2,180 results on '"Skinner, S."'
Search Results
2. Adolescent risk behaviours are associated with educational attainment in early adulthood: results from the Raine Study cohort
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Graham, Petra L., Schofield, Deborah J., Tait, Robert J., Bista, Sarita, Ivers, Rebecca Q., Liu, Bette, Lymer, Sharyn, Marino, Jennifer L., Sanci, Lena A., Shrestha, Rupendra N., Steinbeck, Katharine, Straker, Leon M., and Skinner, S. Rachel
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- 2024
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3. A Qualitative Exploration of Young Australians’ Lived Experiences of Social Media Use and Sexual Agency
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Cooper, Spring Chenoa, Ferreira, Kateryn, Edwards, Raz G., Keegan, Julia, Norvila, Nika, Lewis, Larissa, Albury, Kath, and Skinner, S. Rachel
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- 2024
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4. Impact of COVID-19 & Response Measures on HIV-HCV Prevention Services and Social Determinants in People Who Inject Drugs in 13 Sites with Recent HIV Outbreaks in Europe, North America and Israel
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Wiessing, Lucas, Sypsa, V., Abagiu, A. O., Arble, A., Berndt, N., Bosch, A., Buskin, S., Chemtob, D., Combs, B., Conyngham, C., Feelemyer, J., Fitzgerald, M., Goldberg, D., Hatzakis, A., Patrascu, R. E., Keenan, E., Khan, I., Konrad, S., Leahy, J., McAuley, A., Menza, T., Merrick, S., Metcalfe, R., Rademaker, T., Revivo, S., Rosca, P., Seguin-Devaux, C., Skinner, S., Smith, C., Tinsley, J., Wilberg, M., and Des Jarlais, D.
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- 2023
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5. Phonons and Oxygen Diffusion in Bi2O3 and (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3
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Goel, Prabhatasree, Gupta, M. K., Mittal, R., Skinner, S. J., Rols, S. Mukhopadhyay S., and Chaplot, S. L.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We report investigation of phonons and oxygen diffusion in Bi2O3 and (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3. The phonon spectra have been measured in Bi2O3 at high temperatures up to 1083 K using inelastic neutron scattering. Ab-initio calculations have been used to compute the individual contributions of the constituent atoms in Bi2O3 and (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3 to the total phonon density of states. Our computed results indicate that as temperature is increased, there is a complete loss of sharp peak structure in the vibrational density of states. Ab-initio molecular dynamics simulations show that even at 1000 K in {\delta}-phase Bi2O3, Bi-Bi correlations remain ordered in the crystalline lattice while the correlations between O-O show liquid like disordered behavior. In the case of (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3, the O-O correlations broadened at around 500 K indicating that oxygen conductivity is possible at such low temperatures in (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3 although the conductivity is much less than that observed in the undoped high temperature {\delta}-phase of Bi2O3. This result is consistent with the calculated diffusion coefficients of oxygen and observation by QENS experiments. Our ab-initio molecular dynamics calculations predict that macroscopic diffusion is attainable in (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3 at much lower temperatures, which is more suited for technological applications. Our studies elucidate the easy directions of diffusion in {\delta}-Bi2O3 and (Bi0.7Y0.3)2O3.
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- 2020
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6. Perceived facilitators and barriers to the uptake of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine among adolescents of Arabic-speaking mothers in NSW, Australia: A qualitative study
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Netfa, Faeza, King, Catherine, Davies, Cristyn, Rashid, Harunor, Tashani, Mohamed, Booy, Robert, and Rachel Skinner, S.
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- 2023
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7. Complex intervention to promote human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake in school settings: A cluster-randomized trial
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Davies, Cristyn, Marshall, Helen S., Brotherton, Julia M.L., McCaffery, Kirsten, Kang, Melissa, Macartney, Kristine, Garland, Suzanne M., Kaldor, John, Zimet, Gregory, and Skinner, S. Rachel
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- 2023
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8. Health, social and economic implications of adolescent risk behaviours/states: protocol for Raine Study Gen2 cohort data linkage study
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Marino, Jennifer L., Tait, Robert J., Straker, Leon M., Schofield, Deborah J., Doherty, Dorota A., Ivers, Rebecca Q., Graham, Petra L., Steinbeck, Katharine, Lymer, Sharyn, Sanci, Lena A., Patton, George C., Liu, Bette, Brooks, Fiona M., Kang, Melissa S., Hickey, Martha, Cunich, Michelle, Bista, Sarita, and Skinner, S. Rachel
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- 2022
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9. ALMA detects a radial disk wind in DG Tau
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Guedel, M., Eibensteiner, C., Dionatos, O., Audard, M., Forbrich, J., Kraus, S., Rab, Ch., Schneider, Ch., Skinner, S., and Vorobyov, E.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Aims: We aim to use the high spatial resolution of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) to map the flow pattern of molecular gas near DG Tau and its disk, a young stellar object driving a jet and a molecular outflow. Methods: We use observations from ALMA in the J = 2 - 1 transition of 12CO, 13CO, and C18O to study the Keplerian disk of DG Tau and outflows that may be related to the disk and the jet. Results: We find a new wind component flowing radially at a steep angle (~25 deg from the vertical) above the disk with a velocity of ~ 3.1 km/s. It continues the trend of decreasing velocity for increasing distance from the jet axis ("onion-like velocity structure"). Conclusions: The new component is located close to the protostellar disk surface and may be related to photoevaporative winds., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters, in press, 8 pages
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- 2018
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10. Resolving the Inner Arcsecond of the RY Tau Jet With HST
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Skinner, S. L., Schneider, P. C., Audard, M., and Guedel, Manuel
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Faint X-ray emission from hot plasma (T > 1 MK) has been detected extending outward a few arcseconds along the optically-delineated jets of some classical T Tauri stars including RY Tau. The mechanism and location where the jet is heated to X-ray temperatures is unknown. We present high spatial resolution HST far-ultraviolet long-slit observations of RY Tau with the slit aligned along the jet. The primary objective was to search for C IV emission from warm plasma at T(CIV) ~ 10$^{5}$ K within the inner jet (<1 arcsec) that cannot be fully-resolved by X-ray telescopes. Spatially-resolved C IV emission is detected in the blueshifted jet extending outward from the star to 1 arcsec and in the redshifted jet out to 0.5 arcsec. C IV line centroid shifts give a radial velocity in the blueshifted jet of -136 $\pm$ 10 km/s at an offset of 0.29 arcsec (39 au) and deceleration outward is detected. The deprojected jet speed is subject to uncertainties in the jet inclination but values >200 km/s are likely. The mass-loss rate in the blueshifted jet is at least 2.3 $\times$ 10$^{-9}$ M_sun yr$^{-1}$, consistent with optical determinations. We use the HST data along with optically-determined jet morphology to place meaningful constraints on candidate jet-heating models including a hot-launch model in which the jet is heated near the base to X-ray temperatures by an unspecified (but probably magnetic) process, and downstream heating from shocks or a putative jet magnetic field., Comment: 21 pages, 4 tables, 7 figures
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- 2018
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11. The role of motivation and puberty hormones in adolescents' academic engagement and disengagement: A latent growth modeling study
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Martin, Andrew J., Balzer, Ben, Garden, Frances, Handelsman, David J., Hawke, Catherine, Luscombe, Georgina, Paxton, Karen, Skinner, S. Rachel, and Steinbeck, Katharine
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- 2022
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12. Fabrication and characterisation of single-phase Hf2Al4C5 ceramics
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Jayaseelan, Doni Daniel, Pramana, S., Grasso, S., Bai, Y., Skinner, S., Reece, M.J., and Lee, W.E.
