5,431 results on '"A Robotham"'
Search Results
102. Evaluating pooled testing for asymptomatic screening of healthcare workers in hospitals
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Bethany Heath, Stephanie Evans, David S. Robertson, Julie V. Robotham, Sofía S. Villar, and Anne M. Presanis
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Nosocomial transmission ,Pandemic preparedness ,Simulation study ,Testing policy ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Abstract Background There is evidence that during the COVID pandemic, a number of patient and HCW infections were nosocomial. Various measures were put in place to try to reduce these infections including developing asymptomatic PCR (polymerase chain reaction) testing schemes for healthcare workers. Regularly testing all healthcare workers requires many tests while reducing this number by only testing some healthcare workers can result in undetected cases. An efficient way to test as many individuals as possible with a limited testing capacity is to consider pooling multiple samples to be analysed with a single test (known as pooled testing). Methods Two different pooled testing schemes for the asymptomatic testing are evaluated using an individual-based model representing the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in a ‘typical’ English hospital. We adapt the modelling to reflect two scenarios: a) a retrospective look at earlier SARS-CoV-2 variants under lockdown or social restrictions, and b) transitioning back to ‘normal life’ without lockdown and with the omicron variant. The two pooled testing schemes analysed differ in the population that is eligible for testing. In the ‘ward’ testing scheme only healthcare workers who work on a single ward are eligible and in the ‘full’ testing scheme all healthcare workers are eligible including those that move across wards. Both pooled schemes are compared against the baseline scheme which tests only symptomatic healthcare workers. Results Including a pooled asymptomatic testing scheme is found to have a modest (albeit statistically significant) effect, reducing the total number of nosocomial healthcare worker infections by about 2 $$\%$$ % in both the lockdown and non-lockdown setting. However, this reduction must be balanced with the increase in cost and healthcare worker isolations. Both ward and full testing reduce HCW infections similarly but the cost for ward testing is much less. We also consider the use of lateral flow devices (LFDs) for follow-up testing. Considering LFDs reduces cost and time but LFDs have a different error profile to PCR tests. Conclusions Whether a PCR-only or PCR and LFD ward testing scheme is chosen depends on the metrics of most interest to policy makers, the virus prevalence and whether there is a lockdown.
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- 2023
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103. Model-based evaluation of admission screening strategies for the detection and control of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales in the English hospital setting
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Diane Pople, Theodore Kypraios, Tjibbe Donker, Nicole Stoesser, Anna C. Seale, Ryan George, Andrew Dodgson, Rachel Freeman, Russell Hope, Ann Sarah Walker, Susan Hopkins, and Julie Robotham
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Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales ,Screening ,Mathematical model ,Nosocomial transmission ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Globally, detections of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales (CPE) colonisations and infections are increasing. The spread of these highly resistant bacteria poses a serious threat to public health. However, understanding of CPE transmission and evidence on effectiveness of control measures is severely lacking. This paper provides evidence to inform effective admission screening protocols, which could be important in controlling nosocomial CPE transmission. Methods CPE transmission within an English hospital setting was simulated with a data-driven individual-based mathematical model. This model was used to evaluate the ability of the 2016 England CPE screening recommendations, and of potential alternative protocols, to identify patients with CPE-colonisation on admission (including those colonised during previous stays or from elsewhere). The model included nosocomial transmission from colonised and infected patients, as well as environmental contamination. Model parameters were estimated using primary data where possible, including estimation of transmission using detailed epidemiological data within a Bayesian framework. Separate models were parameterised to represent hospitals in English areas with low and high CPE risk (based on prevalence). Results The proportion of truly colonised admissions which met the 2016 screening criteria was 43% in low-prevalence and 54% in high-prevalence areas respectively. Selection of CPE carriers for screening was improved in low-prevalence areas by adding readmission as a screening criterion, which doubled how many colonised admissions were selected. A minority of CPE carriers were confirmed as CPE positive during their hospital stay (10 and 14% in low- and high-prevalence areas); switching to a faster screening test pathway with a single-swab test (rather than three swab regimen) increased the overall positive predictive value with negligible reduction in negative predictive value. Conclusions Using a novel within-hospital CPE transmission model, this study assesses CPE admission screening protocols, across the range of CPE prevalence observed in England. It identifies protocol changes—adding readmissions to screening criteria and a single-swab test pathway—which could detect similar numbers of CPE carriers (or twice as many in low CPE prevalence areas), but faster, and hence with lower demand on pre-emptive infection-control resources. Study findings can inform interventions to control this emerging threat, although further work is required to understand within-hospital transmission sources.
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- 2023
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104. Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): Evolution of the $\sigma_{\mathrm{SFR}}$-M$_{\star}$ relation and implications for self-regulated star formation
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Davies, L. J. M., Thorne, J. E., Bellstedt, S., Bravo, M., Robotham, A. S. G., Driver, S. P., Cook, R. H. W., Cortese, L., D'Silva, J., Grootes, M. W., Holwerda, B. W., Hopkins, A. M., Jarvis, M. J., Lidman, C., Phillipps, S., and Siudek, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the evolution of the star-formation dispersion - stellar mass relation ($\sigma_{SFR}$-M$_{\star}$) in the DEVILS D10 region using new measurements derived using the ProSpect spectral energy distribution fitting code. We find that $\sigma_{SFR}$-M$_{\star}$ shows the characteristic 'U-shape' at intermediate stellar masses from 0.1
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- 2021
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105. Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): Identification of AGN through SED Fitting and the Evolution of the Bolometric AGN Luminosity Function
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Thorne, Jessica E., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Davies, Luke J. M., Bellstedt, Sabine, Brown, Michael J. I., Croom, Scott M., Delvecchio, Ivan, Groves, Brent, Jarvis, Matt J., Shabala, Stanislav S., Seymour, Nick, Whittam, Imogen H., Bravo, Matias, Cook, Robin H. W., Driver, Simon P., Holwerda, Benne, Phillipps, Steven, and Siudek, Malgorzata
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are typically identified through radio, mid-infrared, or X-ray emission or through the presence of broad and/or narrow emission lines. AGN can also leave an imprint on a galaxy's spectral energy distribution (SED) through the re-processing of photons by the dusty torus. Using the SED fitting code ProSpect with an incorporated AGN component, we fit the far ultraviolet to far-infrared SEDs of $\sim$494,00 galaxies in the D10-COSMOS field and $\sim$230,000 galaxies from the GAMA survey. By combining an AGN component with a flexible star formation and metallicity implementation, we obtain estimates for the AGN luminosities, stellar masses, star formation histories, and metallicity histories for each of our galaxies. We find that ProSpect can identify AGN components in 91 per cent of galaxies pre-selected as containing AGN through narrow-emission line ratios and the presence of broad lines. Our ProSpect-derived AGN luminosities show close agreement with luminosities derived for X-ray selected AGN using both the X-ray flux and previous SED fitting results. We show that incorporating the flexibility of an AGN component when fitting the SEDs of galaxies with no AGN has no significant impact on the derived galaxy properties. However, in order to obtain accurate estimates of the stellar properties of AGN host galaxies, it is crucial to include an AGN component in the SED fitting process. We use our derived AGN luminosities to map the evolution of the AGN luminosity function for $0
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- 2021
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106. Drivers of asymmetry in synthetic H I emission-line profiles of galaxies in the EAGLE simulation
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Manuwal, Aditya, Ludlow, Aaron D., Stevens, Adam R. H., Wright, Ruby J., and Robotham, Aaron S. G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the shapes of spatially integrated H I emission-line profiles of galaxies in the EAGLE simulation using three separate measures of the profile's asymmetry. We show that the subset of EAGLE galaxies whose gas fractions and stellar masses are consistent with those in the xGASS survey also have similar H I line asymmetries. Central galaxies with symmetric H I line profiles typically correspond to rotationally supported H I and stellar disks, but those with asymmetric line profiles may or may not correspond to dispersion-dominated systems. Galaxies with symmetric H I emission lines are, on average, more gas rich than those with asymmetric lines, and also exhibit systematic differences in their specific star formation rates, suggesting that turbulence generated by stellar or AGN feedback may be one factor contributing to H I line asymmetry. The line asymmetry also correlates strongly with the dynamical state of a galaxy's host dark matter halo: older, more relaxed haloes host more-symmetric galaxies than those hosted by unrelaxed ones. At fixed halo mass, asymmetric centrals tend to be surrounded by a larger number of massive subhaloes than their symmetric counterparts, and also experience higher rates of gas accretion and outflow. At fixed stellar mass, central galaxies have, on average, more symmetric H I emission lines than satellites; for the latter, ram pressure and tidal stripping are significant sources of asymmetry., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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107. Comparing word and face recognition – An insoluble conundrum?
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Robotham, Ro J. and Starrfelt, Randi
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- 2024
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108. Evaluating pooled testing for asymptomatic screening of healthcare workers in hospitals
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Heath, Bethany, Evans, Stephanie, Robertson, David S., Robotham, Julie V., Villar, Sofía S., and Presanis, Anne M.
