1,720 results on '"Bradford, M."'
Search Results
2. Optimizing Distributed ML Communication with Fused Computation-Collective Operations
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Punniyamurthy, Kishore, Hamidouche, Khaled, and Beckmann, Bradford M.
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Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,Computer Science - Hardware Architecture - Abstract
In order to satisfy their ever increasing capacity and compute requirements, machine learning models are distributed across multiple nodes using numerous parallelism strategies. As a result, collective communications are often on the critical path, and hiding their latency by overlapping kernel-granular communication and computation is difficult due to the absence of independent computation. In this work, we propose fusing computation with dependent collective communication by leveraging GPUs' massive parallelism and GPU-initiated communication. We have developed self-contained GPU kernels where workgroups (WGs) immediately communicate their results to remote GPUs when they complete their computation. Meanwhile, other WGs within the same kernel perform overlapping computation, maintaining high ALU utilization. We demonstrate our approach by creating three prototype fused operators (embedding + All-to-All, GEMV + AllReduce, and GEMM + All-to-All) to address the pervasive communication overheads observed in DLRM, Transformers and MoE model architectures. In order to demonstrate that our approach can be integrated into ML frameworks for wide adoption in production environments, we expose our fused operators as new PyTorch operators as well as extend the Triton framework to enable them. Our evaluations show that our approach can effectively overlap communication with computations, subsequently reducing their combined execution time than the current collective library-based approaches. Our scale-up GEMV + AllReduce and GEMM + All-to-All implementations achieve up to 22% and 20% lower execution time, while our fused embedding + All-to-All reduces execution time by 20% and 31% for intra-node and inter-node configurations. Large scale-out simulations indicate that our approach reduces DLRM execution time by 21% for 128 node system.
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- 2023
3. Simulated microgravity impairs human NK cell cytotoxic activity against space radiation-relevant leukemic cells
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Bradford M. Kuhlman, Jonathan H. Diaz, Trang Simon, Kimberly D. Reeves, Stephen J. Walker, Anthony Atala, Graça Almeida-Porada, and Christopher D. Porada
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Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Natural killer (NK) cells are an important first-line of defense against malignant cells. Because of the potential for increased cancer risk from astronaut exposure to space radiation, we determined whether microgravity present during spaceflight affects the body’s defenses against leukemogenesis. Human NK cells were cultured for 48 h under normal gravity and simulated microgravity (sμG), and cytotoxicity against K-562 (CML) and MOLT-4 (T-ALL) cells was measured using standard methodology or under continuous sμG. This brief exposure to sμG markedly reduced NK cytotoxicity against both leukemias, and these deleterious effects were more pronounced in continuous sμG. RNA-seq performed on NK cells from two additional healthy donors provided insight into the mechanism(s) by which sμG reduced cytotoxicity. Given our prior report of space radiation-induced human T-ALL in vivo, the reduced cytotoxicity against MOLT-4 is striking and raises the possibility that μG may increase astronaut risk of leukemogenesis during prolonged missions beyond LEO.
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- 2024
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4. Cache Cohort GPU Scheduling.