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- 2022
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13. Safeguarding the health and wellbeing of transgender young people.
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Pace, Carmen, Chinsen, Alessandra, Cheung, Ada S, Skinner, S. Rachel, Knight, Ken W, Tollit, Michelle A, Telfer, Michelle M, and Pang, Ken C
- Abstract
The article discusses the challenges faced by transgender young people in safeguarding their health and well-being, particularly in the face of increasing anti-trans campaigns and discrimination. It highlights the adverse impact of such discourse on the mental health of young trans individuals and calls for urgent action to protect their rights and dignity. The text emphasizes the importance of providing gender-affirming care and support to trans youth, as research shows that access to such care is associated with improved mental health outcomes. The article concludes by urging healthcare providers, researchers, educators, politicians, and the media to promote inclusive practices, challenge anti-trans attitudes, and amplify the voices of trans individuals to combat transphobia and ensure the well-being of young trans people. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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14. Adolescents’ self-efficacy and digital health literacy: a cross-sectional mixed methods study
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Taba, Melody, Allen, Tiffany B., Caldwell, Patrina H.Y., Skinner, S. Rachel, Kang, Melissa, McCaffery, Kirsten, and Scott, Karen M.
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- 2022
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15. Measuring school level attributable risk to support school-based HPV vaccination programs
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Vujovich-Dunn, C., Wand, H., Brotherton, J. M. L., Gidding, H., Sisnowski, J., Lorch, R., Veitch, M., Sheppeard, V., Effler, P., Skinner, S. R., Venn, A., Davies, C., Hocking, J., Whop, L., Leask, J., Canfell, K., Sanci, L., Smith, M., Kang, M., Temple-Smith, M., Kidd, M., Burns, S., Selvey, L., Meijer, D., Ennis, S., Thomson, C., Lane, N., Kaldor, J., and Guy, R.
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- 2022
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16. School-based HPV vaccination positively impacts parents’ attitudes toward adolescent vaccination
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Davies, Cristyn, Stoney, Tanya, Hutton, Heidi, Parrella, Adriana, Kang, Melissa, Macartney, Kristine, Leask, Julie, McCaffery, Kirsten, Zimet, Gregory, Brotherton, Julia M.L., Marshall, Helen S., and Skinner, S. Rachel
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- 2021
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17. The nature of the 2014-2015 dim state of RW Aur revealed by X-ray, optical, and NIR observations
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Schneider, P. C., Günther, H. M., Robrade, J., Facchini, S., Hodapp, K. W., Manara, C. F, Perdelwitz, V., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Skinner, S., and Wolk, S. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The binary system RW Aur consists of two classical T~Tauri stars (CTTSs). The primary recently underwent its second observed major dimming event ($\Delta V\,\sim2\,$mag). We present new, resolved Chandra X-ray and UKIRT near-IR (NIR) data as well as unresolved optical photometry obtained in the dim state to study the gas and dust content of the absorber causing the dimming. The X-ray data show that the absorbing column density increased from $N_H<0.1\times10^{22}\,$cm$^{-2}$ during the bright state to $\approx2\times10^{22}\,$cm$^{-2}$ in the dim state. The brightness ratio between dim and bright state at optical to NIR wavelengths shows only a moderate wavelength dependence and the NIR color-color diagram suggests no substantial reddening. Taken together, this indicates gray absorption by large grains ($\gtrsim1\,\mu$m) with a dust mass column density of $\gtrsim2\times10^{-4}\,$g$\,$cm$^{-2}$. Comparison with $N_H$ shows that an absorber responsible for the optical/NIR dimming and the X-ray absorption is compatible with the ISM's gas-to-dust ratio, i.e., that grains grow in the disk surface layers without largely altering the gas-to-dust ratio. Lastly, we discuss a scenario in which a common mechanism can explain the long-lasting dimming in RW Aur and recently in AA Tau., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&A letters
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- 2015
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18. X-rays from the oxygen-type Wolf-Rayet binary WR30a
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Zhekov, S. A. and Skinner, S. L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present an analysis of XMM-Newton X-ray data of WR30a (WO+O), a close massive binary that harbours an oxygen-rich Wolf-Rayet star. Its spectrum is characterized by the presence of two well-separated broad peaks, or `bumps', one peaking at energies between 1 and 2 keV and the other between 5 and 7 keV. A two-component model is required to match the observed spectrum. The higher energy spectral peak is considerably more absorbed and dominates the X-ray luminosity. For the currently accepted distance of 7.77 kpc, the X-ray luminosity of WR30a is L_X > 10^{34} erg s^{-1}, making it one of the most X-ray luminous WR+O binary amongst those in the Galaxy with orbital periods less than ~20 d. The X-ray spectrum can be acceptably fitted using either thermal or nonthermal models, so the X-ray production mechanism is yet unclear., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; 7 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2015
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19. "I Thought It Was Better to Be Safe Than Sorry": Factors Influencing Parental Decisions on HPV and Other Adolescent Vaccinations for Students with Intellectual Disability and/or Autism in New South Wales, Australia.