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- 2023
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109. Model-based evaluation of admission screening strategies for the detection and control of carbapenemase-producing Enterobacterales in the English hospital setting
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Pople, Diane, Kypraios, Theodore, Donker, Tjibbe, Stoesser, Nicole, Seale, Anna C., George, Ryan, Dodgson, Andrew, Freeman, Rachel, Hope, Russell, Walker, Ann Sarah, Hopkins, Susan, and Robotham, Julie
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- 2023
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110. Simplifying glycan monitoring of complex antigens such as the SARS-CoV-2 spike to accelerate vaccine development
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Sauvageau, Janelle, Koyuturk, Izel, St. Michael, Frank, Brochu, Denis, Goneau, Marie-France, Schoenhofen, Ian, Perret, Sylvie, Star, Alexandra, Robotham, Anna, Haqqani, Arsalan, Kelly, John, Gilbert, Michel, and Durocher, Yves
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- 2023
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111. Preclinical evaluation of manufacturable SARS-CoV-2 spike virus-like particles produced in Chinese Hamster Ovary cells
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Alpuche-Lazcano, Sergio P., Stuible, Matthew, Akache, Bassel, Tran, Anh, Kelly, John, Hrapovic, Sabahudin, Robotham, Anna, Haqqani, Arsalan, Star, Alexandra, Renner, Tyler M., Blouin, Julie, Maltais, Jean-Sébastien, Cass, Brian, Cui, Kai, Cho, Jae-Young, Wang, Xinyu, Zoubchenok, Daria, Dudani, Renu, Duque, Diana, McCluskie, Michael J., and Durocher, Yves
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- 2023
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112. Deep learning diagnostic and severity-stratification for interstitial lung diseases and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in digital lung auscultations and ultrasonography: clinical protocol for an observational case–control study
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Siebert, Johan N., Hartley, Mary-Anne, Courvoisier, Delphine S., Salamin, Marlène, Robotham, Laura, Doenz, Jonathan, Barazzone-Argiroffo, Constance, Gervaix, Alain, and Bridevaux, Pierre-Olivier
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- 2023
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113. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) Survey: The Merging Potential of Brightest Group Galaxies
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Banks, Kirsten, Brough, Sarah, Holwerda, Benne, Hopkins, Andrew, López-Sánchez, Ángel, Phillipps, Steven, Pimbblet, Kevin, and Robotham, Aaron
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Using a volume-limited sample of 550 groups from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) Galaxy Group Catalogue spanning the halo mass range $12.8 < \log [M_{h}/M] < 14.2$, we investigate the merging potential of central Brightest Group Galaxies (BGGs). We use spectroscopically-confirmed close-companion galaxies as an indication of the potential stellar mass build-up of low-redshift BGGs, $z \leq 0.2$. We identify 17 close-companion galaxies with projected separations $r_{p} < 30$ kpc, relative velocities $\Delta v \leq 300$ km s$^{-1}$, and stellar-mass ratios $M_{BGG}/M_{CC} \leq 4$ relative to the BGG. These close-companion galaxies yield a total pair fraction of $0.03 \pm 0.01$. Overall, we find that BGGs in our sample have the potential to grow in stellar mass due to mergers by $2.2 \pm 1.5\%$ Gyr$^{-1}$. This is lower than the stellar mass growth predicted by current galaxy evolution models., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication by ApJ
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- 2021
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114. The Subaru HSC weak lensing mass-observable scaling relations of spectroscopic galaxy groups from the GAMA survey
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Rana, Divya, More, Surhud, Miyatake, Hironao, Nishimichi, Takahiro, Takada, Masahiro, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Hopkins, Andrew M., and Holwerda, Benne W.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We utilize the galaxy shape catalogue from the first-year data release of the Subaru Hyper Suprime-cam Survey (HSC) to study the dark matter content of galaxy groups in the Universe using weak lensing. We use galaxy groups from the Galaxy Mass and Assembly galaxy survey in approximately $100$ sq. degrees of the sky that overlap with the HSC survey as lenses. We restrict our analysis to the $1587$ groups with at least five members. We divide these groups into six bins each of group luminosity and group member velocity dispersion and measure the lensing signal with a signal-to-noise ratio of $55$ and $51$ for these two different selections, respectively. We use a Bayesian halo model framework to infer the halo mass distribution of our groups binned in the two different observable properties and constrain the power-law scaling relation, and the scatter between mean halo masses and the two group observable properties. We obtain a 5 percent constraint on the amplitude of the scaling relation between halo mass and group luminosity with $\avg{M} = (0.81\pm 0.04)\times10^{14}\hinvMsun$ for $L_{\rm grp}=10^{11.5}\hinvsqLsun$, and a power-law index of $\alpha=1.01\pm 0.07$. We constrain the amplitude of the scaling relation between halo mass and velocity dispersion to be $\avg{M}=(0.93\pm 0.05)\times10^{14}\hinvMsun$ for $\sigma=500 \kms$ and a power-law index to be $\alpha=1.52\pm0.10$. However, these scaling relations are sensitive to the exact cuts applied to the number of group members. Comparisons with similar scaling relations from the literature show that our results are consistent and have significantly reduced errors., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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115. Forensic reconstruction of galaxy colour evolution and population characterisation
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Bravo, Matías, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Lagos, Claudia del P., Davies, Luke J. M., Bellstedt, Sabine, and Thorne, Jessica E.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Mapping the evolution of galaxy colours, from blue star-forming to red passive systems, is fundamental to understand the processes involved in galaxy evolution. To this end, we reconstruct the colour evolution of low-redshift galaxies, combining stellar templates with star formation and metallicity histories of galaxies from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly survey and \shark\ semi-analytic model. We use these colour histories to robustly characterise the evolution of red and blue galaxy populations over cosmic time. Using a Gaussian Mixture Model to characterise the colour distribution at any given epoch and stellar mass, we find both observations and simulations strongly favour a model with only two populations (blue and red), with no evidence for a third "green" population. We map the evolution of mean, weight, and scatter of the blue and red populations as a function of both stellar mass and lookback time. Using our simulated galaxy catalogue as a testbed, we find that we can accurately recover galaxies colour histories up to a lookback time of $\sim6$ Gyr. We find that both populations show little change in the mean colour for low-mass galaxies, while the colours at the massive end become significantly redder with time. The stellar mass above which the galaxy population is predominantly red decreases by 0.3 dex in the last 5 Gyrs. We find a good agreement between observations and simulations, with the largest tension being that massive galaxies from \shark\ are too blue (a known issue with many galaxy evolution models)., Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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116. Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): Consistent multi-wavelength photometry for the DEVILS regions (COSMOS, XMMLSS & ECDFS)
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Davies, L. J. M., Thorne, J. E., Robotham, A. S. G., Bellstedt, S., Driver, S. P., Adams, N. J., Bilicki, M., Bowler, R. A. A., Bravo, M., Cortese, L., Foster, C., Grootes, M. W., Häußler, B., Hashemizadeh, A., Holwerda, B. W., Hurley, P., Jarvis, M. J., Lidman, C., Maddox, N., Meyer, M., Paolillo, M., Phillipps, S., Radovich, M., Siudek, M., Vaccari, M., and Windhorst, R. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS) is an ongoing high-completeness, deep spectroscopic survey of $\sim$60,000 galaxies to Y$<$21.2 mag, over $\sim$6 deg2 in three well-studied deep extragalactic fields: D10 (COSMOS), D02 (XMM-LSS) and D03 (ECDFS). Numerous DEVILS projects all require consistent, uniformly-derived and state-of-the-art photometric data with which to measure galaxy properties. Existing photometric catalogues in these regions either use varied photometric measurement techniques for different facilities/wavelengths leading to inconsistencies, older imaging data and/or rely on source detection and photometry techniques with known problems. Here we use the ProFound image analysis package and state-of-the-art imaging datasets (including Subaru-HSC, VST-VOICE, VISTA-VIDEO and UltraVISTA-DR4) to derive matched-source photometry in 22 bands from the FUV to 500{\mu}m. This photometry is found to be consistent, or better, in colour-analysis to previous approaches using fixed-size apertures (which are specifically tuned to derive colours), but produces superior total source photometry, essential for the derivation of stellar masses, star-formation rates, star-formation histories, etc. Our photometric catalogue is described in detail and, after internal DEVILS team projects, will be publicly released for use by the broader scientific community., Comment: 33 pages, 22 figures, Accepted to MNRAS
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- 2021
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117. Simplifying glycan monitoring of complex antigens such as the SARS-CoV-2 spike to accelerate vaccine development
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Janelle Sauvageau, Izel Koyuturk, Frank St. Michael, Denis Brochu, Marie-France Goneau, Ian Schoenhofen, Sylvie Perret, Alexandra Star, Anna Robotham, Arsalan Haqqani, John Kelly, Michel Gilbert, and Yves Durocher
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Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Abstract Glycosylation is a key quality attribute that must be closely monitored for protein therapeutics. Established assays such as HILIC-Fld of released glycans and LC-MS of glycopeptides work well for glycoproteins with a few glycosylation sites but are less amenable for those with multiple glycosylation sites, resulting in complex datasets that are time consuming to generate and difficult to analyze. As part of efforts to improve preparedness for future pandemics, researchers are currently assessing where time can be saved in the vaccine development and production process. In this context, we evaluated if neutral and acidic monosaccharides analysis via HPAEC-PAD could be used as a rapid and robust alternative to LC-MS and HILIC-Fld for monitoring glycosylation between protein production batches. Using glycoengineered spike proteins we show that the HPAEC-PAD monosaccharide assays could quickly and reproducibly detect both major and minor glycosylation differences between batches. Moreover, the monosaccharide results aligned well with those obtained by HILIC-Fld and LC-MS.