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Vinay Ramakrishnaiah, Bradford M. Beckmann, Pete Ehrett, René van Oostrum, and Keith Lowery
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- 2024
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5. The formation of planetary systems with SPICA
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Kamp, I., Honda, M., Nomura, H., Audard, M., Fedele, D., Waters, L. B. F. M., Aikawa, Y., Banzatti, A., Bowey, J. E., Bradford, M., Dominik, C., Furuya, K., Habart, E., Ishihara, D., Johnstone, D., Kennedy, G., Kim, M., Kral, Q., Lai, S. P., Larsson, B., McClure, M., Miotello, A., Momose, M., Nakagawa, T., Naylor, D., Nisini, B., Notsu, S., Onaka, T., Pantin, E., Podio, L., Marichalar, P. Riviere, Rocha, W. R. M., Roelfsema, P., Santos, F., Shimonishi, T., Tang, Y. W., Takami, M., Tazaki, R., Wolf, S., Wyatt, M., and Ysard, N.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In this era of spatially resolved observations of planet forming disks with ALMA and large ground-based telescopes such as the VLT, Keck and Subaru, we still lack statistically relevant information on the quantity and composition of the material that is building the planets, such as the total disk gas mass, the ice content of dust, and the state of water in planetesimals. SPICA is an infrared space mission concept developed jointly by JAXA and ESA to address these questions. The key unique capabilities of SPICA that enable this research are (1) the wide spectral coverage 10-220 micron, (2) the high line detection sensitivity of (1-2) 10-19 W m-2 with R~2000-5000 in the far-IR (SAFARI) and 10-20 W m-2 with R~29000 in the mid-IR (SMI, spectrally resolving line profiles), (3) the high far-IR continuum sensitivity of 0.45 mJy (SAFARI), and (4) the observing efficiency for point source surveys. This paper details how mid- to far-IR infrared spectra will be unique in measuring the gas masses and water/ice content of disks and how these quantities evolve during the planet forming period. These observations will clarify the crucial transition when disks exhaust their primordial gas and further planet formation requires secondary gas produced from planetesimals. The high spectral resolution mid-IR is also unique for determining the location of the snowline dividing the rocky and icy mass reservoirs within the disk and how the divide evolves during the build-up of planetary systems. Infrared spectroscopy (mid- to far-IR) of key solid state bands is crucial for assessing whether extensive radial mixing, which is part of our Solar System history, is a general process occurring in most planetary systems and whether extrasolar planetesimals are similar to our Solar System comets/asteroids. ... (abbreviated), Comment: accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2021
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6. Predict; Don't React for Enabling Efficient Fine-Grain DVFS in GPUs.
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Srikant Bharadwaj, Shomit Das, Kaushik Mazumdar, Bradford M. Beckmann, and Stephen Kosonocky
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- 2023
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7. A Research Retrospective on AMD's Exascale Computing Journey.
