, Allcock, A Louise, and BioStor
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- 2017
9. Greater trochanter morphology and association with patient demographics, surgical factors, and post-operative stem position: a retrospective assessment of 150 cementless THRs in 135 dogs
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Silveira, Catrina J., Barnes, Katherine H., Kerwin, Sharon C., and Saunders, W. Brian
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- 2022
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10. Evaluation of a self-fitting, shape memory polymer scaffold in a rabbit calvarial defect model
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Pfau, Michaela R., Beltran, Felipe O., Woodard, Lindsay N., Dobson, Lauren K., Gasson, Shelby B., Robbins, Andrew B., Lawson, Zachary T., Brian Saunders, W., Moreno, Michael R., and Grunlan, Melissa A.
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- 2021
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11. SPOKES: an End-to-End Simulation Facility for Spectroscopic Cosmological Surveys
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Nord, B., Amara, A., Refregier, A., Gamper, La., Gamper, Lu., Hambrecht, B., Chang, C., Forero-Romero, J. E., Serrano, S., Cunha, C., Coles, O., Nicola, A., Busha, M., Bauer, A., Saunders, W., Jouvel, S., Kirk, D., and Wechsler, R.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The nature of dark matter, dark energy and large-scale gravity pose some of the most pressing questions in cosmology today. These fundamental questions require highly precise measurements, and a number of wide-field spectroscopic survey instruments are being designed to meet this requirement. A key component in these experiments is the development of a simulation tool to forecast science performance, define requirement flow-downs, optimize implementation, demonstrate feasibility, and prepare for exploitation. We present SPOKES (SPectrOscopic KEn Simulation), an end-to-end simulation facility for spectroscopic cosmological surveys designed to address this challenge. SPOKES is based on an integrated infrastructure, modular function organization, coherent data handling and fast data access. These key features allow reproducibility of pipeline runs, enable ease of use and provide flexibility to update functions within the pipeline. The cyclic nature of the pipeline offers the possibility to make the science output an efficient measure for design optimization and feasibility testing. We present the architecture, first science, and computational performance results of the simulation pipeline. The framework is general, but for the benchmark tests, we use the Dark Energy Spectrometer (DESpec), one of the early concepts for the upcoming project, the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). We discuss how the SPOKES framework enables a rigorous process to optimize and exploit spectroscopic survey experiments in order to derive high-precision cosmological measurements optimally., Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
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- 2016
12. Case 3703 Nautilus pompilius Linnaeus, 1758 (Mollusca, Cephalopoda, Nautilida): proposed designation of a neotype
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Nikolaeva, Svetlana V, Saunders, W. Bruce, Mapes, Royal, Allcock, A Louise, and BioStor
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- 2015
13. The Dark Energy Spectrometer (DESpec): A Multi-Fiber Spectroscopic Upgrade of the Dark Energy Camera and Survey for the Blanco Telescope
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Abdalla, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bridle, S., Castander, F., Colless, M., DePoy, D., Diehl, H. T., Eriksen, M., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Gaztanaga, E., Hogan, C., Jouvel, S., Kent, S., Kirk, D., Kron, R., Kuhlmann, S., Lahav, O., Lawrence, J., Lin, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J., Mohr, J., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Saunders, W., Soares-Santos, M., Thomas, D., Wechsler, R., West, A., and Wu, H.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe an initiative to build and use the Dark Energy Spectrometer (DESpec), a wide-field spectroscopic survey instrument for the Blanco 4 meter telescope at Cerro Tololo InterAmerican Observatory (CTIO) in Chile. A new system with about 4000 robotically positioned optical fibers will be interchangeable with the CCD imager of the existing Dark Energy Camera (DECam), accessing a field of view of 3.8 square degrees in a single exposure. The proposed instrument will be operated by CTIO and available for use by the astronomy community. Our collaboration proposes to use DESpec to conduct a wide, deep spectroscopic survey to study Dark Energy. In a survey of about 350 nights, the DESpec collaboration proposes to obtain spectroscopic redshifts for about 8 million galaxies over 5000 square degrees selected from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). This Dark Energy Spectroscopic Survey will advance our knowledge of cosmic expansion and structure growth significantly beyond that obtainable with imaging-only surveys. Since it adds a spectroscopic third dimension to the same sky as DES, DESpec will enable increasingly precise techniques to discriminate among alternative explanations of cosmic acceleration, such as Dark Energy and Modified Gravity., Comment: 57 pages, 28 figures
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- 2012
14. The Science Case for PILOT III: the Nearby Universe
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Lawrence, J. S., Ashley, M. C. B., Bailey, J., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Bedding, T., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Bond, I., Bruntt, H., Burton, M. G., Cioni, M. -R., Eiroa, C., Epchtein, N., Kiss, L., Lagage, P. O., Minier, V., Mora, A., Olsen, K., Peri, P., Saunders, W., Stello, D., Storey, J. W. V., Tinney, C., and Yock, P.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