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- 2023
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118. Antimicrobial resistance prevalence in bloodstream infection in 29 European countries by age and sex: An observational study
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Waterlow, Naomi R., Cooper, Ben S., Robotham, Julie V., and Knight, Gwenan Mary
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Bacteria -- Analysis -- Health aspects -- Usage ,Drug resistance in microorganisms -- Usage -- Analysis -- Health aspects ,Prevalence studies (Epidemiology) -- Analysis -- Health aspects -- Usage ,Infection -- Usage -- Health aspects -- Analysis ,Methicillin -- Usage ,Epidemiology -- Usage -- Analysis -- Health aspects ,Biological sciences ,World Health Organization - Abstract
Background Antibiotic usage, contact with high transmission healthcare settings as well as changes in immune system function all vary by a patient's age and sex. Yet, most analyses of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) ignore demographic indicators and provide only country-level resistance prevalence values. This study aimed to address this knowledge gap by quantifying how resistance prevalence and incidence of bloodstream infection (BSI) varied by age and sex across bacteria and antibiotics in Europe. Methods and findings We used patient-level data collected as part of routine surveillance between 2015 and 2019 on BSIs in 29 European countries from the European Antimicrobial Resistance Surveillance Network (EARS-Net). A total of 6,862,577 susceptibility results from isolates with age, sex, and spatial information from 944,520 individuals were used to characterise resistance prevalence patterns for 38 different bacterial species and antibiotic combinations, and 47% of these susceptibility results were from females, with a similar age distribution in both sexes (mean of 66 years old). A total of 349,448 isolates from 2019 with age and sex metadata were used to calculate incidence. We fit Bayesian multilevel regression models by country, laboratory code, sex, age, and year of sample to quantify resistant prevalence and provide estimates of country-, bacteria-, and drug-family effect variation. We explore our results in greater depths for 2 of the most clinically important bacteria-antibiotic combinations (aminopenicillin resistance in Escherichia coli and methicillin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus) and present a simplifying indicative index of the difference in predicted resistance between old (aged 100) and young (aged 1). At the European level, we find distinct patterns in resistance prevalence by age. Trends often vary more within an antibiotic family, such as fluroquinolones, than within a bacterial species, such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Clear resistance increases by age for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) contrast with a peak in resistance to several antibiotics at approximately 30 years of age for P. aeruginosa. For most bacterial species, there was a u-shaped pattern of infection incidence with age, which was higher in males. An important exception was E. coli, for which there was an elevated incidence in females between the ages of 15 and 40. At the country-level, subnational differences account for a large amount of resistance variation (approximately 38%), and there are a range of functional forms for the associations between age and resistance prevalence. For MRSA, age trends were mostly positive, with 72% (n = 21) of countries seeing an increased resistance between males aged 1 and 100 years and a greater change in resistance in males. This compares to age trends for aminopenicillin resistance in E. coli which were mostly negative (males: 93% (n = 27) of countries see decreased resistance between those aged 1 and 100 years) with a smaller change in resistance in females. A change in resistance prevalence between those aged 1 and 100 years ranged up to 0.51 (median, 95% quantile of model simulated prevalence using posterior parameter ranges 0.48, 0.55 in males) for MRSA in one country but varied between 0.16 (95% quantile 0.12, 0.21 in females) to -0.27 (95% quantile -0.4, -0.15 in males) across individual countries for aminopenicillin resistance in E. coli. Limitations include potential bias due to the nature of routine surveillance and dependency of results on model structure. Conclusions In this study, we found that the prevalence of resistance in BSIs in Europe varies substantially by bacteria and antibiotic over the age and sex of the patient shedding new light on gaps in our understanding of AMR epidemiology. Future work is needed to determine the drivers of these associations in order to more effectively target transmission and antibiotic stewardship interventions., Author(s): Naomi R. Waterlow 1, Ben S. Cooper 2, Julie V. Robotham 3, Gwenan Mary Knight 1,4,* Introduction Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global public health priority [1]. Understanding how [...]
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- 2024
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119. Isolation and characterization of a VHH targeting the Acinetobacter baumannii cell surface protein CsuA/B
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Lei, Eric K., Ryan, Shannon, van Faassen, Henk, Foss, Mary, Robotham, Anna, Baltat, Isabel, Fulton, Kelly, Henry, Kevin A., Chen, Wangxue, and Hussack, Greg
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- 2023
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120. Excess resource use and cost of drug-resistant infections for six key pathogens in Europe: a systematic review and Bayesian meta-analysis
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Lorenzo Argante, Barana, Benedetta, Cappelli, Eva, De Rui, Maria Elena, Galia, Liliana, Geurtsen, Jeroen, Guedes, Mariana, Mejia, Jorly, Palladino, Andrea, Pezzani, Maria Diletta, Piljic, Alen, Kingston, Rhys, Vella, Venanzio, Pouwels, Koen B., Schmidt, Johannes E., Abdelatif El-Abasiri, Radwa A., Reyna-Villasmil, Eduardo, Hassoun-Kheir, Nasreen, Harbarth, Stephan, Rodríguez-Baño, Jesús, Tacconelli, Evelina, Arieti, Fabiana, Gladstone, Beryl Primrose, de Kraker, Marlieke E.A., Naylor, Nichola R., and Robotham, Julie V.
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- 2024
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121. A systematic review on the excess health risk of antibiotic-resistant bloodstream infections for six key pathogens in Europe
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Barana, Benedetta, Cappelli, Eva, De Rui, Maria Elena, El-Abasiri, Radwa A., Galia, Liliana, Geurtsen, Jeroen, Mejia, Jorly, Palladino, Andrea, Piljic, Alen, Rajendran, Nithya Babu, Reyna-Villasmil, Eduardo, Schmidt, Johannes E., Hassoun-Kheir, Nasreen, Guedes, Mariana, Ngo Nsoga, Marie-Therese, Argante, Lorenzo, Arieti, Fabiana, Gladstone, Beryl P., Kingston, Rhys, Naylor, Nichola R., Pezzani, Maria D., Pouwels, Koen B., Robotham, Julie V., Rodríguez-Baño, Jesús, Tacconelli, Evelina, Vella, Venanzio, Harbarth, Stephan, and de Kraker, Marlieke E.A.
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- 2024
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122. Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): Stellar Mass Growth by Morphological Type since $z = 1$
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Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Driver, Simon P., Davies, Luke J. M., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Bellstedt, Sabine, Windhorst, Rogier A., Bremer, Malcolm, Phillipps, Steven, Jarvis, Matt, Holwerda, Benne W., Lagos, Claudia del P., Koushan, Soheil, Siudek, Malgorzata, Maddox, Natasha, Thorne, Jessica E., and Elahi, Pascal
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope imaging data, we perform a visual morphological classification of $\sim 36,000$ galaxies at $z < 1$ in the DEVILS/COSMOS region. As the main goal of this study, we derive the stellar mass function (SMF) and stellar mass density (SMD) sub-divided by morphological types. We find that visual morphological classification using optical imaging is increasingly difficult at $z > 1$ as the fraction of irregular galaxies and merger systems (when observed at rest-frame UV/blue wavelengths) dramatically increases. We determine that roughly two-thirds of the total stellar mass of the Universe today was in place by $z \sim 1$. Double-component galaxies dominate the SMD at all epochs and increase in their contribution to the stellar mass budget to the present day. Elliptical galaxies are the second most dominant morphological type and increase their SMD by $\sim 2.5$ times, while by contrast, the pure-disk population significantly decreases by $\sim 85\%$. According to the evolution of both high- and low-mass ends of the SMF, we find that mergers and in-situ evolution in disks are both present at $z < 1$, and conclude that double-component galaxies are predominantly being built by the in-situ evolution in disks (apparent as the growth of the low-mass end with time), while mergers are likely responsible for the growth of ellipticals (apparent as the increase of intermediate/high-mass end)., Comment: 29 pages, 22 figures
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- 2021
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123. GAMA/DEVILS: Constraining the cosmic star-formation history from improved measurements of the 0.3-2.2 micron Extragalactic Background Light
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Koushan, Soheil, Driver, Simon P., Bellstedt, Sabine, Davies, Luke J., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Lagos, Claudia del P, Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Obreschkow, Danail, Thorne, Jessica E., Bremer, Malcolm, Holwerda, B. W., Hopkins, Andrew M., Jarvis, Matt J., Siudek, Malgorzata, and Windhorst, Rogier A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a revised measurement of the optical extragalactic background light (EBL), based on the contribution of resolved galaxies to the integrated galaxy light (IGL). The cosmic optical background radiation (COB), encodes the light generated by star-formation, and provides a wealth of information about the cosmic star formation history (CSFH). We combine wide and deep galaxy number counts from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly survey (GAMA) and Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS), along with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) archive and other deep survey datasets, in 9 multi-wavelength filters to measure the COB in the range from 0.35 micron to 2.2 micron. We derive the luminosity density in each band independently and show good agreement with recent and complementary estimates of the optical-EBL from very high-energy (VHE) experiments. Our error analysis suggests that the IGL and Gamma-ray measurements are now fully consistent to within ~10%, suggesting little need for any additional source of diffuse light beyond the known galaxy population. We use our revised IGL measurements to constrain the cosmic star-formation history, and place amplitude constraints on a number of recent estimates. As a consistency check, we can now demonstrate convincingly, that the CSFH, stellar mass growth, and the optical-EBL provide a fully consistent picture of galaxy evolution. We conclude that the peak of star-formation rate lies in the range 0.066-0.076 Msol/yr/Mpc^3 at a lookback time of 9.1 to 10.9 Gyrs., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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124. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The inferred mass--metallicity relation from z=0 to 3.5 via forensic SED fitting