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Carter, Allison, Klinner, Christiane, Young, Alexandra, Strnadová, Iva, Wong, Horas, Vujovich-Dunn, Cassandra, Newman, Christy E., Davies, Cristyn, Skinner, S. Rachel, Danchin, Margie, Hynes, Sarah, and Guy, Rebecca
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HEALTH attitudes ,YOUNG adults ,HUMAN papillomavirus ,VACCINE hesitancy ,PARENT attitudes - Abstract
The uptake of human papilloma virus (HPV) and other adolescent vaccinations in special schools for young people with disability is significantly lower than in mainstream settings. This study explored the factors believed to influence parental decision making regarding vaccine uptake for students with intellectual disability and/or on the autism spectrum attending special schools in New South Wales, Australia, from the perspective of all stakeholders involved in the program. Focus groups and interviews were conducted with 40 participants, including parents, school staff, and immunisation providers. The thematic analysis identified two themes: (1) appreciating diverse parental attitudes towards vaccination and (2) educating parents and managing vaccination questions and concerns. While most parents were described as pro-vaccination, others were anti-vaccination or vaccination-hesitant, articulating a marked protectiveness regarding their child's health. Reasons for vaccine hesitancy included beliefs that vaccines cause autism, concerns that the vaccination may be traumatic for the child, vaccination fatigue following COVID-19, and assumptions that children with disability will not be sexually active. Special school staff regarded the vaccination information pack as inadequate for families, and nurses described limited educational impact resulting from minimal direct communication with parents. More effective communication strategies are needed to address vaccine hesitancy among parents with children with disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Solid Oxide Fuel Cells
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Atkinson, A., Skinner, S. J., Kilner, J. A., Loftness, Vivian, Section editor, Meyers, Robert A., Editor-in-Chief, Lipman, Timothy E., editor, and Weber, Adam Z., editor
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- 2019
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21. Joint developmental trajectories of internalizing and externalizing problems from mid-childhood to late adolescence and childhood risk factors: Findings from a prospective pre-birth cohort
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Bista, Sarita, primary, Tait, Robert J., additional, Straker, Leon M., additional, Lin, Ashleigh, additional, Steinbeck, Katharine, additional, Graham, Petra L., additional, Kang, Melissa, additional, Lymer, Sharyn, additional, Robinson, Monique, additional, Marino, Jennifer L., additional, and Skinner, S. Rachel, additional
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- 2024
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22. A Chandra Observation of the Eclipsing Wolf-Rayet Binary CQ Cep
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Skinner, S. L., Zhekov, S. A., Guedel, M., and Schmutz, W.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The short-period (1.64 d) near-contact eclipsing WN6+O9 binary system CQ Cep provides an ideal laboratory for testing the predictions of X-ray colliding wind shock theory at close separation where the winds may not have reached terminal speeds before colliding. We present results of a Chandra X-ray observation of CQ Cep spanning ~1 day during which a simultaneous Chandra optical light curve was acquired. Our primary objective was to compare the observed X-ray properties with colliding wind shock theory, which predicts that the hottest shock plasma (T > 20 MK) will form on or near the line-of-centers between the stars. The X-ray spectrum is strikingly similar to apparently single WN6 stars such as WR 134 and spectral lines reveal plasma over a broad range of temperatures T ~ 4 - 40 MK. A deep optical eclipse was seen as the O star passed in front of the Wolf-Rayet star and we determine an orbital period P = 1.6412400 d. Somewhat surprisingly, no significant X-ray variability was detected. This implies that the hottest X-ray plasma is not confined to the region between the stars, at odds with the colliding wind picture and suggesting that other X-ray production mechanisms may be at work. Hydrodynamic simulations that account for such effects as radiative cooling and orbital motion will be needed to determine if the new Chandra results can be reconciled with the colliding wind picture., Comment: 31 pages, 4 figures
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- 2014
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23. Emergency Department Initiated Mental Health Interventions for Young People: A Systematic Review
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Walker, Natasha, Medlow, Sharon, Georges, Amanda, Steinbeck, Katharine, Ivers, Rebecca, Perry, Lin, Skinner, S. Rachel, Kang, Melissa, and Cullen, Patricia
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- 2021
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24. VLA Observations of DG Tau's Radio Jet: A highly collimated thermal outflow
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Lynch, C., Mutel, R. L., Güdel, M., Ray, T., Skinner, S. L., Schneider, P. C., and Gayley, K. G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The active young protostar DG Tau has an extended jet that has been well studied at radio, optical, and X-ray wavelengths. We report sensitive new VLA full-polarization observations of the core and jet between 5 GHz and 8 GHz. Our high angular resolution observation at 8 GHz clearly shows an unpolarized inner jet with a size 42 AU (0.35") extending along a position angle similar to the optical-X ray outer jet. Using our nearly coeval 2012 VLA observations, we find a spectral-index=+0.46+/-0.05, which combined with the lack of polarization, is consistent with bremsstrahlung (free-free) emission, with no evidence for a non-thermal coronal component. By identifying the end of the radio jet as the optical depth unity surface, and calculating the resulting emission measure, we find our radio results are in agreement with previous optical line studies of electron density and consequent mass-loss rate. We also detect a weak radio knot at 5 GHz located 7" from the base of the jet, coincident with the inner radio knot detected by Rodriguez et al. (2012) in 2009 but at lower surface brightness. We interpret this as due to expansion of post-shock ionized gas in the three years between observations., Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures
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- 2013
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25. Recommendations of the International Society of Intraoperative Neurophysiology for intraoperative somatosensory evoked potentials
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MacDonald, D.B., Dong, C., Quatrale, R., Sala, F., Skinner, S., Soto, F., and Szelényi, A.