PILOT (the Pathfinder for an International Large Optical Telescope is a proposed 2.5 m optical/infrared telescope to be located at DomeC on the Antarctic plateau. The atmospheric conditions at Dome C deliver a high sensitivity, high photometric precision, wide-field, high spatial resolution, and high-cadence imaging capability to the PILOT telescope. These capabilities enable a unique scientific potential for PILOT, which is addressed in this series of papers. The current paper presents a series of projects dealing with the nearby Universe that have been identified as key science drivers for the PILOT facility. Several projects are proposed that examine stellar populations in nearby galaxies and stellar clusters in order to gain insight into the formation and evolution processes of galaxies and stars. A series of projects will investigate the molecular phase of the Galaxy and explore the ecology of star formation, and investigate the formation processes of stellar and planetary systems. Three projects in the field of exoplanet science are proposed: a search for free-floating low-mass planets and dwarfs, a program of follow-up observations of gravitational microlensing events, and a study of infrared light-curves for previously discovered exoplanets. Three projects are also proposed in the field of planetary and space science: optical and near-infrared studies aimed at characterising planetary atmospheres, a study of coronal mass ejections from the Sun, and a monitoring program searching for small-scale Low Earth Orbit satellite debris items., Comment: 27 pages, 16 figures (degraded quality), accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2009
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15. The Science Case for PILOT II: the Distant Universe
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Lawrence, J. S., Ashley, M. C. B., Bunker, A., Bouwens, R., Burgarella, D., Burton, M. G., Gehrels, N., Glazebrook, K., Pimbblet, K., Quimby, R., Saunders, W., Storey, J. W. V., and Wheeler, J. C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
PILOT (the Pathfinder for an International Large Optical Telescope) is a proposed 2.5 m optical/infrared telescope to be located at Dome C on the Antarctic plateau. The atmospheric conditions at Dome C deliver a high sensitivity, high photometric precision, wide-field, high spatial resolution, and high-cadence imaging capability to the PILOT telescope. These capabilities enable a unique scientific potential for PILOT, which is addressed in this series of papers. The current paper presents a series of projects dealing with the distant (redshift >) Universe, that have been identified as key science drivers for the PILOT facility. The potential for PILOT to detect the first populations of stars to form in the early Universe, via infrared projects searching for pair-instability supernovae and gamma-ray burst afterglows, is investigated. Two projects are proposed to examine the assembly and evolution of structure in the Universe: an infrared survey searching for the first evolved galaxies at high redshift, and an optical survey aimed at characterising moderate-redshift galaxy clusters. Finally, a large-area weak-lensing survey and a program to obtain supernovae infrared light-curves are proposed to examine the nature and evolution of dark energy and dark matter., Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2009
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16. The Science Case for PILOT I: Summary and Overview
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Lawrence, J. S., Ashley, M. C. B., Bailey, J., Navascues, D. Barrado y, Bedding, T., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Bond, I., Boulanger, F., Bouwens, R., Bruntt, H., Bunker, A., Burgarella, D., Burton, M. G., Busso, M., Coward, D., Cioni, M. -R., Durand, G., Eiroa, C., Epchtein, N., Gehrels, N., Gillingham, P., Glazebrook, K., Haynes, R., Kiss, L., Lagage, P. O., Bertre, T. Le, Mackay, C., Maillard, J. P., McGrath, A., Minier, V., Mora, A., Olsen, K., Persi, P., Pimbblet, K., Quimby, R., Saunders, W., Schmidt, B., Stello, D., Storey, J. W. V., Tinney, C., Tremblin, P., Wheeler, J. C., and Yoc, P.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
PILOT (the Pathfinder for an International Large Optical Telescope) is a proposed 2.5 m optical/infrared telescope to be located at Dome C on the Antarctic plateau. Conditions at Dome C are known to be exceptional for astronomy. The seeing (above ~30 m height), coherence time, and isoplanatic angle are all twice s good as at typical mid-latitude sites, while the water-vapour column, and the atmosphere and telescope thermal emission are all an order of magnitude better. These conditions enable a unique scientific capability for PILOT, which is addressed in this series of papers. The current paper presents an overview of the optical and instrumentation suite for PILO and its expected performance, a summary of the key science goals and observational approach for the facility, a discussion of the synergies between the science goals for PILOT and other telescopes, and a discussion of the future of Antarctic astronomy. Paper II and Paper III present details of the science projects divided, respectively, between the distant Universe (i.e., studies of first light, and the assembly and evolution of structure) and the nearby Universe (i.e., studies of Local Group galaxies, the Milky Way, and the Solar System)., Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2009
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17. P051 Associations between Chronotype and Symptoms of Depression in Patients attending an Outpatient Sleep Clinic
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Mendes, J, primary, Ng, Y, additional, Lu, S, additional, Saunders, W, additional, Cahill, F, additional, Oh, S, additional, Wasgewatta, S, additional, Rajaratnam, S, additional, Hamilton, G, additional, Mansfield, D, additional, and Bei, B, additional
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- 2023
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18. PILOT and cosmic shear
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Saunders, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Cosmic shear offers a remarkbly clean way to measure the equation of state of the Universe and its evolution. Resolution over a wide field is paramount, and Antarctica offers unique possibilities in this respect. There is an order of magnitude gain in speed over temperate sites, or a factor three in surface density. This means that PILOT outperforms much larger telescopes elsewhere, and can compete with the proposed DUNE space mission. Keywords: Antarctic astronomy, Surveys, Adaptive optics, Weak lensing, Comment: 6 pages, Proceedings of 2nd ARENA conference 'The Astrophysical Science Cases at Dome C', Potsdam, 17-21 September 2007
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- 2008
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19. PILOT: design and capabilities