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Bellstedt, Sabine, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Driver, Simon P., Thorne, Jessica E., Davies, Luke J. M., Holwerda, Benne W., Hopkins, Andrew M., Lara-Lopez, Maritza A., López-Sánchez, Ángel R., and Phillipps, Steven
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyse the metallicity histories of ~4,500 galaxies from the GAMA survey at z<0.06 modelled by the SED-fitting code ProSpect using an evolving metallicity implementation. These metallicity histories, in combination with the associated star formation histories, allow us to analyse the inferred gas-phase mass--metallicity relation. Furthermore, we extract the mass--metallicity relation at a sequence of epochs in cosmic history, to track the evolving mass--metallicity relation with time. Through comparison with observations of gas-phase metallicity over a large range of redshifts, we show that, remarkably, our forensic SED analysis has produced an evolving mass--metallicity relationship that is consistent with observations at all epochs. We additionally analyse the three dimensional mass--metallicity--SFR space, showing that galaxies occupy a clearly defined plane. This plane is shown to be subtly evolving, displaying an increased tilt with time caused by general enrichment, and also the slowing down of star formation with cosmic time. This evolution is most apparent at lookback times greater than 7 Gyr. The trends in metallicity recovered in this work highlight that the evolving metallicity implementation used within the SED fitting code ProSpect produces reasonable metallicity results over the history of a galaxy. This is expected to provide a significant improvement to the accuracy of the SED fitting outputs., Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures (inc. 2 animations), accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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125. Remnant Radio Galaxies Discovered in a Multi-frequency Survey
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Quici, B., Hurley-Walker, N., Seymour, N., Turner, R. J., Shabala, S. S., Huynh, M., Andernach, H., Kapińska, A. D., Collier, J. D., Johnston-Hollitt, M., White, S. V., Prandoni, I., Galvin, T. J., Franzen, T., Ishwara-Chandra, C. H., Bellstedt, S., Tingay, S. J., Gaensler, B. M., O'Brien, A., Rogers, J., Chow, K., Driver, S., and Robotham, A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The remnant phase of a radio galaxy begins when the jets launched from an active galactic nucleus are switched off. To study the fraction of radio galaxies in a remnant phase, we take advantage of a $8.31$\,deg$^2$ sub-region of the GAMA~23~field which comprises of surveys covering the frequency range 0.1--9\,GHz. We present a sample of 104 radio galaxies compiled from observations conducted by the Murchison Wide-field Array (216\,MHz), the Australia Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (887\,MHz), and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (5.5\,GHz). We adopt an `absent radio core' criterion to identify 10 radio galaxies showing no evidence for an active nucleus. We classify these as new candidate remnant radio galaxies. Seven of these objects still display compact emitting regions within the lobes at 5.5\,GHz; at this frequency the emission is short-lived, implying a recent jet switch-off. On the other hand, only three show evidence of aged lobe plasma by the presence of an ultra-steep spectrum ($\alpha<-1.2$) and a diffuse, low surface-brightness radio morphology. The predominant fraction of young remnants is consistent with a rapid fading during the remnant phase. Within our sample of radio galaxies, our observations constrain the remnant fraction to $4\%\lesssim f_{\mathrm{rem}} \lesssim 10\%$; the lower limit comes from the limiting case in which all remnant candidates with hotspots are simply active radio galaxies with faint, undetected radio cores. Finally, we model the synchrotron spectrum arising from a hotspot to show they can persist for 5--10\,Myr at 5.5\,GHz after the jets switch off -- radio emission arising from such hotspots can therefore be expected in an appreciable fraction of genuine remnants.
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- 2021
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126. The colors of bulges and disks in the core and outskirts of galaxy clusters
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Barsanti, S., Owers, M. S., McDermid, R. M., Bekki, K., Bryant, J. J., Croom, S. M., Oh, S., Robotham, A. S. G., Scott, N., and van de Sande, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The role of the environment on the formation of S0 galaxies is still not well understood, specifically in the outskirts of galaxy clusters. We study eight low-redshift clusters, analyzing galaxy members up to cluster-centric distances $\sim2.5\,R_{200}$. We perform 2D photometric bulge-disk decomposition in the $g$-, $r$- and $i$-bands from which we identify 469 double-component galaxies. We analyze separately the colors of the bulges and the disks and their dependence on the projected cluster-centric distance and on the local galaxy density. For our sample of cluster S0 galaxies, we find that bulges are redder than their surrounding disks, show a significant color-magnitude trend, and have colors that do not correlate with environment metrics. On the other hand, the disks associated with our cluster S0s become significantly bluer with increasing cluster-centric radius, but show no evidence for a color-magnitude relation. The disk color-radius relation is mainly driven by galaxies in the cluster core at $0\leq R/ R_{200}<0.5$. No significant difference is found for the disk colors of backsplash and infalling galaxies in the projected phase space. Beyond $R_{200}$, the disk colors do not change with the local galaxy density, indicating that the colors of double-component galaxies are not affected by pre-processing. A significant color-density relation is observed for single-component disk-dominated galaxies beyond $R_{200}$. We conclude that the formation of cluster S0 galaxies is primarily driven by cluster core processes acting on the disks, while evidence of pre-processing is found for single-component disk-dominated galaxies. We publicly release the data from the bulge-disk decomposition., Comment: 30 pages (including 3 pages of appendices), 18 Figures, 10 Tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Please see "Other formats" or "Ancillary files" to download the data from the $g$-, $r$- and $i$-bands bulge-disk decompositions
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- 2020
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127. Influence of Multi-Modal Interactive Formats on Subjective Audio Quality and Exploration Behavior.
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Thomas Robotham, Ashutosh Singla, Alexander Raake, Olli S. Rummukainen, and Emanuël A. P. Habets
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- 2023
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128. Saliency of Omnidirectional Videos with Different Audio Presentations: Analyses and Dataset.
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Ashutosh Singla, Thomas Robotham, Abhinav Bhattacharya, William Menz, Emanuël A. P. Habets, and Alexander Raake
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- 2023
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129. A Spin of the Wheel: Co-operation or Competition—Defense Procurement and Defense Industries in International Relations
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Brueller, Nir N., King, David R., Robotham, Rojan, and Akande, Adebowale, editor
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- 2023
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130. Preclinical evaluation of manufacturable SARS-CoV-2 spike virus-like particles produced in Chinese Hamster Ovary cells
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Sergio P. Alpuche-Lazcano, Matthew Stuible, Bassel Akache, Anh Tran, John Kelly, Sabahudin Hrapovic, Anna Robotham, Arsalan Haqqani, Alexandra Star, Tyler M. Renner, Julie Blouin, Jean-Sébastien Maltais, Brian Cass, Kai Cui, Jae-Young Cho, Xinyu Wang, Daria Zoubchenok, Renu Dudani, Diana Duque, Michael J. McCluskie, and Yves Durocher
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve, novel vaccines need to be developed that are readily manufacturable and provide clinical efficacy against emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants. Virus-like particles (VLPs) presenting the spike antigen at their surface offer remarkable benefits over other vaccine antigen formats; however, current SARS-CoV-2 VLP vaccines candidates in clinical development suffer from challenges including low volumetric productivity, poor spike antigen density, expression platform-driven divergent protein glycosylation and complex upstream/downstream processing requirements. Despite their extensive use for therapeutic protein manufacturing and proven ability to produce enveloped VLPs, Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO) cells are rarely used for the commercial production of VLP-based vaccines. Methods Using CHO cells, we aimed to produce VLPs displaying the full-length SARS-CoV-2 spike. Affinity chromatography was used to capture VLPs released in the culture medium from engineered CHO cells expressing spike. The structure, protein content, and glycosylation of spikes in VLPs were characterized by several biochemical and biophysical methods. In vivo, the generation of neutralizing antibodies and protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection was tested in mouse and hamster models. Results We demonstrate that spike overexpression in CHO cells is sufficient by itself to generate high VLP titers. These VLPs are evocative of the native virus but with at least three-fold higher spike density. In vivo, purified VLPs elicit strong humoral and cellular immunity at nanogram dose levels which grant protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection. Conclusions Our results show that CHO cells are amenable to efficient manufacturing of high titers of a potently immunogenic spike protein-based VLP vaccine antigen.