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Gabriel H. Loh, Michael J. Schulte, Mike Ignatowski, Vignesh Adhinarayanan, Shaizeen Aga, Derrick Aguren, Varun Agrawal, Ashwin M. Aji, Johnathan Alsop, Paul T. Bauman, Bradford M. Beckmann, Majed Valad Beigi, Sergey Blagodurov, Travis Boraten, Michael Boyer, William C. Brantley, Noel Chalmers, Shaoming Chen, Kevin Cheng, Michael L. Chu, David Cownie, Nicholas Curtis, Joris Del Pino, Nam Duong, Alexandru Dutu, Yasuko Eckert, Christopher Erb, Chip Freitag, Joseph L. Greathouse, Sudhanva Gurumurthi, Anthony Gutierrez, Khaled Hamidouche, Sachin Hossamani, Wei Huang 0004, Mahzabeen Islam, Nuwan Jayasena, John Kalamatianos, Onur Kayiran, Jagadish Kotra, Alan Lee, Daniel Lowell, Niti Madan, Abhinandan Majumdar, Nicholas Malaya, Srilatha Manne, Susumu Mashimo, Damon McDougall, Elliot Mednick, Michael Mishkin, Mark Nutter, Indrani Paul, Matthew Poremba, Brandon Potter, Kishore Punniyamurthy, Sooraj Puthoor, Steven E. Raasch, Karthik Rao, Gregory Rodgers, Marko Scrbak, Mohammad Seyedzadeh, John Slice, Vilas Sridharan, René van Oostrum, Eric Van Tassell, Abhinav Vishnu, Samuel Wasmundt, Mark Wilkening, Noah Wolfe, Mark Wyse, Adithya Yalavarti, and Dmitri Yudanov
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- 2023
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8. Classification of variants of reduced penetrance in high-penetrance cancer susceptibility genes: Framework for genetics clinicians and clinical scientists by CanVIG-UK (Cancer Variant Interpretation Group-UK)
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Turnbull, C., Garrett, A., Loong, L., Choi, S., Torr, B., Allen, S., Durkie, M., Callaway, A., Drummond, J., Burghel, G.J., Robinson, R., Berry, I.R., Wallace, A.J., Eccles, D.M., Tischkowitz, M., Ellard, S., Hanson, H., Baple, E., Evans, D.G., Woodward, E., Lalloo, F., Samant, S., Lucassen, A., Znaczko, A., Shaw, A., Ansari, A., Kumar, A., Donaldson, A., Murray, A., Ross, A., Taylor-Beadling, A., Taylor, A., Innes, A., Brady, A., Kulkarni, A., Hogg, A.C., Bowden, A. Ramsay, Hadonou, A., Coad, B., McIldowie, B., Speight, B., DeSouza, B., Mullaney, B., McKenna, C., Brewer, C., Olimpio, C., Clabby, C., Crosby, C., Jenkins, C., Armstrong, C., Bowles, C., Brooks, C., Byrne, C., Maurer, C., Baralle, D., Chubb, D., Stobo, D., Moore, D., O'Sullivan, D., Donnelly, D., Randhawa, D., Halliday, D., Atkinson, E., Rauter, E., Johnston, E., Maher, E., Sofianopoulou, E., Petrides, E., McRonald, F., Pelz, F., Frayling, I., Corbett, G., Rea, G., Clouston, H., Powell, H., Williamson, H., Carley, H., Thomas, H.J.W., Tomlinson, I., Cook, J., Hoyle, J., Tellez, J., Whitworth, J., Williams, J., Murray, J., Campbell, J., Tolmie, J., Field, J., Mason, J., Burn, J., Bruty, J., Callaway, J., Grant, J., Del Rey Jimenez, J., Pagan, J., VanCampen, J., Barwell, J., Monahan, K., Tatton-Brown, K., Ong, K.R., Murphy, K., Andrews, K., Mokretar, K., Cadoo, K., Smith, K., Baker, K., Brown, K., Reay, K., McKay Bounford, K., Bradshaw, K., Russell, K., Stone, K., Snape, K., Crookes, L., Reed, L., Taggart, L., Yarram, L., Cobbold, L., Walker, L., Hawkes, L., Busby, L., Izatt, L., Kiely, L., Hughes, L., Side, L., Sarkies, L., Greenhalgh, K.-L., Shanmugasundaram, M., Duff, M., Bartlett, M., Watson, M., Owens, M., Bradford, M., Huxley, M., Slean, M., Ryten, M., Smith, M., Ahmed, M., Roberts, N., O'Brien, C., Middleton, O., Tarpey, P., Logan, P., Dean, P., May, P., Brace, P., Tredwell, R., Harrison, R., Hart, R., Kirk, R., Martin, R., Nyanhete, R., Wright, R., Davidson, R., Cleaver, R., Talukdar, S., Butler, S., Sampson, J., Ribeiro, S., Dell, S., Mackenzie, S., Hegarty, S., Albaba, S., McKee, S., Palmer-Smith, S., Heggarty, S., MacParland, S., Greville-Heygate, S., Daniels, S., Prapa, S., Abbs, S., Tennant, S., Hardy, S., MacMahon, S., McVeigh, T., Foo, T., Bedenham, T., Cranston, T., McDevitt, T., Clowes, V., Tripathi, V., McConnell, V., Woodwaer, N., Wallis, Y., Kemp, Z., Mullan, G., Pierson, L., Rainey, L., Joyce, C., Timbs, A., Reuther, A.-M., Frugtniet, B., Husher, C., Lawn, C., Corbett, C., Nocera-Jijon, D., Reay, D., Cross, E., Ryan, F., Lindsay, H., Oliver, J., Dring, J., Spiers, J., Harper, J., Ciucias, K., Connolly, L., Tsang, M., Brown, R., Shepherd, S., Begum, S., Tadiso, T., Linton-Willoughby, T., Heppell, H., Sahan, K., Worrillow, L., Allen, Z., Watt, C., Hegarty, M., Mitchell, R., Coles, R., Nickless, G., Cojocaru, E., Doal, I., Sava, F., McCarthy, C., Jeeneea, R., Goudie, D., McConachie, M., Botosneanu, S., Kavanaugh, G., Sherlaw, C., Tsoulaki, O., Forde, C., Petley, E., Jones, A.