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Saunders, W., Gillingham, P. R., McGrath, A. J., Storey, J. W. V., and Lawrence, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The proposed design for PILOT is a general-purpose, wide-field 1 degree 2.4m, f/10 Ritchey-Chretien telescope, with fast tip-tilt guiding, for use 0.5-25 microns. The design allows both wide-field and diffraction-limited use at these wavelengths. The expected overall image quality, including median seeing, is 0.28-0.3" FWHM from 0.8-2.4 microns. Point source sensitivities are estimated., Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings of 2nd ARENA conference 'The Astrophysical Science Cases at Dome C', Potsdam, 17-21 September 2007
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- 2008
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20. The Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE): first data release
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Steinmetz, M., Zwitter, T., Siebert, A., Watson, F. G., Freeman, K. C., Munari, U., Campbell, R., Williams, M., Seabroke, G. M., Wyse, R. F. G., Parker, Q. A., Bienayme, O., Roeser, S., Gibson, B. K., Gilmore, G., Grebel, E. K., Helmi, A., Navarro, J. F., Burton, D., Cass, C. J. P., Dawe, J. A., Fiegert, K., Hartley, M., Russell, K. S., Saunders, W., Enke, H., Bailin, J., Binney, J., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Boeche, C., Dehnen, W., Eisenstein, D. J., Evans, N. W., Fiorucci, M., Fulbright, J. P., Gerhard, O., Jauregi, U., Kelz, A., Mijovic, L., Minchev, I., Parmentier, G., Penarrubia, J., Quillen, A. C., Read, M. A., Ruchti, G., Scholz, R. -D., Siviero, A., Smith, M. C., Sordo, R., Veltz, L., Vidrih, S., von Berlepsch, R., Boyle, B. J., and Schilbach, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first data release of the Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE), an ambitious spectroscopic survey to measure radial velocities and stellar atmosphere parameters (temperature, metallicity, surface gravity) of up to one million stars using the 6dF multi-object spectrograph on the 1.2-m UK Schmidt Telescope of the Anglo-Australian Observatory (AAO). The RAVE program started in 2003, obtaining medium resolution spectra (median R=7,500) in the Ca-triplet region ($\lambda\lambda$ 8,410--8,795 \AA) for southern hemisphere stars drawn from the Tycho-2 and SuperCOSMOS catalogs, in the magnitude range 9
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- 2006
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21. The Dipole Anisotropy of the 2mass Redshift Survey
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Erdogdu, P., Huchra, J. P., Lahav, O., Colless, M., Cutri, R. M., Falco, E., George, T., Jarrett, T., Jones, D. H., Kochanek, C. S., Macri, L., Mader, J., Martimbeau, N., Pahre, M., Parker, Q., Rassat, A., and Saunders, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We estimate the flux weighted acceleration on the Local Group (LG) from the near-infrared Two Micron All Sky Redshift Survey (2MRS). The near-infrared flux weighted dipoles are very robust because they closely approximate a mass weighted dipole, bypassing the effects of redshift distortions and require no preferred reference frame. We use this method with the redshift information to determine the change in dipole with distance. The LG dipole seemingly converges by 60 Mpc/h. Assuming convergence, the comparison of the 2MRS flux dipole and the CMB dipole provides a value for the combination of the mass density and luminosity bias parameters Omega_m^0.6/b_L= 0.40+/-0.09., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Contribution to Rencontres de Moriond: Contents and Structures of the Universe, March 18-25, 2006, La Thuile
- Published
- 2006
22. Redshifts and Velocity Dispersions of Galaxy Clusters in the Horologium-Reticulum Supercluster
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Fleenor, M. C., Rose, J. A., Christiansen, W. A., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Hunstead, R. W., Drinkwater, M. J., and Saunders, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present 118 new optical redshifts for galaxies in 12 clusters in the Horologium-Reticulum supercluster (HRS) of galaxies. For 76 galaxies, the data were obtained with the Dual Beam Spectrograph on the 2.3m telescope of the Australian National University at Siding Spring Observatory. After combining 42 previously unpublished redshifts with our new sample, we determine mean redshifts and velocity dispersions for 13 clusters, in which previous observational data were sparse. In six of the 13 clusters, the newly determined mean redshifts differ by more than 750 km/s from the published values. In the case of three clusters, A3047, A3109, and A3120, the redshift data indicate the presence of multiple components along the line of sight. The new cluster redshifts, when combined with other reliable mean redshifts for clusters in the HRS, are found to be distinctly bi-modal. Furthermore, the two redshift components are consistent with the bi-modal redshift distribution found for the inter-cluster galaxies in the HRS by Fleenor et al. (2005)., Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, Accepted to AJ
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- 2005
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23. The Dipole Anisotropy of the 2 Micron All-Sky Redshift Survey
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Erdogdu, P., Huchra, J. P., Lahav, O., Colless, M., Cutri, R. M., Falco, E., George, T., Jarrett, T., Jones, D. H., Kochanek, C. S., Macri, L., Mader, J., Martimbeau, N., Pahre, M., Parker, Q., Rassat, A., and Saunders, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We estimate the acceleration on the Local Group (LG) from the Two Micron All Sky Redshift Survey (2MRS). The sample used includes about 23,200 galaxies with extinction corrected magnitudes brighter than K_s=11.25 and it allows us to calculate the flux weighted dipole. The near-infrared flux weighted dipoles are very robust because they closely approximate a mass weighted dipole, bypassing the effects of redshift distortions and require no preferred reference frame. This is combined with the redshift information to determine the change in dipole with distance. The misalignment angle between the LG and the CMB dipole drops to 12 degrees at around 50 Mpc/h, but then increases at larger distances, reaching 21 degrees at around 130 Mpc/h. Exclusion of the galaxies Maffei 1, Maffei 2, Dwingeloo 1, IC342 and M87 brings the resultant flux dipole to 14 degrees away from the CMB velocity dipole In both cases, the dipole seemingly converges by 60 Mpc/h. Assuming convergence, the comparison of the 2MRS flux dipole and the CMB dipole provides a value for the combination of the mass density and luminosity bias parameters Omega_m^0.6/b_L=0.40+/-0.09., Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, MNRAS, in press