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- 2023
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131. Deep learning diagnostic and severity-stratification for interstitial lung diseases and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in digital lung auscultations and ultrasonography: clinical protocol for an observational case–control study
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Johan N. Siebert, Mary-Anne Hartley, Delphine S. Courvoisier, Marlène Salamin, Laura Robotham, Jonathan Doenz, Constance Barazzone-Argiroffo, Alain Gervaix, and Pierre-Olivier Bridevaux
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Lung diseases, Interstitial ,Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis ,Idiopathic interstitial pneumonias ,Pulmonary disease, Chronic obstructive ,Deep learning ,Artificial intelligence ,Diseases of the respiratory system ,RC705-779 - Abstract
Abstract Background Interstitial lung diseases (ILD), such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and non-specific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP), and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are severe, progressive pulmonary disorders with a poor prognosis. Prompt and accurate diagnosis is important to enable patients to receive appropriate care at the earliest possible stage to delay disease progression and prolong survival. Artificial intelligence-assisted lung auscultation and ultrasound (LUS) could constitute an alternative to conventional, subjective, operator-related methods for the accurate and earlier diagnosis of these diseases. This protocol describes the standardised collection of digitally-acquired lung sounds and LUS images of adult outpatients with IPF, NSIP or COPD and a deep learning diagnostic and severity-stratification approach. Methods A total of 120 consecutive patients (≥ 18 years) meeting international criteria for IPF, NSIP or COPD and 40 age-matched controls will be recruited in a Swiss pulmonology outpatient clinic, starting from August 2022. At inclusion, demographic and clinical data will be collected. Lung auscultation will be recorded with a digital stethoscope at 10 thoracic sites in each patient and LUS images using a standard point-of-care device will be acquired at the same sites. A deep learning algorithm (DeepBreath) using convolutional neural networks, long short-term memory models, and transformer architectures will be trained on these audio recordings and LUS images to derive an automated diagnostic tool. The primary outcome is the diagnosis of ILD versus control subjects or COPD. Secondary outcomes are the clinical, functional and radiological characteristics of IPF, NSIP and COPD diagnosis. Quality of life will be measured with dedicated questionnaires. Based on previous work to distinguish normal and pathological lung sounds, we estimate to achieve convergence with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of > 80% using 40 patients in each category, yielding a sample size calculation of 80 ILD (40 IPF, 40 NSIP), 40 COPD, and 40 controls. Discussion This approach has a broad potential to better guide care management by exploring the synergistic value of several point-of-care-tests for the automated detection and differential diagnosis of ILD and COPD and to estimate severity. Trial registration Registration: August 8, 2022. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05318599.
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- 2023
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132. Lensed Type Ia Supernova 'Encore' at z = 2: The First Instance of Two Multiply Imaged Supernovae in the Same Host Galaxy
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J. D. R. Pierel, A. B. Newman, S. Dhawan, M. Gu, B. A. Joshi, T. Li, S. Schuldt, L. G. Strolger, S. H. Suyu, G. B. Caminha, S. H. Cohen, J. M. Diego, J. C. J. DŚilva, S. Ertl, B. L. Frye, G. Granata, C. Grillo, A. M. Koekemoer, J. Li, A. Robotham, J. Summers, T. Treu, R. A. Windhorst, A. Zitrin, S. Agarwal, A. Agrawal, N. Arendse, S. Belli, C. Burns, R. Cañameras, S. Chakrabarti, W. Chen, T. E. Collett, D. A. Coulter, R. S. Ellis, M. Engesser, N. Foo, O. D. Fox, C. Gall, N. Garuda, S. Gezari, S. Gomez, K. Glazebrook, J. Hjorth, X. Huang, S. W. Jha, P. S. Kamieneski, P. Kelly, C. Larison, L. A. Moustakas, M. Pascale, I. Pérez-Fournon, T. Petrushevska, F. Poidevin, A. Rest, M. Shahbandeh, A. J. Shajib, M. Siebert, C. Storfer, M. Talbot, Q. Wang, T. Wevers, and Y. Zenati
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Gravitational lensing ,Cosmology ,Type Ia supernovae ,Supernovae ,Galaxy clusters ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
A bright ( m _F150W,AB = 24 mag), z = 1.95 supernova (SN) candidate was discovered in JWST/NIRCam imaging acquired on 2023 November 17. The SN is quintuply imaged as a result of strong gravitational lensing by a foreground galaxy cluster, detected in three locations, and remarkably is the second lensed SN found in the same host galaxy. The previous lensed SN was called “Requiem,” and therefore the new SN is named “Encore.” This makes the MACS J0138.0−2155 cluster the first known system to produce more than one multiply imaged SN. Moreover, both SN Requiem and SN Encore are Type Ia SNe (SNe Ia), making this the most distant case of a galaxy hosting two SNe Ia. Using parametric host fitting, we determine the probability of detecting two SNe Ia in this host galaxy over a ∼10 yr window to be ≈3%. These observations have the potential to yield a Hubble constant ( H _0 ) measurement with ∼10% precision, only the third lensed SN capable of such a result, using the three visible images of the SN. Both SN Requiem and SN Encore have a fourth image that is expected to appear within a few years of ∼2030, providing an unprecedented baseline for time-delay cosmography.
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- 2024
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133. JWST NIRCam Photometry: A Study of Globular Clusters Surrounding Bright Elliptical Galaxy VV 191a at z = 0.0513
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Jessica M. Berkheimer, Timothy Carleton, Rogier A. Windhorst, William C. Keel, Benne W. Holwerda, Mario Nonino, Seth H. Cohen, Rolf A. Jansen, Dan Coe, Christopher J. Conselice, Simon P. Driver, Brenda L. Frye, Norman A. Grogin, Anton M. Koekemoer, Ray A. Lucas, Madeline A. Marshall, Nor Pirzkal, Clayton Robertson, Aaron Robotham, Russell E. Ryan Jr., Brent M. Smith, Jake Summers, Scott Tompkins, Christopher N. A. Willmer, and Haojing Yan
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Elliptical galaxies ,Globular star clusters ,Photometry ,James Webb Space Telescope ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
James Webb Space Telescope NIRCam images have revealed 154 reliable globular cluster (GC) candidates around the z = 0.0513 elliptical galaxy VV 191a after subtracting 34 likely interlopers from background galaxies inside our search area. NIRCam broadband observations are made at 0.9–4.5 μ m using the F090W, F150W, F356W, and F444W filters. Using point-spread-function-matched photometry, the data are analyzed to present color–magnitude diagrams and color distributions that suggest a relatively uniform population of GCs, except for small fractions of reddest (5%–8%) and bluest (2%–4%) outliers. GC models in the F090W versus (F090W–F150W) diagram fit the NIRCam data well and show that the majority of GCs detected have a mass of ∼10 ^6.5 M _⊙ , with metallicities [Fe/H] spanning the typical range expected for GCs (−2.5 ≲ [Fe/H]≲ 0.5). However, the models predict ∼0.3–0.4 mag bluer (F356W–F444W) colors than the NIRCam data for a reasonable range of GC ages, metallicities, and reddening. Although our data do not quite reach the luminosity function turnover, the measured luminosity function is consistent with previous measurements, suggesting an estimated peak at m _AB ∼ −9.4 ± 0.2 mag in the F090W filter.
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- 2024
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134. PEARLS: A Potentially Isolated Quiescent Dwarf Galaxy with a Tip of the Red Giant Branch Distance of 30 Mpc
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Timothy Carleton, Timothy Ellsworth-Bowers, Rogier A. Windhorst, Seth H. Cohen, Christopher J. Conselice, Jose M. Diego, Adi Zitrin, Haylee N. Archer, Isabel McIntyre, Patrick Kamieneski, Rolf A. Jansen, Jake Summers, Jordan C. J. D’Silva, Anton M. Koekemoer, Dan Coe, Simon P. Driver, Brenda Frye, Norman A. Grogin, Madeline A. Marshall, Mario Nonino, Nor Pirzkal, Aaron Robotham, Russell E. Ryan Jr., Rafael Ortiz III, Scott Tompkins, Christopher N. A. Willmer, Haojing Yan, and Benne W. Holwerda
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Low surface brightness galaxies ,James Webb Space Telescope ,Dwarf galaxies ,Stellar populations ,Galaxy evolution ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
A wealth of observations have long suggested that the vast majority of isolated classical dwarf galaxies ( M _* = 10 ^7 –10 ^9 M _⊙ ) are currently star forming. However, recent observations of the large abundance of “ultra-diffuse galaxies” beyond the reach of previous large spectroscopic surveys suggest that our understanding of the dwarf galaxy population may be incomplete. Here we report the serendipitous discovery of an isolated quiescent dwarf galaxy in the nearby Universe, which was imaged as part of the JWST PEARLS Guaranteed Time Observation program. Remarkably, individual red-giant branch stars are visible in this near-IR imaging, suggesting a distance of 30 ± 4 Mpc, and a wealth of archival photometry point to an sSFR of 2 × 10 ^−11 yr ^−1 and star formation rate of 4 × 10 ^−4 M _⊙ yr ^−1 . Spectra obtained with the Lowell Discovery Telescope find a recessional velocity consistent with the Hubble Flow and >1500 km s ^−1 separated from the nearest massive galaxy in Sloan Digital Sky Survey suggesting that this galaxy was either quenched from internal mechanisms or had a very high-velocity (≳1000 km s ^−1 ) interaction with a nearby massive galaxy in the past. This analysis highlights the possibility that many nearby quiescent dwarf galaxies are waiting to be discovered and that JWST has the potential to resolve them.