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- 2019
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26. On the origin of [Ne II] emission in young stars: mid-infrared and optical observations with the Very Large Telescope
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Baldovin-Saavedra, C., Audard, M., Carmona, A., Guedel, M., Briggs, K., Rebull, L. M., Skinner, S. L., and Ercolano, B.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
{Abridged version for ArXiv}. We provide direct constraints on the origin of the [Ne II] emission in 15 young stars using high-spatial and spectral resolution observations with VISIR at the VLT that allow us to study the kinematics of the emitting gas. In addition we compare the [Ne II] line with optical forbidden lines observed for three stars with UVES. The [Ne II] line was detected in 7 stars, among them the first confirmed detection of [Ne II] in a Herbig Be star, V892 Tau. In four cases, the large blueshifted lines indicate an origin in a jet. In two stars, the small shifts and asymmetric profiles indicate an origin in a photo-evaporative wind. CoKu Tau 1, seen close to edge-on, shows a spatially unresolved line centered at the stellar rest velocity, although cross-dispersion centroids move within 10 AU from one side of the star to the other as a function of wavelength. The line profile is symmetric with wings extending up to about +-80 km/s. The origin of the [Ne II] line could either be due to the bipolar jet or to the disk. For the stars with VLT-UVES observations, in several cases, the optical forbidden line profiles and shifts are very similar to the profile of the [Ne II] line, suggesting that the lines are emitted in the same region. A general trend observed with VISIR is a lower line flux when compared with the fluxes obtained with Spitzer. We found no correlation between the line full-width at half maximum and the line peak velocity. The [Ne II] line remains undetected in a large part of the sample, an indication that the emission detected with Spitzer in those stars is likely extended., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics; revised version: corrected minor typos, corrected center values (col 3) for CoKuTau1 in Table 5
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- 2012
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27. Determination of the physical characteristics of the variable stars in the direction of the open cluster NGC 6811 through $uvby\beta$ photoelectric photometry
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Peña, J. H., Fox-Machado, L., García, H., Rentería, A., Romero, E., Skinner, S., and Espinosa, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The study of open clusters and their short period variable stars is fundamental in stellar evolution. Because the cluster members are formed in almost the same physical conditions, they share similar stellar properties such age and chemical composition. The assumption of common age, metallicity and distance impose strong constraints when modeling an ensemble of short period pulsators belonging to open clusters (e.g. Fox Machado et al., 2006). Very recently, Luo et al. (2009) carried out a search for variable stars in the direction of NGC 6811 with CCD photometry in B and V bands. They detected a total of sixteen variable stars. Among these variables, twelve were catalogued as $\delta$ {\it Scuti} stars, while no variability type was assigned to the remaining stars. In this paper we present $uvby\beta$ photoelectric photometry for the variable stars in the direction of NGC 6811., Comment: To be published in Astrophysics and Space Science Proceedings series (ASSP), in the proceedings of "20th Stellar Pulsation Conference Series: Impact of new instrumentation & new insights in stellar pulsations", 5-9 September 2011, Granada, Spain
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- 2011
28. $uvby-\beta$ photoelectric photometry of the open clusters NGC 6811 and NGC 6830
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Pena, J. H., Machado, L. Fox, Garcia, H., Renteria, A., Skinner, S., Espinosa, A., and Romero, E.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
From $uvby-\beta$ photometry of the open clusters NGC 6811 (75 stars), and NGC 6830 (19 stars) we were able to determine membership of the stars to each cluster, and fix the age and reddening for each. Since several short period stars have recently been found, we have carried out a study of these variables., Comment: Accepted for publication in RevMexAA; 18 pages, 7 figures, 8 tables
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- 2011
29. Chandra Evidence for Extended X-ray Structure in RY Tau
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Skinner, S. L., Audard, M., and Guedel, M.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report results of a sensitive Chandra ACIS-S observation of the classical T Tauri star RY Tau. Previous studies have shown that it drives a spectacular bipolar jet whose blueshifted component is traced optically along P.A. approximately 295 degrees at separations of 1.5 - 31 arcseconds from the star. Complex X-ray emission is revealed, including a very soft non-variable spectral component (some of which may originate in shocks), a superhot flaring component (T >= 100 MK), and faint extended structure near the star. The structure is visible in deconvolved images and extends northwestward out to a separation of 1.7 arcseconds, overlapping the inner part of the optical jet. Image analysis suggests that most of the extension is real, but some contamination by PSF-induced structure within the central arcsecond may be present. The predicted temperature for a shock-heated jet based on jet speed and shock speed estimates from optical measurements is too low to explain the extended X-ray structure. Either higher speed material within the jet has escaped optical detection or other mechanisms besides shock-heating are involved. Alternative mechanisms that could produce higher temperature plasma at small offsets to the northwest of RY Tau include magnetic heating in the jet, hot plasmoids ejected at high speeds, or X-ray emission from a putative close companion whose presence has been inferred from Hipparcos variations., Comment: 2 tables, 6 figures
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- 2011
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30. Searching for gas emission lines in Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) spectra of young stars in Taurus
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Baldovin-Saavedra, C., Audard, M., Güdel, M., Rebull, L. M., Padgett, D. L., Skinner, S. L., Carmona, A., Glauser, A. M., and Fajardo-Acosta, S. B.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Our knowledge of circumstellar disks has traditionally been based on studies of dust. However, gas dominates the disk mass and its study is key to understand the star and planet formation process. Spitzer can access gas emission lines in the mid-infrared, providing new diagnostics of the physical conditions in accretion disks and outflows. We have studied the spectra of 64 pre-main-sequence stars in Taurus using Spitzer/IRS observations. We have detected H2 (17.03, 28.22 $\mu$m) emission in 6 objects, [Ne II] (12.81 $\mu$m) in 18 objects, and [Fe II] (17.93, 25.99 $\mu$m) in 7 objects. [Ne II] detections are found primarily in Class II objects. The luminosity of the [Ne II] line, is in general higher for objects known to drive jets than for those without known jets, but the two groups are not statistically distinguishable. We have searched for correlations between the line luminosities and different parameters related to the star-disk system. The [Ne II] luminosity is correlated with X-ray luminosity for Class II objects. The [NeII] luminosity is correlated with disk mass and accretion rate when the sample is divided into high and low accretors. We also find correlations between [NeII] luminosity and mid-IR continuum luminosity and with luminosity of the [O I] (6300 \AA) line, the latter being an outflow tracer. [Fe II] luminosity correlates with mass accretion rate. No correlations were found between H2 luminosity and several tested parameters. Our study reveals a general trend toward accretion-related phenomena as the origin of the gas emission lines. Shocks in jets and outflowing material are more likely to play a significant role than shocks in infalling material. The role of X-ray irradiation is less prominent but still present for [Ne II], in particular for Class II sources, the lack of correlation between [Fe II] and [Ne II] points toward different emitting mechanisms., Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2011