-B., Oprych, K., Pryde, S., Hyder, Z., Elkhateeb, N., Braham, R., Hanington, L., Huntley, C., Irving, R., Sadan, A., Ramos, M., Elliot, C., Wren, D., Lobo, D., McLean, J., May, D., Kearney, L., Campbell, T., Asakura, K., Alwadi, L., O’Shea, R., Gabriel, J., Chiecchio, L., Bowman, P., Sutton, L.A., Walsh, C., Cloke, V., Ucanok, D., Davies, J., Pleasance, B., Maguire, E., Whaite, A., Best, S., Westbury, S., Logan, A., Navarajasegaran, D., Bench, A., Wightman, P., Cartwright, A., Higgs, E., J.Bott, Whitehouse, H., Stevens, J., Martin, D., Dunlop, J., Thomas, S., Sau, C., Farndon, S., Coleman, N., Angelini, P., Massey, H., Rowlands, C., Garcia-Petit, C., Gillespie, K., Alder, A., Middleton, E., Cassidy, C., Orfali, N., Webb, A., Luharia, A., Walker, N., Charlton, J., Andreou, A., Peddie, J., Khan, M., Wilkinson, L., Bezuidenhout, H., Edis, M., Callard, A., Ostrowski, P., Moverley, P., Bean, K., Dunne, A., Moleirinho, A., Waller, S., Cox, K., Greensmith, L., Brittle, A., Gossan, N., Freestone, L., Shak, C., Langford, T., Clinch, Y., Livesey, H., Borland, S., Joshi, A., Wall, K., Whitworth, A., Wilsdon, A., Edgerley, K., Pugh, S., Chrysochoidi, N., Mutch, S., McMullan, C., Johnston, Y., Muraru, M., May, A., Begum, R., Smith, C., Patel, R., Bhatnagar, I., Brown, D., Willan, J., Taylor, S., Jones, K., Ramsden, C., Taiwo, O., Jaudzemaite, J., Sharmin, R., Young, L., C.O’Dubhshlaine, McSorley, L., Rodriguez, I. Abreu, Lillis, S., Alexopoulos, P., Mortensson, E., Kingham, L., Moore, R., Kosicka-Slawinska, M., Aslam, S., Wells, R., Carter, A., Warren, H., Rolf, E., Reed, H., Pearce, L., Lock, D., Ali, F., Kolozi, A., White, N., Wood, D., Hayden, C., Garrett, Alice, Allen, Sophie, Durkie, Miranda, Burghel, George J., Robinson, Rachel, Callaway, Alison, Field, Joanne, Frugtniet, Bethan, Palmer-Smith, Sheila, Grant, Jonathan, Pagan, Judith, McDevitt, Trudi, Rowlands, Charlie F., McVeigh, Terri, Hanson, Helen, and Turnbull, Clare
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- 2024
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9. Prescribed Burning Alters Insects and Wood Decay in a Sagebrush-Steppe Rangeland in Southwestern Idaho, United States
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Page-Dumroese, Deborah S., Cook, Stephen P., Kard, Bradford M., Jurgensen, Martin F., Miller, Chris A., and Tirocke, Joanne M.
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- 2023
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10. Initial Graphics Exchange Specification (IGES), version 2.0
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1983
11. Guidelines for exchangeable APT data packages : APT part programmer's manual
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1980
12. Guidelines for exchangeable APT data packages : final report
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1980
13. Guidelines for exchangeable APT data packages : APT postprocessor specifications
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1980
14. A glossary of terms for robotics
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1981
15. Interface standards for automated coal mining equipment
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Smith, Bradford M.
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- 1977
16. Optimizing GPU Cache Policies for MI Workloads
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Alsop, Johnathan, Sinclair, Matthew D., Bharadwaj, Srikant, Dutu, Alexandru, Gutierrez, Anthony, Kayiran, Onur, LeBeane, Michael, Puthoor, Sooraj, Zhang, Xianwei, Yeh, Tsung Tai, and Beckmann, Bradford M.