- Published
- 2005
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24. Large-Scale Velocity Structures in the Horologium-Reticulum Supercluster
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Fleenor, M. C., Rose, J. A., Christiansen, W. A., Hunstead, R. W., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Drinkwater, M. J., and Saunders, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present 547 optical redshifts obtained for galaxies in the region of the Horologium-Reticulum Supercluster (HRS) using the 6dF multi-fiber spectrograph on the UK Schmidt Telescope at the Anglo Australian Observatory. The HRS covers an area of more than 12deg x 12deg on the sky centered at approximately RA = 03h19m, DEC = -50deg 02amin. Our 6dF observations concentrate upon the inter-cluster regions of the HRS, from which we describe four primary results. First, the HRS spans at least the redshift range from 17,000 to 22,500 km s^-1. Second, the overdensity of galaxies in the inter-cluster regions of the HRS in this redshift range is estimated to be 2.4, or del rho/ rho ~ 1.4. Third, we find a systematic trend of increasing redshift along a Southeast-Northwest (SE-NW) spatial axis in the HRS, in that the mean redshift of HRS members increases by more than 1500 km s^-1 from SE to NW over a 12 deg region. Fourth, the HRS is bi-modal in redshift with a separation of ~ 2500 km s^-1 (35 Mpc) between the higher and lower redshift peaks. This fact is particularly evident if the above spatial-redshift trend is fitted and removed. In short, the HRS appears to consist of two components in redshift space, each one exhibiting a similar systematic spatial-redshift trend along a SE-NW axis. Lastly, we compare these results from the HRS with the Shapley supercluster and find similar properties and large-scale features., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, accepted to AJ
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- 2005
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25. The Clustering of Hot and Cold IRAS Galaxies: The Redshift Space Correlation Function
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Hawkins, E., Maddox, S., Branchini, E., and Saunders, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the autocorrelation function of galaxies in the IRAS Point Source Catalogue galaxy redshift (PSCz) survey and investigate its dependence on the far-infrared colour and absolute luminosity of the galaxies. We find that the PSCz survey correlation function can be modelled out to a scale of 10 h^{-1}Mpc as a power law of slope 1.30 +/- 0.04 and correlation length 4.77 +/- 0.20. At a scale of 75 h^{-1}Mpc we find the value of J_3 to be 1500 +/- 400. We also find that galaxies with cooler dust temperatures, are more strongly clustered than warmer galaxies. Splitting the survey into three colour subsamples, we find that, between 1 and 10 h^{-1}Mpc, the ratio of the correlation function is factor of 1.5 higher for the cooler galaxies compared to the hotter galaxies. This is consistent with the suggestion that hotter galaxies have higher star-formation rates, and correspond to later-type galaxies which are less clustered than earlier types. Using volume limited sub-samples, we find a weak variation of the correlation function as a function of absolute luminosity, in the sense that more luminous galaxies are less clustered than fainter galaxies. The trend is consistent with the colour dependence of the correlation function and the observed colour-luminosity correlation, but the large uncertainties mean that it has a low statistical significance., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 12 pages, 12 figures
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- 2001
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26. Predicting the peculiar velocities of nearby PSC-z galaxies using the Least Action Principle
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Sharpe, J., Rowan-Robinson, M., Canavezes, A., Saunders, W., Branchini, E., Efstathiou, G., Frenk, C., Keeble, O., McMahon, R. G., Maddox, S., Oliver, S. J., Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the Least Action Principle to predict the peculiar velocities of PSC-z galaxies inside $cz=2000$\km. Linear theory is used to account for tidal effects to $cz=15000$\km, and we iterate galaxy positions to account for redshift distortions. As the Least Action Principle is valid beyond Linear theory, we can predict reliable peculiar velocities even for very nearby galaxies (ie $cz \leq 500$\km). These predicted peculiar velocities are then compared with the observed velocities of 12 galaxies with Cepheid distances. The combination of the PSC-z galaxy survey (with its large sky coverage and uniform selection), with the accurate Cepheid distances, makes this comparison relatively free from systematic effects. We find that galaxies are good tracers of the mass, even at small ($\leq 10$\mpc) scales; and under the assumption of no biasing, $0.25 \leq \beta \leq 0.75$ (at 90% confidence). We use the reliable predicted peculiar velocities to estimate the Hubble constant \ho from the local volume without ``stepping up'' the distance ladder, finding a confidence range of 65-75\kmM (at 90% confidence)., Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2000
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27. The 1-point PDF of the Initial Conditions of our Local Universe from the IRAS PSC redshift catalogue
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Monaco, P., Efstathiou, G., Maddox, S. J., Branchini, E., Frenk, C. S., McMahon, R. G., Oliver, S. J., Rowan-Robinson, M., Saunders, W., Sutherland, W. J., Tadros, H., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The algorithm ZTRACE of Monaco & Efstathiou (1999) is applied to the IRAS PSCz catalogue to reconstruct the initial conditions of our local Universe with a resolution down to ~5 Mpc/h. The 1-point PDF of the reconstructed initial conditions is consistent with the assumptions that (i) IRAS galaxies trace mass on scales of ~5 Mpc/h, and (ii) the statistics of primordial density fluctuations is Gaussian. We use simulated PSCz catalogues, constructed from N-body simulations with Gaussian initial conditions, to show that local non-linear bias can cause the recovered initial PDF (assuming no bias) to be non-Gaussian. However, for plausible bias models, the distortions of the recovered PDF would be difficult to detect using the volume finely sampled by the PSCz catalogue. So, for Gaussian initial conditions, a range of bias models remain compatible with our PSCz reconstruction results., Comment: 13 pages, figures included (needs mn.sty), in press on MNRAS