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31. The Bipolar X-Ray Jet of the Classical T Tauri Star DG Tau
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Guedel, M., Audard, M., Bacciotti, F., Bary, J. S., Briggs, K. R., Cabrit, S., Carmona, A., Codella, C., Dougados, C., Eisloeffel, J., Gueth, F., Guenther, H. M., Herczeg, G., Kundurthy, P., Matt, S. P., Mutel, R. L., Ray, T., Schmitt, J. H. M. M., Schneider, P. C., Skinner, S. L., and van Boekel, R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on new X-ray observations of the classical T Tauri star DG Tau. DG Tau drives a collimated bi-polar jet known to be a source of X-ray emission perhaps driven by internal shocks. The rather modest extinction permits study of the jet system to distances very close to the star itself. Our initial results presented here show that the spatially resolved X-ray jet has been moving and fading during the past six years. In contrast, a stationary, very soft source much closer (~ 0.15-0.2") to the star but apparently also related to the jet has brightened during the same period. We report accurate temperatures and absorption column densities toward this source, which is probably associated with the jet base or the jet collimation region., Comment: Proceedings of the 16 Cool Stars Workshop, in press, 7 pages, 7 figures
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- 2011
32. A multi-wavelength study of the young star V1118 Orionis in outburst
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Audard, M., Stringfellow, G. S., Güdel, M., Skinner, S. L., Walter, F. M., Guinan, E. F., Hamilton, R. T., Briggs, K. R., and Baldovin-Saavedra, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Abriged version for astroph: The young late-type star V1118 Orionis was in outburst from 2005 to 2006. We followed the outburst with optical and near-infrared photometry; the X-ray emission was further probed with observations taken with XMM-Newton and Chandra during and after the outburst. In addition, we obtained mid-infrared photometry and spectroscopy with Spitzer at the peak of the outburst and in the post-outburst phase. The spectral energy distribution of V1118 Ori varied significantly over the course of the outburst. The optical flux showed the largest variations, most likely due to enhanced emission by a hot spot. The latter dominated the optical and near-infrared emission at the peak of the outburst, while the disk emission dominated in the mid-infrared. The X-ray flux correlated with the optical and infrared fluxes, indicating that accretion affected the magnetically active corona and the stellar magnetosphere. The thermal structure of the corona was variable with some indication of a cooling of the coronal temperature in the early phase of the outburst with a gradual return to normal values. Color-color diagrams in the optical and infrared showed variations during the outburst, with no obvious signature of reddening due to circumstellar matter. Using MC realizations of star+disk+hotspot models to fit the SED in ``quiescence'' and at the peak of the outburst, we determined that the mass accretion rate varied from about 2.5E-7 Msun/yr to 1E-6 Msun/yr; in addition the fractional area of the hotspot increased significantly as well. The multi-wavelength study of the V1118 Ori outburst helped us to understand the variations in spectral energy distributions and demonstrated the interplay between the disk and the stellar magnetosphere in a young, strongly accreting star., Comment: Accepted in A&A, Tables will be published online
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- 2009
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33. X-ray Emission from Nitrogen-Type Wolf-Rayet Stars
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Skinner, S. L., Zhekov, S. A., Guedel, M., Schmutz, W., and Sokal, K. R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We summarize new X-ray detections of four nitrogen-type Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars obtained in a limited survey aimed at establishing the X-ray properties of WN stars across their full range of spectral subtypes. None of the detected stars is so far known to be a close binary. We report Chandra detections of WR 2 (WN2), WR 18 (WN4), and WR 134 (WN6), and an XMM-Newton detection of WR79a (WN9ha). These observations clearly demonstrate that both WNE and WNL stars are X-ray sources. We also discuss Chandra archive detections of the WN6h stars WR 20b, WR 24, and WR 136 and ROSAT non-detections of WR 16 (WN8h) and WR 78 (WN7h). The X-ray spectra of all WN detections show prominent emission lines and an admixture of cool (kT < 1 keV) and hot (kT > 2 keV) plasma. The hotter plasma is not predicted by radiative wind shock models and other as yet unidentified mechanisms are at work. Most stars show X-ray absorption in excess of that expected from visual extinction (Av), likely due to their strong winds or cold circumstellar gas. Existing data suggest a falloff in X-ray luminosity toward later WN7-9 subtypes, which have higher Lbol but slower, denser winds than WN2-6 stars. This provides a clue that wind properties may be a more crucial factor in determining emergent X-ray emission levels than bolometric luminosity., Comment: 42 pages, 5 tables, 10 figures
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- 2009
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34. The Taurus Spitzer Survey: New Candidate Taurus Members Selected Using Sensitive Mid-Infrared Photometry
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Rebull, L. M., Padgett, D. L., McCabe, C. -E., Hillenbrand, L. A., Stapelfeldt, K. R., Noriega-Crespo, A., Carey, S. J., Brooke, T., Huard, T., Terebey, S., Audard, M., Monin, J. -L., Fukagawa, M., Guedel, M., Knapp, G. R., Menard, F., Allen, L. E., Angione, J. R., Baldovin-Saavedra, C., Bouvier, J., Briggs, K., Dougados, C., Evans, N. J., Flagey, N., Guieu, S., Grosso, N., Glauser, A. M., Harvey, P., Hines, D., Latter, W. B., Skinner, S. L., Strom, S., Tromp, J., and Wolf, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the properties of pre-main-sequence objects in the Taurus molecular clouds as observed in 7 mid- and far-infrared bands with the Spitzer Space Telescope. There are 215 previously-identified members of the Taurus star-forming region in our ~44 square degree map; these members exhibit a range of Spitzer colors that we take to define young stars still surrounded by circumstellar dust (noting that ~20% of the bonafide Taurus members exhibit no detectable dust excesses). We looked for new objects in the survey field with similar Spitzer properties, aided by extensive optical, X-ray, and ultraviolet imaging, and found 148 candidate new members of Taurus. We have obtained follow-up spectroscopy for about half the candidate sample, thus far confirming 34 new members, 3 probable new members, and 10 possible new members, an increase of 15-20% in Taurus members. Of the objects for which we have spectroscopy, 7 are now confirmed extragalactic objects, and one is a background Be star. The remaining 93 candidate objects await additional analysis and/or data to be confirmed or rejected as Taurus members. Most of the new members are Class II M stars and are located along the same cloud filaments as the previously-identified Taurus members. Among non-members with Spitzer colors similar to young, dusty stars are evolved Be stars, planetary nebulae, carbon stars, galaxies, and AGN., Comment: Accepted to ApJS. Two large online-only figures available with the preprint here: http://web.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/rebull/research.html
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- 2009
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35. Chandra and Spitzer Imaging of the Infrared Cluster in NGC 2071