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Computer Science - Hardware Architecture - Abstract
In recent years, machine intelligence (MI) applications have emerged as a major driver for the computing industry. Optimizing these workloads is important but complicated. As memory demands grow and data movement overheads increasingly limit performance, determining the best GPU caching policy to use for a diverse range of MI workloads represents one important challenge. To study this, we evaluate 17 MI applications and characterize their behaviors using a range of GPU caching strategies. In our evaluations, we find that the choice of caching policy in GPU caches involves multiple performance trade-offs and interactions, and there is no one-size-fits-all GPU caching policy for MI workloads. Based on detailed simulation results, we motivate and evaluate a set of cache optimizations that consistently match the performance of the best static GPU caching policies., Comment: Extended version of short paper published in the 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Workload Characterization
- Published
- 2019
17. The global abundance of tree palms
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Muscarella, R, Emilio, T, Phillips, OL, Lewis, SL, Slik, F, Baker, WJ, Couvreur, TLP, Eiserhardt, WL, Svenning, JC, Affum-Baffoe, K, Aiba, SI, de Almeida, EC, de Almeida, SS, de Oliveira, EA, Álvarez-Dávila, E, Alves, LF, Alvez-Valles, CM, Carvalho, FA, Guarin, FA, Andrade, A, Aragão, LEOC, Murakami, AA, Arroyo, L, Ashton, PS, Corredor, GAA, Baker, TR, de Camargo, PB, Barlow, J, Bastin, JF, Bengone, NN, Berenguer, E, Berry, N, Blanc, L, Böhning-Gaese, K, Bonal, D, Bongers, F, Bradford, M, Brambach, F, Brearley, FQ, Brewer, SW, Camargo, JLC, Campbell, DG, Castilho, CV, Castro, W, Catchpole, D, Cerón Martínez, CE, Chen, S, Chhang, P, Cho, P, Chutipong, W, Clark, C, Collins, M, Comiskey, JA, Medina, MNC, Costa, FRC, Culmsee, H, David-Higuita, H, Davidar, P, del Aguila-Pasquel, J, Derroire, G, Di Fiore, A, Van Do, T, Doucet, JL, Dourdain, A, Drake, DR, Ensslin, A, Erwin, T, Ewango, CEN, Ewers, RM, Fauset, S, Feldpausch, TR, Ferreira, J, Ferreira, LV, Fischer, M, Franklin, J, Fredriksson, GM, Gillespie, TW, Gilpin, M, Gonmadje, C, Gunatilleke, AUN, Hakeem, KR, Hall, JS, Hamer, KC, Harris, DJ, Harrison, RD, Hector, A, Hemp, A, Herault, B, Pizango, CGH, Coronado, ENH, Hubau, W, Hussain, MS, Ibrahim, FH, Imai, N, Joly, CA, Joseph, S, Anitha, K, Kartawinata, K, Kassi, J, and Killeen, TJ
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above-ground biomass ,abundance patterns ,Arecaceae ,local abiotic conditions ,Neotropics ,pantropical biogeography ,tropical rainforest ,wood density ,Ecology ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Ecological Applications - Abstract
Aim: Palms are an iconic, diverse and often abundant component of tropical ecosystems that provide many ecosystem services. Being monocots, tree palms are evolutionarily, morphologically and physiologically distinct from other trees, and these differences have important consequences for ecosystem services (e.g., carbon sequestration and storage) and in terms of responses to climate change. We quantified global patterns of tree palm relative abundance to help improve understanding of tropical forests and reduce uncertainty about these ecosystems under climate change. Location: Tropical and subtropical moist forests. Time period: Current. Major taxa studied: Palms (Arecaceae). Methods: We assembled a pantropical dataset of 2,548 forest plots (covering 1,191 ha) and quantified tree palm (i.e., ≥10 cm diameter at breast height) abundance relative to co-occurring non-palm trees. We compared the relative abundance of tree palms across biogeographical realms and tested for associations with palaeoclimate stability, current climate, edaphic conditions and metrics of forest structure. Results: On average, the relative abundance of tree palms was more than five times larger between Neotropical locations and other biogeographical realms. Tree palms were absent in most locations outside the Neotropics but present in >80% of Neotropical locations. The relative abundance of tree palms was more strongly associated with local conditions (e.g., higher mean annual precipitation, lower soil fertility, shallower water table and lower plot mean wood density) than metrics of long-term climate stability. Life-form diversity also influenced the patterns; palm assemblages outside the Neotropics comprise many non-tree (e.g., climbing) palms. Finally, we show that tree palms can influence estimates of above-ground biomass, but the magnitude and direction of the effect require additional work. Conclusions: Tree palms are not only quintessentially tropical, but they are also overwhelmingly Neotropical. Future work to understand the contributions of tree palms to biomass estimates and carbon cycling will be particularly crucial in Neotropical forests.