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- 2000
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28. The PSCz Catalogue
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Saunders, W., Sutherland, W. J., Maddox, S. J., Keeble, O., Oliver, S. J., Rowan-Robinson, M., McMahon, R. G., Efstathiou, G. P., Tadros, H., White, S. D. M., Frenk, C. S., Carraminana, A., and Hawkins, M. R. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the catalogue, mask, redshift data and selection function for the PSCz survey of 15411 IRAS galaxies across 84% of the sky. Most of the IRAS data is taken from the Point Source Catalog, but this has been supplemented and corrected in various ways to improve the completeness and uniformity. We quantify the known imperfections in the catalogue, and we assess the overall uniformity, completeness and data quality. We find that overall the catalogue is complete and uniform to within a few percent at high latitudes and 10% at low latitudes. Ancillary information, access details, guidelines and caveats for using the catalogue are given., Comment: 10 pages, submitted to MNRAS Oct 1999, accepted 8 March 2000. Includes details for data access
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- 2000
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29. The Clymeniid Dilemma: Functional Implications of the Dorsal Siphuncle in Clymeniid Ammonoids
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Saunders, W. Bruce
- Published
- 2005
30. Galaxy and Cluster Biasing from Local Group Dynamics
- Author
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Plionis, M., Basilakos, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., Maddox, S. J., Oliver, S. J., Keeble, O., and Saunders, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Comparing the gravitational acceleration induced on the Local Group of galaxies by different tracers of the underline density field we estimate, within the linear gravitational instability theory and the linear biasing ansatz, their relative bias factors. Using optical SSRS2 galaxies, IRAS (PSCz) galaxies and Abell/ACO clusters, we find b_{O,I} ~ 1.21 +- 0.06 and b_{C,I} ~ 4.3 +- 0.8, in agreement with other recent studies. Finally, there is an excellent one-to-one correspondence of the PSCz and Abell/ACO cluster dipole profiles, once the latter is rescaled by b_{C,I}, out to at least ~150 h^{-1} Mpc., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 1999
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31. The IRAS PSCz Dipole
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Rowan-Robinson, M., Sharpe, J., Oliver, S. J., Keeble, O., Canavezes, A., Saunders, W., Taylor, A. N., Valentine, H., Frenk, C. S., Efstathiou, G. P., McMahon, R. G., White, S. D. M., Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., and Maddox, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the PSCz IRAS galaxy redshift survey to analyze the cosmological galaxy dipole out to a distance 300 h$^{-1}$ Mpc. The masked area is filled in three different ways, firstly by sampling the whole sky at random, secondly by using neighbouring areas to fill a masked region, and thirdly using a spherical harmonic analysis. The method of treatment of the mask is found to have a significant effect on the final calculated dipole. The conversion from redshift space to real space is accomplished by using an analytical model of the cluster and void distribution, based on 88 nearby groups, 854 clusters and 163 voids, with some of the clusters and all of the voids found from the PSCz database. The dipole for the whole PSCz sample appears to have converged within a distance of 200 $h^{-1}$Mpc and yields a value for $\beta = \Omega^{0.6}/b$ = 0.75 (+0.11,-0.08), consistent with earlier determinations from IRAS samples by a variety of methods. For b = 1, the $2-\sigma$ range for $\Omega_{o}$ is 0.43-1.02. The direction of the dipole is within 13$^o$ of the CMB dipole, the main uncertainty in direction being associated with the masked area behind the Galactic plane. The improbability that further major contributions to the dipole amplitude will come from volumes larger than those surveyed here means that the question of the origin of the CMB dipole is essentially resolved., Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Figs 2,3,4 available by anonymous ftp from ftp://icstar5.ph.ic.ac.uk (cd /pub/mrr)
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- 1999
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32. The Correlation Between Galaxy HI Linewidths and K' Luminosities
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Rothberg, B., Saunders, W., Tully, R. B., and Witchalls, P. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The relationship between galaxy luminosities and rotation rates is studied with total luminosities in the K' band. Extinction problems are essentially eliminated at this band centered at 2.1 micron. A template luminosity-linewidth relation is derived based on 65 galaxies drawn from two magnitude-limited cluster samples. The zero-point is determined using 4 galaxies with accurately known distances. The calibration is applied to give the distance to the Pisces Cluster (60 Mpc) at a redshift in the CMB frame of 4771 km/s. The resultant value of the Hubble Constant is 81 km/s/Mpc. The largest sources of uncertainty arises from the small number of zero-point calibrators at this time at K' and present application to only one cluster., Comment: 13 pages including 5 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal
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- 1999
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33. Reconstruction Analysis of the IRAS Point Source Catalog Redshift Survey