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Skinner, S. L., Sokal, K. R., Megeath, S. T., Guedel, M., Audard, M., Flaherty, K. M., Meyer, M. R., and Damineli, A.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of a sensitive Chandra X-ray observation and Spitzer mid-IR observations of the infrared cluster lying north of the NGC 2071 reflection nebula in the Orion B molecular cloud. We focus on the dense cluster core known as NGC 2071-IR which contains at least nine IR sources within a 40 x 40 arcsecond region. This region shows clear signs of active star formation including powerful molecular outflows, Herbig-Haro objects, and both OH and H2O masers. We use Spitzer IRAC images to aid in X-ray source identification and to determine YSO classes using mid-IR colors. Spitzer IRAC colors show that the luminous source IRS 1 is a class I protostar. IRS 1 is believed to be driving a powerful bipolar molecular outflow and may be an embedded B-type star or its progenitor. Its X-ray spectrum reveals a fluorescent Fe emission line at 6.4 keV, arising in cold material near the protostar. The line is present even in the absence of large flares, raising questions about the nature of the ionizing mechanism responsible for producing the 6.4 keV fluorescent line. Chandra also detects X-ray sources at or near the positions of IRS 2, IRS 3, IRS 4, and IRS 6 and a variable X-ray source coincident with the radio source VLA 1, located just 2 arcsec north of IRS 1. No IR data are yet available to determine a YSO classification for VLA 1, but its high X-ray absorption shows that it is even more deeply-embedded than IRS 1, suggesting that it could be an even younger, less-evolved protostar., Comment: To appear in ApJ; 30 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables
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- 2009
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36. HDE 245059: A Weak-Lined T Tauri Binary Revealed by Chandra and Keck
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Saavedra, C. Baldovin, Audard, M., Duchêne, G., Güdel, M., Skinner, S. L., Paerels, F. B. S., Ghez, A., and McCabe, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer (HETGS) and Keck observations of HDE 245059, a young weak-lined T Tauri star (WTTS), member of the pre-main sequence group in the Lambda Orionis Cluster. Our high spatial resolution, near-infrared observations with Keck reveal that HDE 245059 a binary separated by 0.87". Based on this new information we have obtained an estimate of the masses of the binary components; 3M_{sun} and 2.5M_{sun} for the north and south components, respectively. We have estimated the age of the system to be ~2-3 Myr. We detect both components of the binary in the zeroth order Chandra image and in the grating spectra. Our fits to the spectrum of the binary have shown that the emission is dominated by a plasma between 8 and 15 MK, a soft component at 4 MK and a hard component at 50 MK are also detected. The value of the hydrogen column density was low, 8 x 10^{19} cm^{-2}, likely due to the clearing of the inner region of the Lambda Orionis cloud. The abundance pattern shows an inverse First Ionization Potential (FIP) effect for all elements from O to Fe, the only exception being Ca. A 3-T model was fitted to the individual zeroth order spectra using the abundances derived for the binary. We have also obtained several lines fluxes from the grating spectra. The fits to the triplets show no evidence of high densities. We conclude that the X-ray properties of the weak-lined T Tau binary HDE 245059 are similar to those generally observed in other weak-lined T Tau stars. Although its accretion history may have been affected by the clearing of the interstellar material around Lambda Ori, its coronal properties appears not to have been strongly modified., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2009
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37. X-ray Emission from the FU Orionis Star V1735 Cygni
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Skinner, S. L., Sokal, K. R., Gudel, M., and Briggs, K. R.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The variable star V1735 Cyg (= Elias 1-12) lies in the IC 5146 dark cloud and is a member of the class of FU Orionis objects whose dramatic optical brightenings are thought to be linked to episodic accretion. We report the first X-ray detections of V1735 Cyg and a deeply-embedded class I protostar lying 24 arcsecs to its northeast. X-ray spectra obtained with EPIC on XMM-Newton reveal very high-temperature plasma (kT > 5 keV) in both objects, but no large flares. Such hard X-ray emission is not anticipated from accretion shocks and is a signature of magnetic processes. We place these new results into the context of what is presently known about the X-ray properties of FU Orionis stars and other accreting young stellar objects., Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures
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- 2009
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38. Recognizing and responding to misleading trans health research
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Skinner, S. Rachel, primary, McLamore, Quinnehtukqut, additional, Donaghy, Olivia, additional, Stathis, Stephen, additional, Moore, Julia K., additional, Nguyen, Tram, additional, Rayner, Cate, additional, Tait, Robert, additional, Anderson, Jemma, additional, and Pang, Ken C., additional
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- 2023
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39. Childhood and Adolescence Gender Role Nonconformity and Gender and Sexuality Diversity in Young Adulthood
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Marino, Jennifer L., primary, Lin, Ashleigh, additional, Davies, Cristyn, additional, Kang, Melissa, additional, Bista, Sarita, additional, and Skinner, S. Rachel, additional
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- 2023
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40. Temperature effect on surface structure of single crystal SrLaAlO4(001)
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Mousley, P., primary, Nicklin, C., additional, Pramana, S. S., additional, van den Bosch, C., additional, Ryan, M. P., additional, and Skinner, S. J., additional
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- 2023
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41. Association of urinary sex hormones with mood and behavior changes in a community adolescent cohort
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Hazell, Philip, primary, Balzer, Ben W. R., additional, Garden, Frances, additional, Handelsman, David J., additional, Paxton, Karen, additional, Hawke, Catherine, additional, Ivers, Rebecca, additional, Skinner, S. Rachel, additional, Luscombe, Georgina, additional, and Steinbeck, Katharine S., additional
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- 2023
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42. Immunogenicity, safety, usability and acceptability of microarray patches for vaccination: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Berger, Matthew N, primary, Mowbray, Ellen S, additional, Farag, Marian W A, additional, Mathieu, Erin, additional, Davies, Cristyn, additional, Thomas, Claire, additional, Booy, Robert, additional, Forster, Angus H, additional, and Skinner, S Rachel, additional
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- 2023
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43. Quantum state transfer with untuneable couplings
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Gagnebin, P. K., Skinner, S., Behrman, E. C., and Steck, J. E.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We present a general scheme for implementing bi-directional quantum state transfer in a quantum swapping channel. Unlike many other schemes for quantum computation and communication, our method does not require qubit couplings to be switched on and off. The only control variable is the bias acting on individual qubits. We show how to derive the parameters of the system (fixed and variable) such that perfect state transfer can be achieved. Since these parameters vary linearly with the pulse width, our scheme allows flexibility in the time scales under which qubits evolve. Unlike quantum spin networks, our scheme allows the transmission of several quantum states at a time, requiring only a two qubit separation between quantum states. By pulsing the biases of several qubits at the same time, we show that only eight bias control lines are required to achieve state transfer along a channel of arbitrary length. Furthermore, when the information to be transferred is purely classical in nature, only three bias control lines are required, greatly simplifying the circuit complexity.