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- 2024
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135. Pragmatic, feasibility randomized controlled trial of a recorded mental health recovery narrative intervention: narrative experiences online intervention for informal carers (NEON-C)
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Fiona Ng, Stefan Rennick-Egglestone, Juliana Onwumere, Christopher Newby, Joy Llewellyn-Beardsley, Caroline Yeo, Yasmin Ali, Kristian Pollock, Yasuhiro Kotera, Scott Pomberth, Sean P. Gavan, Lian van der Krieke, Dan Robotham, Steve Gillard, Graham Thornicroft, Mike Slade, and and the NEON Study Group
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mental health ,recovery ,recovery narratives ,carers ,NEON intervention ,recommender system ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
IntroductionInformal carers of people with mental health problems often have unmet support needs. Mental health recovery narratives are increasingly accessible, but their relevance to and effect on informal carers have been minimally investigated. The Narrative Experiences Online (NEON) Intervention is a first-in-field intervention that provides informal carers with access to a diverse collection of recorded mental health recovery narratives. This trial aimed to examine the feasibility and acceptability of the NEON Intervention for informal carers.MethodsThis study involved a two-arm feasibility randomized controlled trial. Carers were randomly assigned to receiving versus not receiving the NEON Intervention. The feasibility aspects investigated included the acceptability of the intervention and of randomization, trial processes, engagement rates, recruitment procedures, attrition, sample size estimation, identification of candidate primary and secondary outcomes, and the feasibility of conducting a definitive trial. A qualitative process evaluation was conducted.FindingsA total of 121 carers were eligible, of whom 54 were randomized (intervention: 27, control: 27). Twelve-month follow-up data were available for 36 carers. Carers accessed a mean of 25 narratives over a 12-month period, and the intervention group, compared with the control group, reported a small effect on hope and a moderate effect on the presence of meaning in life. Five modifications were recommended to improve the user experience, applicability, and trial processes.DiscussionThe NEON Intervention is feasible and acceptable. Significant refinement of the NEON Intervention and trial processes is required to personalize and ensure applicability to carers. Further feasibility testing is recommended prior to a definitive trial.
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- 2024
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136. Deep Extragalactic VIsible Legacy Survey (DEVILS): SED Fitting in the D10-COSMOS Field and the Evolution of the Stellar Mass Function and SFR-$M_\star$ relation
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Thorne, Jessica E., Robotham, Aaron. S. G., Davies, Luke J. M., Bellstedt, Sabine, Driver, Simon P., Bravo, Matias, Bremer, Malcolm N., Holwerda, Benne W., Hopkins, Andrew M., Lagos, Claudia del P., Phillipps, Steven, Siudek, Malgorzata, Taylor, Edward N., and Wright, Angus H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present catalogues of stellar masses, star formation rates, and ancillary stellar population parameters for galaxies spanning $0
2.6$, we see evidence of a bend in the relation at low redshifts ($z<0.45$). This suggests evolution in both the normalisation and shape of the SFR-$M_\star$ relation since cosmic noon. It is significant that we only clearly see this bend when combining our new DEVILS measurements with consistently derived values for lower redshift galaxies from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey: this shows the power of having consistent treatment for galaxies at all redshifts., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 28 pages, 20 figures - Published
- 2020
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137. The MAGPI Survey -- science goals, design, observing strategy, early results and theoretical framework
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Foster, C., Mendel, J. T., Lagos, C. D. P., Wisnioski, E., Yuan, T., D'Eugenio, F., Barone, T. M., Harborne, K. E., Vaughan, S. P., Schulze, F., Remus, R. -S., Gupta, A., Collacchioni, F., Khim, D. J., Taylor, P., Bassett, R., Croom, S. M., McDermid, R. M., Poci, A., Battisti, A. J., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Bellstedt, S., Colless, M., Davies, L. J. M., Derkenne, C., Driver, S., Ferré-Mateu, A., Fisher, D. B., Gjergo, E., Johnston, E. J., Khalid, A., Kobayashi, C., Oh, S., Peng, Y., Robotham, A. S. G., Sharda, P., Sweet, S. M., Taylor, E. N., Tran, K. -V. H., Trayford, J. W., van de Sande, J., Yi, S. K., and Zanisi, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an overview of the Middle Ages Galaxy Properties with Integral Field Spectroscopy (MAGPI) survey, a Large Program on ESO/VLT. MAGPI is designed to study the physical drivers of galaxy transformation at a lookback time of 3-4 Gyr, during which the dynamical, morphological, and chemical properties of galaxies are predicted to evolve significantly. The survey uses new medium-deep adaptive optics aided MUSE observations of fields selected from the GAMA survey, providing a wealth of publicly available ancillary multi-wavelength data. With these data, MAGPI will map the kinematic and chemical properties of stars and ionised gas for a sample of 60 massive (> 7 x 10^10 M_Sun) central galaxies at 0.25 < z <0.35 in a representative range of environments (isolated, groups and clusters). The spatial resolution delivered by MUSE with Ground Layer Adaptive Optics (GLAO, 0.6-0.8 arcsec FWHM) will facilitate a direct comparison with Integral Field Spectroscopy surveys of the nearby Universe, such as SAMI and MaNGA, and at higher redshifts using adaptive optics, e.g. SINS. In addition to the primary (central) galaxy sample, MAGPI will deliver resolved and unresolved spectra for as many as 150 satellite galaxies at 0.25 < z <0.35, as well as hundreds of emission-line sources at z < 6. This paper outlines the science goals, survey design, and observing strategy of MAGPI. We also present a first look at the MAGPI data, and the theoretical framework to which MAGPI data will be compared using the current generation of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations including EAGLE, Magneticum, HORIZON-AGN, and Illustris-TNG. Our results show that cosmological hydrodynamical simulations make discrepant predictions in the spatially resolved properties of galaxies at z ~ 0.3. MAGPI observations will place new constraints and allow for tangible improvements in galaxy formation theory., Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, PASA accepted
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- 2020
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138. The SAMI Galaxy Survey: bulge and disk stellar population properties in cluster galaxies
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Barsanti, S., Owers, M. S., McDermid, R. M., Bekki, K., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Brough, S., Bryant, J. J., Cortese, L., Croom, S. M., Foster, C., Lawrence, J. S., López-Sánchez, A. R., Oh, S., Robotham, A. S. G., Scott, N., Sweet, S. M., and van de Sande, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We explore stellar population properties separately in the bulge and the disk of double-component cluster galaxies to shed light on the formation of lenticular galaxies in dense environments. We study eight low-redshift clusters from the Sydney-AAO Multi-object Integral field (SAMI) Galaxy Survey, using 2D photometric bulge-disk decomposition in the $g$, $r$ and $i$-bands to characterize galaxies. For 192 double-component galaxies with $M_{*}>10^{10~}M_{\odot}$ we estimate the color, age and metallicity of the bulge and the disk. The analysis of the $g-i$ colors reveals that bulges are redder than their surrounding disks with a median offset of 0.12$\pm$0.02 mag, consistent with previous results. To measure mass-weighted age and metallicity we investigate three methods: (i) one based on galaxy stellar mass weights for the two components, (ii) one based on flux weights and (iii) one based on radial separation. The three methods agree in finding 62% of galaxies having bulges that are 2-3 times more metal-rich than the disks. Of the remaining galaxies, 7% have bulges that are more metal-poor than the disks, while for 31% the bulge and disk metallicities are not significantly different. We observe 23% of galaxies being characterized by bulges older and 34% by bulges younger with respect to the disks. The remaining 43% of galaxies have bulges and disks with statistically indistinguishable ages. Redder bulges tend to be more metal-rich than the disks, suggesting that the redder color in bulges is due to their enhanced metallicity relative to the disks instead of differences in stellar population age., Comment: 38 pages (including 5 pages of appendices), 23 Figures, 5 Tables. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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139. Current and Next Generation Survey Filter Conversions with ProSpect
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Robotham, Aaron S. G.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this work we compute a reasonably comprehensive set of tables for current and next generation survey facility filter conversions. Almost all useful transforms are included with the ProSpect software package described in Robotham et al (2020). Users are free to provide their own filters and compute their own transforms, where the included package examples outline the approach. This arXiv document will be relatively frequently updated, so people are encouraged to get in touch with their suggestions for additional utility (i.e. new filter sets)., Comment: Document is 36 pages, 80 tables, 4 figures. Comments welcome! This will be regularly updated (new facilities and filter sets), so uncertain whether it will be submitted to a journal for publication
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- 2020
140. Extracting Galaxy Merger Timescales II: A new fitting formula
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Poulton, Rhys J. J., Power, Chris, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Elahi, Pascal J., and Lagos, Claudia del P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Predicting the merger timescale ($\tau_{\rm merge}$) of merging dark matter halos, based on their orbital parameters and the structural properties of their hosts, is a fundamental problem in gravitational dynamics that has important consequences for our understanding of cosmological structure formation and galaxy formation. Previous models predicting $\tau_{\rm merge}$ have shown varying degrees of success when compared to the results of cosmological $N$-body simulations. We build on this previous work and propose a new model for $\tau_{\rm merge}$ that draws on insights derived from these simulations. We find that published predictions can provide reasonable estimates for $\tau_{\rm merge}$ based on orbital properties at infall, but tend to underpredict $\tau_{\rm merge}$ inside the host virial radius ($R_{200}$) because tidal stripping is neglected, and overpredict it outside $R_{200}$ because the host mass is underestimated. Furthermore, we find that models that account for orbital angular momentum via the circular radius $R_{\rm circ}$ underpredict (overpredict) $\tau_{\rm merge}$ for bound (unbound) systems. By fitting for the dependence of $\tau_{\rm merge}$ on various orbital and host halo properties,we derive an improved model for $\tau_{\rm merge}$ that can be applied to a merging halo at any point in its orbit. Finally, we discuss briefly the implications of our new model for $\tau_{\rm merge}$ for semi-analytical galaxy formation modelling., Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2020