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Narayanan, Vijay K., Weinberg, David H., Branchini, E., Frenk, C. S., Maddox, S., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., and Saunders, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of reconstruction analysis of the galaxy distribution in a spherical region of radius 50 Mpc/h centered on the Local Group, as mapped by the IRAS Point Source Catalog Redshift Survey (PSCz). We reconstruct it using 15 different models for structure formation in the universe, each consisting of a set of assumptions regarding the value of the density parameter Omega_m, and the amplitude and nature of the biasing between IRAS galaxies and mass. For every model, we also reconstruct ten mock PSCz catalogs derived from the outputs of numerical simulations that have the appropriate assumptions about Omega_m and bias. We use a variety of statistics to compare the accuracy of each reconstruction of the PSCz catalog to the accuracy expected based on the corresponding mock catalog reconstructions. We find that gravitational instability of Gaussian mass density fluctuations can account for the galaxy distribution in the PSCz catalog, at least for some plausible assumptions about the value of Omega_m and the bias. Unbiased models in which IRAS galaxies trace mass fail to reconstruct the PSCz catalog accurately, both for Omega_m=0.4 and for Omega_m=1. Low Omega_m models in which IRAS galaxies are antibiased with respect to the mass are the most successful in reconstructing the PSCz catalog. In particular, a model with Omega_m=0.4 and IRAS galaxies related to the mass according to the predictions of a semi-analytic galaxy formation model is very successful in reconstructing the PSCz galaxy distribution., Comment: 50 pages including 13 Figures and 2 Tables, submitted to ApJ
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- 1999
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34. On density and velocity fields and beta from the IRAS PSCz survey
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Schmoldt, Inga M., Saar, Veikko, Saha, Prasenjit, Branchini, E., Efstathiou, G. P., Frenk, C. S., Keeble, O., Maddox, S., McMahon, R., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., Saunders, W., Sutherland, W. J., Tadros, H., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a version of the Fourier Bessel method first introduced by Fisher et al (1994) and Zaroubi et al (1994) with two extensions: (a) we amend the formalism to allow a generic galaxy weight which can be constant rather than the more conventional overweighting of galaxies at high distances, and (b) we correct for the masked zones by extrapolation of Fourier Bessel modes rather than by cloning from the galaxy distribution in neighbouring regions. We test the procedure extensively on N-body simulations and find that it gives generally unbiased results but that the reconstructed velocities tend to be overpredicted in high-density regions. Applying the formalism to the PSZz redshift catalog, we find that beta = 0.7 +/- 0.5 from a comparison of the reconstructed Local Group velocity to the CMB dipole. From an anisotropy test of the velocity field, we find that beta = 1 CDM models models normalized to the current cluster abundance can be excluded with 90% confidence. The density and velocity fields reconstructed agree with the fields found by Branchini et al (1998) in most points. We find a back-infall into the Great Attractor region (Hydra-Centaurus region) but tests suggest that this may be an artifact. We identify all the major clusters in our density field and confirm the existence of some previously identified possible ones., Comment: To appear in AJ (c Sept 99)
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- 1999
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35. A Comparison of The PSCz and Stromlo-APM Redshift Surveys
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Seaborne, M. D., Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., Efstathiou, G., Frenk, C. S., Keeble, O., Maddox, S., McMahon, R. G., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., Saunders, W., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a direct comparison of the clustering properties of two redshift surveys covering a common volume of space: the recently completed IRAS Point Source Catalogue redshift survey (PSCz) containing 14500 galaxies with a limiting flux of 0.6 Jy at 60 microns, and the optical Stromlo-APM survey containing 1787 galaxies in a region of 4300 deg^2 in the southern Galactic cap. We use three methods to compare the clustering properties: the counts-in-cells comparison of Efstathiou (1995), the two-point cross correlation function, and the Tegmark (1998) `null-buster' test. We find that the Stromlo variances are systematically higher than those of PSCz, as expected due to the deficit of early-type galaxies in IRAS samples. However we find that the differences between the cell counts are consistent with a linear bias between the two surveys, with a relative bias parameter b_rel = b_Stromlo/b_PSCz \approx 1.3 which appears approximately scale-independent. The correlation coefficient R between optical and IRAS densities on scales \sim 20 Mpc/h is R > 0.72 at 95% c.l., placing limits on types of `stochastic bias' which affect optical and IRAS galaxies differently., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 13 pages, 18 postscript figures
- Published
- 1999
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36. A Non Parametric Model for the Cosmic Velocity Field
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Branchini, E., Teodoro, L., Frenk, C. S., Schmoldt, I., Efstathiou, G., White, S. D. M., Saunders, W., Rowan-Robinson, M., Keeble, O., Tadros, H., Maddox, S., Oliver, S., and Sutherland, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a self consistent nonparametric model of the local cosmic velocity field based on the density distribution in the PSCz redshift survey of IRAS galaxies. The error analysis, carried out on mock PSCz catalogues constructed from N-body simulations, reveals uncertainties of ~70 km/sec. The denser sampling provided by the PSCz survey compared to previous IRAS galaxy surveys allows us to reconstruct the velocity field out to larger distances. The most striking feature of the model velocity field is a coherent large-scale streaming motion along a baseline connecting Perseus-Pisces, the Local Supercluster, the Great Attractor, and the Shapley Concentration. We find no evidence for back-infall onto the Great Attractor. Instead, material behind and around the Great Attractor in inferred to be streaming towards the Shapley Concentration The PSCz model velocities compare well with those predicted from the 1.2Jy redshift survey of IRAS galaxies and with those predicted from the distribution of Abell/ACO clusters, out to 140 Mpc/h. Comparison of the real-space density fields (or, alternatively, the peculiar velocity fields) inferred from the PSC$z$ and cluster catalogues gives a relative (linear) bias parameter between clusters and IRAS galaxies of 4.4 +/- 0.6. Finally, we compare the cumulative bulk flows predicted from the PSCz gravity field with those measured from the Mark III and SFI catalogues of peculiar velocities. A conservative estimate of beta=Omega**0.6/b, where b is the bias parameter for IRAS galaxies, gives beta =0.6 + 0.22 -0.15, in agreement with other recent determinations., Comment: 29 pages, Latex, 25 figures (23 ps-files + 2 gif file). Accepted by MNRAS. The correct text now replaces an old draft version, erroneously placed on the net