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- 2008
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44. High-Resolution Chandra X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy of the Sigma Orionis Cluster
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Skinner, S. L., Sokal, K. R., Cohen, D. H., Gagne, M., Owocki, S. P., and Townsend, R. D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of a 90 ksec Chandra X-ray observation of the young sigma Orionis cluster (age ~3 Myr) obtained with the High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer. We use the high resolution grating spectrum and moderate resolution CCD spectrum of the massive central star sigma Ori AB (O9.5V + B0.5V) to test wind shock theories of X-ray emission and also analyze the high spatial resolution zero-order ACIS-S image of the central cluster region. Chandra detected 42 X-ray sources on the primary CCD (ACIS-S3). All but five have near-IR or optical counterparts and about one-fourth are variable. Notable high-mass stellar detections are sigma Ori AB, the magnetic B star sigma Ori E, and the B5V binary HD 37525. Most of the other detections have properties consistent with lower mass K or M-type stars. We present the first X-ray spectrum of the unusual infrared source IRS1 located 3.3 arc-sec north of sigma Ori AB, which is likely an embedded T Tauri star whose disk/envelope is being photoevaporated by sigma Ori AB. We focus on the radiative wind shock interpretation of the soft luminous X-ray emission from sigma Ori AB, but also consider possible alternatives including magnetically-confined wind shocks and colliding wind shocks. Its emission lines show no significant asymmetries or centroid shifts and are moderately broadened to HWHM ~ 264 km/s, or one-fourth the terminal wind speed. Forbidden lines in He-like ions are formally undetected, implying strong UV suppression. The Mg XI triplet forms in the wind acceleration zone within one stellar radius above the surface. These X-ray properties are consistent in several respects with the predictions of radiative wind shock theory for an optically thin wind, but explaining the narrow line widths presents a challenge to the theory., Comment: To appear in ApJ; 35 pages, 22 figures
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- 2008
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45. Discovery of a bipolar X-ray jet from the T Tauri star DG Tau
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Guedel, M., Skinner, S. L., Audard, M., Briggs, K. R., and Cabrit, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have obtained and analyzed Chandra ACIS-S observations of the strongly accreting classical T Tauri star DG Tau. Our principal goals are to map the immediate environment of the star to characterize possible extended X-rays formed in the jet, and to re-visit the anomalous, doubly absorbed X-ray spectrum of DG Tau itself. We combine our new ACIS-S data with a data set previously obtained. The data are superimposed to obtain flux and hardness images. Separate X-ray spectra are extracted for DG Tau and areas outside its point spread function. We detect a prominent X-ray jet at a position angle of PA ~225 deg (tentatively suggested by Guedel et al. 2005), coincident with the optical jet axis. We also identify a counter jet at PA = 45 deg. The X-ray jets are detected out to a distance of ~5" from the star, their sources being extended at the ACIS-S resolution. The jet spectra are soft, with a best-fit electron temperature of 3.4 MK. We find evidence for excess absorption of the counter jet. The spectrum of the DG Tau point source shows two components with largely different temperatures and absorption column densities. The similar temperatures and small absorbing gas columns of the jet sources and the soft component of the "stellar" source suggest that these sources are related, produced either by shocks or by magnetic heating in the jets. Cooling estimates suggest that the pressure in the hot gas contributes to jet expansion. The hard "stellar" component, on the other hand, is associated with a stellar corona or magnetosphere. The excessive photoelectric absorption of this component suggests the presence of dust-depleted accretion streams above coronal magnetic fields., Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics, 11 pages, 6 figures
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- 2007
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46. Million-Degree Plasma Pervading the Extended Orion Nebula
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Guedel, M., Briggs, K. R., Montmerle, T., Audard, M., Rebull, L., and Skinner, S. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Most stars form as members of large associations within dense, very cold (10-100 K) molecular clouds. The nearby giant molecular cloud in Orion hosts several thousand stars of ages less than a few million years, many of which are located in or around the famous Orion Nebula, a prominent gas structure illuminated and ionized by a small group of massive stars (the Trapezium). We present X-ray observations obtained with the X-ray Multi-Mirror satellite XMM-Newton revealing that a hot plasma with a temperature of 1.7-2.1 million K pervades the southwest extension of the nebula. The plasma, originating in the strong stellar winds from the Trapezium, flows into the adjacent interstellar medium. This X-ray outflow phenomenon must be widespread throughout our Galaxy., Comment: accepted by Science, 23 pg, 7 figs, incl. Supplementary Online Material; this version of the work has been posted by permission of the AAAS. The definitive version was published in Science Express on Nov. 29, 2007, at http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/1149926; see also http://www.astro.phys.ethz.ch/papers/guedel/papers.html for downloads
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- 2007
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47. Accretion and Outflow-Related X-Rays in T Tauri Stars
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Guedel, M., Briggs, K., Arzner, K., Audard, M., Bouvier, J., Dougados, C., Feigelson, E., Franciosini, E., Glauser, A., Grosso, N., Guieu, S., Menard, F., Micela, G., Monin, J. -L., Montmerle, T., Padgett, D., Palla, F., Pillitteri, I., Preibisch, T., Rebull, L., Scelsi, L., Silva, B., Skinner, S., Stelzer, B., and Telleschi, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on accretion- and outflow-related X-rays from T Tauri stars, based on results from the "XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the Taurus Molecular Cloud." X-rays potentially form in shocks of accretion streams near the stellar surface, although we hypothesize that direct interactions between the streams and magnetic coronae may occur as well. We report on the discovery of a "soft excess" in accreting T Tauri stars supporting these scenarios. We further discuss a new type of X-ray source in jet-driving T Tauri stars. It shows a strongly absorbed coronal component and a very soft, weakly absorbed component probably related to shocks in microjets. The excessive coronal absorption points to dust-depletion in the accretion streams., Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, in press, Proc. IAUS 243, Star-Disk Interactions in Young Stars