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141. Galaxy and Mass Assembly: luminosity and stellar mass functions in GAMA groups
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Vázquez-Mata, J. A., Loveday, J., Riggs, S. D., Baldry, I. K., Davies, L. J. M., Robotham, A. S. G., Holwerda, B. W., Brown, M. J. I., Cluver, M. E., Wang, L., Alpaslan, M., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Brough, S., Driver, S. P., Hopkins, A. M., Taylor, E. N., and Wright, A. H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
How do galaxy properties (such as stellar mass, luminosity, star formation rate, and morphology) and their evolution depend on the mass of their host dark matter halo? Using the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) group catalogue, we address this question by exploring the dependence on host halo mass of the luminosity function (LF) and stellar mass function (SMF) for grouped galaxies subdivided by colour, morphology and central/satellite. We find that spheroidal galaxies in particular dominate the bright and massive ends of the LF and SMF, respectively. More massive haloes host more massive and more luminous central galaxies. The satellite LF and SMF respectively show a systematic brightening of characteristic magnitude, and increase in characteristic mass, with increasing halo mass. In contrast to some previous results, the faint-end and low-mass slopes show little systematic dependence on halo mass. Semi-analytic models and simulations show similar or enhanced dependence of central mass and luminosity on halo mass. Faint and low-mass simulated satellite galaxies are remarkably independent of halo mass, but the most massive satellites are more common in more massive groups. In the first investigation of low-redshift LF and SMF evolution in group environments, we find that the red/blue ratio of galaxies in groups has increased since redshift $z \approx 0.3$ relative to the field population. This observation strongly suggests that quenching of star formation in galaxies as they are accreted into galaxy groups is a significant and ongoing process., Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS in press
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- 2020
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142. Physical properties and evolution of (Sub-)millimeter selected galaxies in the galaxy formation simulation Shark
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Lagos, Claudia del P., da Cunha, Elisabete, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Obreschkow, Danail, Valentino, Francesco, Fujimoto, Seiji, Magdis, Georgios E., and Tobar, Rodrigo
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We thoroughly explore the properties of (sub)-millimeter (mm) selected galaxies (SMGs) in the Shark semi-analytic model of galaxy formation. Compared to observations, the predicted number counts at wavelengths (lambda) 0.6-2mm and redshift distributions at 0.1-2mm, agree well. At the bright end (>1mJy), Shark galaxies are a mix of mergers and disk instabilities. These galaxies display a stacked FUV-to-FIR spectrum that agrees well with observations. We predict that current optical/NIR surveys are deep enough to detect bright (>1mJy) lambda=0.85-2mm-selected galaxies at z<5, but too shallow to detect counterparts at higher redshift. A James Webb Space Telescope 10,000s survey should detect all counterparts for galaxies with $S_{\rm 0.85mm}>0.01$mJy. We predict SMG's disks contribute significantly (negligibly) to the rest-frame UV (IR). We investigate the 0
1mJy lambda=0.85-2mm-selected galaxies finding their: (i) stellar masses are $>10^{10.2}M_{\odot}$, with the 2mm ones tracing the most massive galaxies ($>10^{11}M_{\odot}$); (ii) specific star formation rates (SFR) are mildly (~3-10x) above the main sequence (MS); (iii) host halo masses are $\gtrsim 10^{12.3}M_{\odot}$, with 2mm galaxies tracing the most massive halos (proto-clusters); (iv) SMGs have lower dust masses ($\approx 10^{8}M_{\odot}$), higher dust temperatures ($\approx 40-45$K) and higher rest-frame V-band attenuation (>1.5) than MS galaxies; (v) sizes decrease with redshift, from 4kpc at z=1 to <1kpc at z=4; (vi) the Carbon Monoxide line spectra of $S_{\rm 0.85mm}>1$mJy sources peak at 4->3. Finally, we study the contribution of SMGs to the molecular gas and cosmic SFR density at 0 1mJy sources make a negligible contribution at z>3 and z>5, respectively, suggesting current observations have unveiled the majority of the star formation at 0 - Published
- 2020
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143. Recovering $\lambda_R$ and $V/\sigma$ from seeing-dominated IFS data
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Harborne, K. E., van de Sande, J., Cortese, L., Power, C., Robotham, A. S. G., Lagos, C. D. P., and Croom, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Observers experience a series of limitations when measuring galaxy kinematics, such as variable seeing conditions and aperture size. These effects can be reduced using empirical corrections, but these equations are usually applicable within a restrictive set of boundary conditions (e.g. S\'ersic indices within a given range) which can lead to biases when trying to compare measurements made across a full kinematic survey. In this work, we present new corrections for two widely used kinematic parameters, $\lambda_R$ and $V/\sigma$, that are applicable across a broad range of galaxy shapes, measurement radii and ellipticities. We take a series of mock observations of N-body galaxy models and use these to quantify the relationship between the observed kinematic parameters, structural properties and different seeing conditions. Derived corrections are then tested using the full catalogue of galaxies, including hydro-dynamic models from the EAGLE simulation. Our correction is most effective for regularly-rotating systems, yet the kinematic parameters of all galaxies -- fast, slow and irregularly rotating systems -- are recovered successfully. We find that $\lambda_R$ is more easily corrected than $V/\sigma$, with relative deviations of 0.02 and 0.06 dex respectively. The relationship between $\lambda_R$ and $V/\sigma$, as described by the parameter $\kappa$, also has a minor dependence on seeing conditions. These corrections will be particularly useful for stellar kinematic measurements in current and future integral field spectroscopic (IFS) surveys of galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS 2020 June 20. 29 pages, 26 figures, including further supplementary material included online in Appendix D
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- 2020
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144. GAMA+KiDS: Empirical correlations between halo mass and other galaxy properties near the knee of the stellar-to-halo mass relation
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Taylor, Edward N., Cluver, Michelle E., Duffy, Alan, Gurri, Pol, Hoekstra, Henk, Sonnenfeld, Alessandro, Bremer, Malcolm N., Brouwer, Margot M., Chisari, Nora Elisa, Dvornik, Andrej, Erben, Thomas, Hildebrandt, Hendrik, Hopkins, Andrew M., Kelvin, Lee S., Phillipps, Steven, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Sifon, Cristobal, Vakili, Mohammadjavad, and Wright, Angus H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use KiDS weak lensing data to measure variations in mean halo mass as a function of several key galaxy properties (namely: stellar colour, specific star formation rate, Sersic index, and effective radius) for a volume-limited sample of GAMA galaxies in a narrow stellar mass range ($M_* \sim 2$--$5 \times 10^{10}$ Msol). This mass range is particularly interesting, inasmuch as it is where bimodalities in galaxy properties are most pronounced, and near to the break in both the galaxy stellar mass function and the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR). In this narrow mass range, we find that both size and Sersic index are better predictors of halo mass than either colour or SSFR, with the data showing a slight preference for Sersic index. In other words, we find that mean halo mass is more tightly correlated with galaxy structure than either past star formation history or current star formation rate. Our results lead to an approximate lower bound on the dispersion in halo masses among $\log M_* \approx {10.5}$ galaxies: we find that the dispersion is $\gtrsim 0.3$ dex. This would imply either that offsets from the mean SHMR are closely coupled to size/structure, or that the dispersion in the SHMR is larger than past results have suggested. Our results thus provide new empirical constraints on the relationship between stellar and halo mass assembly at this particularly interesting mass range., Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures; submitted to MNRAS; updated to reflect accepted version
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- 2020
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145. K-CLASH: spatially-resolving star-forming galaxies in field and cluster environments at $z \approx 0.2$-$0.6$
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Tiley, Alfred L., Vaughan, Sam P., Stott, John P., Davies, Roger L., Prichard, Laura J., Bunker, Andrew, Bureau, Martin, Cappellari, Michele, Jarvis, Matt, Robotham, Aaron, Cortese, Luca, Bellstedt, Sabine, and Ansarinejad, Behzad
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the KMOS-CLASH (K-CLASH) survey, a K-band Multi-Object Spectrograph (KMOS) survey of the spatially-resolved gas properties and kinematics of 191 (predominantly blue) H$\alpha$-detected galaxies at $0.2 \lesssim z \lesssim 0.6$ in field and cluster environments. K-CLASH targets galaxies in four Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) fields in the KMOS $IZ$-band, over $7'$ radius ($\approx2$-$3$ Mpc) fields-of-view. K-CLASH aims to study the transition of star-forming galaxies from turbulent, highly star-forming disc-like and peculiar systems at $z\approx1$-$3$, to the comparatively quiescent, ordered late-type galaxies at $z\approx0$, and to examine the role of clusters in the build-up of the red sequence since $z\approx1$. In this paper, we describe the K-CLASH survey, present the sample, and provide an overview of the K-CLASH galaxy properties. We demonstrate that our sample comprises star-forming galaxies typical of their stellar masses and epochs, residing both in field and cluster environments. We conclude K-CLASH provides an ideal sample to bridge the gap between existing large integral-field spectroscopy surveys at higher and lower redshifts. We find that star-forming K-CLASH cluster galaxies at intermediate redshifts have systematically lower stellar masses than their star-forming counterparts in the field, hinting at possible "downsizing" scenarios of galaxy growth in clusters at these epochs. We measure no difference between the star-formation rates of H$\alpha$-detected, star-forming galaxies in either environment after accounting for stellar mass, suggesting that cluster quenching occurs very rapidly during the epochs probed by K-CLASH, or that star-forming K-CLASH galaxies in clusters have only recently arrived there, with insufficient time elapsed for quenching to have occured., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 31 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables; updated to correct typos in Section 5.2