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- 1999
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37. Spherical Harmonic Analysis of the PSCz Galaxy Catalogue: Redshift distortions and the real-space power spectrum
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Tadros, H., Ballinger, W. E., Taylor, A. N., Heavens, A. F., Efstathiou, G., Saunders, W., Frenk, C. S., Keeble, O., McMahon, R., Maddox, S. J., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., and White, W. J. Sutherland S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We apply the formalism of spherical harmonic decomposition to the galaxy density field of the IRAS PSCz redshift survey. The PSCz redshift survey has almost all-sky coverage and includes IRAS galaxies to a flux limit of 0.6 Jy. Using maximum likelihood methods to examine (to first order) the distortion of the galaxy pattern due to redshift coordinates, we have measured the parameter \beta= \Omega^{0.6}/b. We also simultaneously measure (a) the undistorted amplitude of perturbations in the galaxy distribution when a parameterised power spectrum is assumed, or (b) the shape and amplitude of the real-space power spectrum if the band-power in a set of passbands is measured in a step- wise fashion. These methods are extensively tested on a series of CDM, \Lambda CDM and MDM simulations and are found to be unbiased. We obtain consistent results for the subset of the PSCz catalogue with flux above 0.75 Jy but inclusion of galaxies to the formal flux limit of the catalogue gives variations which are larger than our internal errors. For the 0.75 Jy catalogue we find, in the case of a parameterised power spectrum, \beta=0.58\pm0.26 and the amplitude of the real space power measured at wavenumber k=0.1 h/Mpc is \Delta_{0.1}=0.42 \pm 0.03. Freeing the shape of the power spectrum we find that \beta=0.47\pm 0.16 (conditional error), and \Delta_{0.1}=0.47 \pm 0.03. The shape of the real-space power spectrum is consistent with a \Gamma= 0.2 CDM-like shape parameter, but does not strongly rule out a number of other models. Finally by combining our estimate of the amplitude of galaxy clustering and the distortion parameter we find the amplitude of mass fluctuations on a scale k=0.1 \hmpc is \Delta_\rho = 0.24 \Omega_0^{-0.6}$, with an uncertainty of 50%., Comment: 24 pages (Latex), 12 postscript figures included, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 1999
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38. The Power Spectrum of the PSC Redshift Survey
- Author
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Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., Efstathiou, G., Frenk, C. S., Keeble, O., Maddox, S., McMahon, R. G., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., Saunders, W., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the redshift-space power spectrum P(k) for the recently completed IRAS Point Source Catalogue (PSC) redshift survey, which contains 14500 galaxies over 84% of the sky with 60 micron flux >= 0.6 Jansky. Comparison with simulations shows that our estimated errors on P(k) are realistic, and that systematic errors due to the finite survey volume are small for wavenumbers k >~ 0.03 h Mpc^-1. At large scales our power spectrum is intermediate between those of the earlier QDOT and 1.2 Jansky surveys, but with considerably smaller error bars; it falls slightly more steeply to smaller scales. We have fitted families of CDM-like models using the Peacock-Dodds formula for non-linear evolution; the results are somewhat sensitive to the assumed small-scale velocity dispersion \sigma_V. Assuming a realistic \sigma_V \approx 300 km/s yields a shape parameter \Gamma ~ 0.25 and normalisation b \sigma_8 ~ 0.75; if \sigma_V is as high as 600 km/s then \Gamma = 0.5 is only marginally excluded. There is little evidence for any `preferred scale' in the power spectrum or non-Gaussian behaviour in the distribution of large-scale power., Comment: Latex, uses mn.sty, 14 pages including 11 Postscript figures. Accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 1999
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39. Likelihood Analysis of the Local Group Acceleration
- Author
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Schmoldt, I., Branchini, E., Teodoro, L., Efstathiou, G., Frenk, C., Keeble, O., Maddox, S., Oliver, S., Rowan-Robinson, M., Saunders, W., Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., and White, S. D. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We compute the acceleration on the Local Group using 11206 IRAS galaxies from the recently completed all-sky PSCz redshift survey. Measuring the acceleration vector in redshift space generates systematic uncertainties due to the redshift space distortions in the density field. We therefore assign galaxies to their real space positions by adopting a non-parametric model for the velocity field that solely relies on the linear gravitational instability and linear biasing hypotheses. Remaining systematic contributions to the measured acceleration vector are corrected for by using PSCz mock catalogues from N-body experiments. The resulting acceleration vector points approx. 15 degrees away from the CMB dipole apex, with a remarkable alignment between small and large scale contributions. A considerable fraction of the measured acceleration is generated within 40 h-1 Mpc with a non-negligible contribution from scales between 90 and 140 h-1 Mpc after which the acceleration amplitude seems to have converged. The local group acceleration from PSCz appears to be consistent with the one determined from the IRAS 1.2 Jy galaxy catalogue once the different contributions from shot noise have been taken into account. The results are consistent with the gravitational instability hypothesis and do not indicate any strong deviations from the linear biasing relation on large scales. A maximum-likelihood analysis of the comulative PSCz dipole is performed within a radius of 150 h-1 Mpc in which we account for nonlinear effects, shot noise and finite sample size. We obtain \beta = 0.70 (+ 0.35)(-0.2) at 1 \sigma confidence level., Comment: replace earlier version, references added, errorbars corrected
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- 1999
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40. The Evolutionary History of Shell Geometry in Paleozoic Ammonoids
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Saunders, W. Bruce and Work, David M.