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- 2007
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48. XMM-Newton X-ray Observations of the Wolf-Rayet Binary System WR 147
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Skinner, S. L., Zhekov, S. A., Guedel, M., and Schmutz, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of a 20 ksec X-ray observation of the Wolf-Rayet (WR) binary system WR 147 obtained with XMM-Newton. Previous studies have shown that this system consists of a nitrogen-type WN8 star plus an OB companion whose winds are interacting to produce a colliding wind shock. X-ray spectra from the pn and MOS detectors confirm the high extinction reported from IR studies and reveal hot plasma including the first detection of the Fe K-alpha line complex at 6.67 keV. Spectral fits with a constant-temperature plane-parallel shock model give a shock temperature kT(shock) = 2.7 keV [T(shock) ~ 31 MK], close to but slightly hotter than the maximum temperature predicted for a colliding wind shock. Optically thin plasma models suggest even higher temperatures, which are not yet ruled out. The X-ray spectra are harder than can be accounted for using 2D numerical colliding wind shock models based on nominal mass-loss parameters. Possible explanations include: (i) underestimates of the terminal wind speeds or wind abundances, (ii) overly simplistic colliding wind models, or (iii) the presence of other X-ray emission mechanisms besides colliding wind shocks. Further improvement of the numerical models to include potentially important physics such as non-equilibrium ionization will be needed to rigorously test the colliding wind interpretation., Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures
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- 2007
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49. A Mid-Infrared Spitzer Study of the Herbig Be Star R Mon and the Associated HH 39 Herbig-Haro Object
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Audard, M., Skinner, S., Guedel, M., Lanz, T., Paerels, F., and Arce, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on initial results of our Spitzer Cycle 2 program to observe the young massive star R Mon and its associated HH 39 Herbig-Haro object in the mid-infrared. Our program used all instruments on-board Spitzer to obtain deep images with IRAC of the HH 39 complex and of R Mon and its surroundings, a deep image of HH 39 at 24 and 70 $\mu$m with MIPS, and mid-infrared spectra with the SH, LH, and LL modules of IRS. The aim of this program is to study the physical links in a young massive star between accretion disk, outflows and jets, and sh ocks in the associated HH object. Our preliminary analysis reveals that several knots of HH 39 are clearly detected in most IRAC bands. In IRAC4 (8 $\mu$m), diffuse emission, probably from PAHs, appears as foreground emission covering the HH 39 emission. The HH 39 knots are detected at 24 microns, despite the fact that dust continuum emission covers the knots and shows the same structure as observed with IRAC4. The IRS spectra of HH 39 show weak evidence of [Ne II] 12.8 $\mu$m and 0--0 S(1) H$_2$ 17.0 $\mu$m lines. A more detailed analysis is, however, required due to the faintness of the Herbig-Haro knots. Finally, we obtained the SH and MIPS SED spectra of R Mon. A PAH emission feature at 11.3 $\mu$m is detected on top of the strong continuum; although no strong emission or absorption lines are observed, we will seek to detect faint lines. The combined IRAC, IRS, and MIPS data of the R Mon/HH 39 system will help us to understand circumstellar disk processing, and the connection between jets, outflows, and HH objects., Comment: to appear in Astrophysics and Space Science, special issue of "Science with ALMA: a new era for Astrophysics" conference, ed. Dr. Bachiller
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- 2007
50. X-rays from T Tau: A test case for accreting T Tauri stars
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Guedel, M., Skinner, S. L., Mel'nikov, S. Yu., Audard, M., Telleschi, A., and Briggs, K. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We test models for the generation of X-rays in accreting T Tauri stars (TTS), using X-ray data from the classical TTS T Tau. High-resolution spectroscopy from the Reflection Grating Spectrometers on XMM-Newton is used to infer electron densities, element abundances and the thermal structure of the X-ray source. We also discuss the ultraviolet light curve obtained by the Optical Monitor, and complementary ground-based photometry. A high-resolution image from Chandra constrains contributions from the two companions of T Tau N. The X-ray grating spectrum is rich in emission lines, but shows an unusual mixture of features from very hot (~30 MK) and very cool (1-3 MK) plasma, both emitted by similar amounts of emission measure. The cool plasma confirms the picture of a soft excess in the form of an enhanced OVII/OVIII Lya flux ratio, similar to that previously reported for other accreting TTS. Diagnostics from lines formed by this plasma indicate low electron densities (<~ 1E10 cm-3). The Ne/Fe abundance ratio is consistent with a trend in pre-main sequence stars in which this ratio depends on spectral type, but not on accretion. On the basis of line density diagnostics, we conclude that the density of the cool ``soft-excess'' plasma is orders of magnitude below that predicted for an accretion shock, assuming previously determined accretion rates of (3-6)E-8 M_sun/y. We argue that loading of magnetic field lines with infalling material suppresses the heating process in a part of the corona. We thus suggest that the X-ray production of T Tau is influenced by the accretion process although the X-rays may not form in the bulk of the accretion footpoints., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, A&A style. Accepted by A&A, to appear in a special section/issue dedicated to the XMM-Newton Extended Survey of the Taurus Molecular Cloud (XEST). See also http://www.issibern.ch/teams/Taurus/papers.html
- Published
- 2006
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