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- 2020
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146. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): A forensic SED reconstruction of the cosmic star formation history and metallicity evolution by galaxy type
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Bellstedt, Sabine, Robotham, Aaron S. G., Driver, Simon P., Thorne, Jessica E., Davies, Luke J. M., Lagos, Claudia del P., Stevens, Adam R. H., Taylor, Edward N., Baldry, Ivan K., Moffett, Amanda J., Hopkins, Andrew M., and Phillipps, Steven
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We apply the spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting code ProSpect to multiwavelength imaging for $\sim$7,000 galaxies from the GAMA survey at $z<0.06$, in order to extract their star formation histories. We combine a parametric description of the star formation history with a closed-box evolution of metallicity where the present-day gas-phase metallicity of the galaxy is a free parameter. We show with this approach that we are able to recover the observationally determined cosmic star formation history (CSFH), an indication that stars are being formed in the correct epoch of the Universe, on average, for the manner in which we are conducting SED fitting. We also show the contribution to the CSFH of galaxies of different present-day visual morphologies, and stellar masses. Our analysis suggests that half of the mass in present-day elliptical galaxies was in place 11 Gyr ago. In other morphological types, the stellar mass formed later, up to 6 Gyr ago for present-day irregular galaxies. Similarly, the most massive galaxies in our sample were shown to have formed half their stellar mass by 11 Gyr ago, whereas the least massive galaxies reached this stage as late as 4 Gyr ago (the well-known effect of "galaxy downsizing"). Finally, our metallicity approach allows us to follow the average evolution in gas-phase metallicity for populations of galaxies, and extract the evolution of the cosmic metal mass density in stars and in gas, producing results in broad agreement with independent, higher-redshift observations of metal densities in the Universe., Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication by MNRAS
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- 2020
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147. Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): Assimilation of KiDS into the GAMA database
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Bellstedt, Sabine, Driver, Simon P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Davies, Luke J. M., Bogue, Cameron R. J., Cook, Robin H. W., Hashemizadeh, Abdolhosein, Koushan, Soheil, Taylor, Edward N., Thorne, Jessica E., Turner, Ryan J., and Wright, Angus H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Galaxy And Mass Assembly Survey (GAMA) covers five fields with highly complete spectroscopic coverage ($>95$ per cent) to intermediate depths ($r<19.8$ or $i < 19.0$ mag), and collectively spans 250 square degrees of Equatorial or Southern sky. Four of the GAMA fields (G09, G12, G15 and G23) reside in the ESO VST KiDS and ESO VISTA VIKING survey footprints, which combined with our GALEX, WISE and Herschel data provide deep uniform imaging in the $FUV\,NUV\,ugriZYJHK_s\,W1\,W2\,W3\,W4\,P100\,P160\,S250\,S350\,S500$ bands. Following the release of KiDS DR4, we describe the process by which we ingest the KiDS data into GAMA (replacing the SDSS data previously used for G09, G12 and G15), and redefine our core optical and near-IR catalogues to provide a complete and homogeneous dataset. The source extraction and analysis is based on the new ProFound image analysis package, providing matched-segment photometry across all bands. The data are classified into stars, galaxies, artefacts, and ambiguous objects, and objects are linked to the GAMA spectroscopic target catalogue. Additionally, a new technique is employed utilising ProFound to extract photometry in the unresolved MIR-FIR regime. The catalogues including the full FUV-FIR photometry are described and will be fully available as part of GAMA DR4. They are intended for both standalone science, selection for targeted follow-up with 4MOST, as well as an accompaniment to the upcoming and ongoing radio arrays now studying the GAMA $23^h$ field., Comment: 23 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2020
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148. FLASH Early Science -- Discovery of an intervening HI 21-cm absorber from an ASKAP survey of the GAMA 23 field
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Allison, J. R., Sadler, E. M., Bellstedt, S., Davies, L. J. M., Driver, S. P., Ellison, S. L., Huynh, M., Kapinska, A. D., Mahony, E. K., Moss, V. A., Robotham, A. S. G., Whiting, M. T., Curran, S. J., Darling, J., Hotan, A. W., Hunstead, R. W., Koribalski, B. S., Lagos, C. D. P., Pettini, M., Pimbblet, K. A., and Voronkov, M. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present early science results from the First Large Absorption Survey in HI (FLASH), a spectroscopically blind survey for 21-cm absorption lines in cold hydrogen HI gas at cosmological distances using the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). We have searched for HI absorption towards 1253 radio sources in the GAMA 23 field, covering redshifts between $z = 0.34$ and $0.79$ over a sky area of approximately 50 deg$^{2}$. In a purely blind search we did not obtain any detections of 21-cm absorbers above our reliability threshold. Assuming a fiducial value for the HI spin temperature of $T_{\rm spin}$ = 100 K and source covering fraction $c_{\rm f} = 1$, the total comoving absorption path length sensitive to all Damped Lyman $\alpha$ Absorbers (DLAs; $N_{\rm HI} \geq 2 \times 10^{20}$ cm$^{-2}$) is $\Delta{X} = 6.6 \pm 0.3$ ($\Delta{z} = 3.7 \pm 0.2$) and super-DLAs ($N_{\rm HI} \geq 2 \times 10^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$) is $\Delta{X} = 111 \pm 6$ ($\Delta{z} = 63 \pm 3$). We estimate upper limits on the HI column density frequency distribution function that are consistent with measurements from prior surveys for redshifted optical DLAs, and nearby 21-cm emission and absorption. By cross matching our sample of radio sources with optical spectroscopic identifications of galaxies in the GAMA 23 field, we were able to detect 21-cm absorption at $z = 0.3562$ towards NVSS J224500$-$343030, with a column density of $N_{\rm HI} = (1.2 \pm 0.1) \times 10^{20} (T_{\rm spin}/100~\mathrm{K})$ cm$^{-2}$. The absorber is associated with GAMA J22450.05$-$343031.7, a massive early-type galaxy at an impact parameter of 17 kpc with respect to the radio source and which may contain a massive ($M_{\rm HI} \gtrsim 3 \times 10^{9}$ M$_{\odot}$) gas disc. Such gas-rich early types are rare, but have been detected in the nearby Universe., Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2020
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149. From rest-frame luminosity functions to observer-frame colour distributions: tackling the next challenge in cosmological simulations
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Bravo, Matías, Lagos, Claudia del P., Robotham, Aaron S. G., Bellstedt, Sabine, and Obreschkow, Danail
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxy spectral energy distributions (SEDs) remain among the most challenging yet informative quantities to reproduce in simulations due to the large and complex mixture of physical processes that shape the radiation output of a galaxy. With the increasing number of surveys utilising broadband colours as part of their target selection criteria, the production of realistic SEDs in simulations is necessary for assisting in survey design and interpretation of observations. The recent success in reproducing the observed luminosity functions (LF) from far-UV to far-IR, using the state-of-the-art semi-analytic model \shark\ and the SED generator \prospect, represents a critical step towards better galaxy colour predictions. We show that with \shark\ and \prospect\ we can closely reproduce the optical colour distributions observed in the panchromatic GAMA survey. The treatment of feedback, star formation, central-satellite interactions and radiation re-processing by dust are critical for this achievement. The first three processes create a bimodal distribution, while dust attenuation defines the location and shape of the blue and red populations. While a naive comparison between observation and simulations displays the known issue of over-quenching of satellite galaxies, the introduction of empirically-motivated observational errors and classification from the same group finder used in GAMA greatly reduces this tension. The introduction of random re-assignment of $\sim 15\%$ of centrals/satellites as satellites/centrals on the simulation classification closely resembles the outcome of the group finder, providing a computationally less intensive method to compare simulations with observations., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS after minor corrections (20 pages, 19 figures)
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- 2020
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150. SimSpin -- Constructing mock IFS kinematic data cubes
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Harborne, K. E., Power, C., and Robotham, A. S. G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present SimSpin, a new, public, software framework for generating integral field spectroscopy (IFS) data cubes from N-body/hydrodynamical simulations of galaxies, which can be compared directly with observational datasets. SimSpin provides a consistent method for studying a galaxy's stellar component. It can be used to explore how observationally inferred measurements of kinematics, such as the spin parameter $\lambda_R$, are impacted by the effects of, for example, inclination, seeing conditions, distance, etc. SimSpin is written in R and has been designed to be highly modular, flexible, and extensible. It is already being used by the astrophysics community to generate IFS-like cubes and FITS files for direct comparison of simulations to observations. In this paper, we explain the conceptual framework of SimSpin; how it is implemented in R; and we demonstrate SimSpin's current capabilities, providing as an example a brief investigation of how numerical resolution affects how reliably we can recover the intrinsic stellar kinematics of a simulated galaxy., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2020
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