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- 2020
18. Performance standards and acceptable test conditions for preventive termiticide and insecticide treatments, termite baiting systems, and physical barriers for new structures or buildings under construction (pre-construction; during construction; post-construction)
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Kard, Bradford M., Oi, Faith M., Thorne, Barbara L., Forschler, Brian T., and Jones, Susan C.
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- 2021
19. Probing the High-Redshift Universe with SPICA: Toward the Epoch of Reionization and Beyond
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Egami, E., Gallerani, S., Schneider, R., Pallottini, A., Vallini, L., Sobacchi, E., Ferrara, A., Bianchi, S., Bocchio, M., Marassi, S., Armus, L., Spinoglio, L., Blain, A. W., Bradford, M., Clements, D. L., Dannerbauer, H., Fernández-Ontiveros, J. A., González-Alfonso, E., Griffin, M. J., Gruppioni, C., Kaneda, H., Kohno, K., Madden, S. C., Matsuhara, H., Najarro, P., Nakagawa, T., Oliver, S., Omukai, K., Onaka, T., Pearson, C., Perez-Fournon, I., Pérez-González, P. G., Schaerer, D., Scott, D., Serjeant, S., Smith, J. D., van der Tak, F. F. S., Wada, T., and Yajima, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
With the recent discovery of a dozen dusty star-forming galaxies and around 30 quasars at z>5 that are hyper-luminous in the infrared ($\mu$$L_{\rm IR}>10^{13}$ L$_{\odot}$, where $\mu$ is a lensing magnification factor), the possibility has opened up for SPICA, the proposed ESA M5 mid-/far-infrared mission, to extend its spectroscopic studies toward the epoch of reionization and beyond. In this paper, we examine the feasibility and scientific potential of such observations with SPICA's far-infrared spectrometer SAFARI, which will probe a spectral range (35-230 $\mu$m) that will be unexplored by ALMA and JWST. Our simulations show that SAFARI is capable of delivering good-quality spectra for hyper-luminous infrared galaxies (HyLIRGs) at z=5-10, allowing us to sample spectral features in the rest-frame mid-infrared and to investigate a host of key scientific issues, such as the relative importance of star formation versus AGN, the hardness of the radiation field, the level of chemical enrichment, and the properties of the molecular gas. From a broader perspective, SAFARI offers the potential to open up a new frontier in the study of the early Universe, providing access to uniquely powerful spectral features for probing first-generation objects, such as the key cooling lines of low-metallicity or metal-free forming galaxies (fine-structure and H2 lines) and emission features of solid compounds freshly synthesized by Population III supernovae. Ultimately, SAFARI's ability to explore the high-redshift Universe will be determined by the availability of sufficiently bright targets (whether intrinsically luminous or gravitationally lensed). With its launch expected around 2030, SPICA is ideally positioned to take full advantage of upcoming wide-field surveys such as LSST, SKA, Euclid, and WFIRST, which are likely to provide extraordinary targets for SAFARI., Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PASA (SPICA special issue)
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- 2018
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20. Immediate effects of acute Mars mission equivalent doses of SEP and GCR radiation on the murine gastrointestinal system-protective effects of curcumin-loaded nanolipoprotein particles (cNLPs)
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Jonathan Diaz, Bradford M. Kuhlman, Nicholas P. Edenhoffer, Angela C. Evans, Kelly A. Martin, Peter Guida, Adam Rusek, Anthony Atala, Matthew A. Coleman, Paul F. Wilson, Graça Almeida-Porada, and Christopher D. Porada
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space radiation ,HZE exposure ,gastrointestinal ,DNA damage ,apoptosis ,H2AX foci ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Introduction: Missions beyond low Earth orbit (LEO) will expose astronauts to ionizing radiation (IR) in the form of solar energetic particles (SEP) and galactic cosmic rays (GCR) including high atomic number and energy (HZE) nuclei. The gastrointestinal (GI) system is documented to be highly radiosensitive with even relatively low dose IR exposures capable of inducing mucosal lesions and disrupting epithelial barrier function. IR is also an established risk factor for colorectal cancer (CRC) with several studies examining long-term GI effects of SEP/GCR exposure using tumor-prone APC mouse models. Studies of acute short-term effects of modeled space radiation exposures in wildtype mouse models are more limited and necessary to better define charged particle- induced GI pathologies and test novel medical countermeasures (MCMs) to promote astronaut safety.Methods: In this study, we performed ground-based