- Published
- 2004
41. Velocity Fields from IRAS-PSCz survey
- Author
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Branchini, E., Teodoro, C. S. Frenk L., Schmoldt, I., Efstathiou, G., Saunders, W., White, S. D. M., Rowan-Robinson, M., Sutherland, W., Tadros, H., Maddox, S., Oliver, S., and Keeble, O.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a self-consistent nonparametric model of the cosmic velocity field based on the spatial distribution of IRAS galaxies in the recently completed all-sky PSC$z$ redshift survey. The most streaking feature of the PSCz model velocity field is a coherent large-scale streaming motion along the Perseus Pisces, Local Supercluster, Great Attractor and Shapley Concentration baseline, with no evidence for a backinfall into the Great Attractor region. A likelihood analysis has been performed to measure $\beta$. We have obtained $\beta =0.6^{+0.22}_{-0.15}$ (1-$\sigma$), in agreement with other recent determinations., Comment: 5 pages, Latex, 1 Special Macro, 3 .ps figures
- Published
- 1998
42. Towards Completing a Large Area ULIRG Survey
- Author
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Clements, D. L., Saunders, W. J., and McMahon, R. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the latest results in our efforts to produce a complete, large sample of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs, L60 > 10^11.4 Lsun for H0=100kms^-1 Mpc^-1, q0=0.5) for use in the study of these objects and their evolution. We have been using an optical/IR colour technique to select those objects most likely to be ULIRGs. 65 of the 198 candidate ULIRGs that do not yet have redshifts were observed. Redshifts were obtained for 51 of these objects, including 8 new ULIRGs and a further three probable ULIRGs with tentative redshifts. The new ULIRGs include one object at z=0.44 (00029-1424), the highest in the survey so far, and at least one new broad-line ULIRG (03156-1706) which appears to lie in a galaxy cluster. We discuss the properties of these objects and their local environments, concluding that three of them have high excitation spectra, and that five show disturbed morphology even in the shallow acquisition images. We also present the redshift measurements of the non-ULIRGs identified in the course of this survey., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 1998
43. Global Extinction in Spiral Galaxies
- Author
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Tully, R. Brent, Pierce, M. J., Huang, J. S., Saunders, W., Verheijen, M. A. W., and Witchalls, P. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Magnitude-limited samples of spiral galaxies drawn from the Ursa Major and Pisces clusters are used to determine their extinction properties as a function of inclination. Imaging photometry is available for 87 spirals in B,R,I and K' bands. Extinction causes systematic scatter in color-magnitude plots. A strong luminosity dependence is found. Relative edge-on to face-on extinction of up to 1.7 mag is found at B for the most luminous galaxies but is unmeasurably small for faint galaxies. At R the differential absorption with inclination reaches 1.3 mag, at I it reaches 1.0 mag, and at K' the differential absorption can in the extreme be as great as 0.3 mag. The luminosity dependence of reddening can be translated into a dependence on rotation rate which is a distance-independent observable. Hence, corrections can be made that are useful for distance measurements. The strong dependence of the corrections on luminosity act to steepen luminosity-linewidth correlations. The effect is greatest toward the blue, with the consequence that luminosity-linewidth slope dependencies are now only weakly a function of color., Comment: 23 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 1998
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44. Linking models across scales to assess the viability and restoration potential of a threatened population of steelhead (Oncorhynchus mykiss) in the Middle Fork John Day River, Oregon, USA
- Author
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McHugh, Peter A., Saunders, W. Carl, Bouwes, Nicolaas, Wall, C. Eric, Bangen, Sara, Wheaton, Joseph M., Nahorniak, Matthew, Ruzycki, James R., Tattam, Ian A., and Jordan, Chris E.
- Published
- 2017
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45. Characterization of a pluripotent stem cell-derived matrix with powerful osteoregenerative capabilities
- Author
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McNeill, Eoin P., Zeitouni, Suzanne, Pan, Simin, Haskell, Andrew, Cesarek, Michael, Tahan, Daniel, Clough, Bret H., Krause, Ulf, Dobson, Lauren K., Garcia, Mayra, Kung, Christopher, Zhao, Qingguo, Saunders, W. Brian, Liu, Fei, Kaunas, Roland, and Gregory, Carl A.
- Published
- 2020
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46. The Topology of the IRAS Point Source Catalogue Redshift Survey
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Canavezes, A., Springel, V., Oliver, S. J., Rowan-Robinson, M., Keeble, O., White, S. D. M., Saunders, W., Efstathiou, G., Frenk, C., McMahon, R. G., Maddox, S., Sutherland, W., and Tadros, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the topology of the new Point Source Catalogue Redshift Survey (PSCz) of IRAS galaxies by means of the genus statistic. The survey maps the local Universe with approximately 15000 galaxies over 84.1 per cent of the sky and provides an unprecedented number of resolution elements for the topological analysis. For comparison with the PSCz data we also examine the genus of large N-body simulations of four variants of the cold dark matter cosmogony. The simulations are part of the Virgo project to simulate the formation of structure in the Universe. We assume that the statistical properties of the galaxy distribution can be identified with those of the dark matter particles in the simulations. We extend the standard genus analysis by examining the influence of sampling noise on the genus curve and introducing a statistic able to quantify the amount of phase correlation present in the density field, the "amplitude drop" of the genus compared to a Gaussian field with identical power spectrum. The results for PSCz are consistent with the hypothesis of random-phase initial conditions. In particular, no strong phase correlation is detected on scales ranging from 10 h^(-1)Mpc to 32 h^(-1)Mpc, whereas there is a positive detection of phase correlation at smaller scales. Among the simulations, phase correlations are detected in all models at small scales, albeit with different strengths. when scaled to a common normalization, the amplitude drop primarily depends on the shape of the power spectrum. We find that the constant bias standard CDM model can be ruled out at high significance because the shape of its power spectrum is not consistent with PSCz. The other CDM models with more large-scale power all fit the PSCz data almost equally well, with a slight preference for a high-density tauCDM model., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures and 4 tables, accepted for publication in the MNRAS. New version with corrected typos
- Published
- 1997
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47. Evolution of Complexity in Paleozoic Ammonoid Sutures
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Saunders, W. B., Work, D. M., and Nikolaeva, S. V.
- Published
- 1999
48. Motivation and drug dependence
- Author
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Saunders, W. M.
- Subjects
362.29 - Published
- 2000
49. Allonautilus: A New Genus of Living Nautiloid Cephalopod and Its Bearing on Phylogeny of the Nautilida
- Author
-
Ward, Peter D. and Saunders, W. Bruce
- Published
- 1997
50. Septal Complexity in Ammonoid Cephalopods Increased Mechanical Risk and Limited Depth
- Author
-
Daniel, Thomas L., Helmuth, Brian S., Saunders, W. Bruce, and Ward, Peter D.
- Published
- 1997
Catalog
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