studies where male and female C57BL/6J mice were exposed to γ-rays, 50 MeV protons, or 1 GeV/n Fe-56 ions at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory (NSRL) with histology and immunohistochemistry endpoints measured in the first 24 h post-irradiation to define immediate SEP/GCR-induced GI alterations.Results: Our data show that unlike matched γ-ray controls, acute exposures to protons and iron ions disrupts intestinal function and induces mucosal lesions, vascular congestion, epithelial barrier breakdown, and marked enlargement of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue. We also measured kinetics of DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair using gamma-H2AX- specific antibodies and apoptosis via TUNEL labeling, noting the induction and disappearance of extranuclear cytoplasmic DNA marked by gamma-H2AX only in the charged particle-irradiated samples. We show that 18 h pre-treatment with curcumin-loaded nanolipoprotein particles (cNLPs) delivered via IV injection reduces DSB-associated foci levels and apoptosis and restore crypt villi lengths.Discussion: These data improve our understanding of physiological alterations in the GI tract immediately following exposures to modeled space radiations and demonstrates effectiveness of a promising space radiation MCM.
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- 2023
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21. Deadline-Aware Offloading for High-Throughput Accelerators.
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Tsung Tai Yeh, Matthew D. Sinclair, Bradford M. Beckmann, and Timothy G. Rogers
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- 2021
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22. Experimental and Numerical Study of Flexural-Torsional Buckling of Web-Tapered High-Strength Steel I-Beams
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Le, T., Bradford, M. A., Valipour, H. R., di Prisco, Marco, Series Editor, Chen, Sheng-Hong, Series Editor, Vayas, Ioannis, Series Editor, Kumar Shukla, Sanjay, Series Editor, Sharma, Anuj, Series Editor, Kumar, Nagesh, Series Editor, Wang, Chien Ming, Series Editor, Dao, Vinh, editor, and Kitipornchai, Sritawat, editor
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- 2021
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23. Effect of the Traffic Load Distribution on the Progressive Collapse of a Cable-Stayed Bridge Under Blast Load
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Hashemi, S. K., Valipour, H. R., and Bradford, M. A.
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- 2021
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24. Independent Forward Progress of Work-groups.
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Alexandru Dutu, Matthew D. Sinclair, Bradford M. Beckmann, David A. Wood 0001, and Marcus Chow
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- 2020
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25. Kite: A Family of Heterogeneous Interposer Topologies Enabled via Accurate Interconnect Modeling.
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Srikant Bharadwaj, Jieming Yin, Bradford M. Beckmann, and Tushar Krishna
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- 2020
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26. Reverse Engineering a Bronze Cannon from the La Belle Shipwreck
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Selden, Jr, Robert Z. and Jones, Bradford M.
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- 2021
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27. Adaptive Task Aggregation for High-Performance Sparse Solvers on GPUs.
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Ahmed E. Helal, Ashwin M. Aji, Michael L. Chu, Bradford M. Beckmann, and Wu-chun Feng
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- 2019
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28. Killi: Runtime Fault Classification to Deploy Low Voltage Caches without MBIST.
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Shrikanth Ganapathy, John Kalamatianos, Bradford M. Beckmann, Steven Raasch, and Lukasz G. Szafaryn
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- 2019
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29. Autonomous Data-Race-Free GPU Testing.
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Tuan Ta, Xianwei Zhang, Anthony Gutierrez, and Bradford M. Beckmann
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- 2019
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30. Optimizing Hyperplane Sweep Operations Using Asynchronous Multi-grain GPU Tasks.
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Anirudh Mohan Kaushik, Ashwin M. Aji, Muhammad Amber Hassaan, Noel Chalmers, Noah Wolfe, Scott Moe, Sooraj Puthoor, and Bradford M. Beckmann
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- 2019
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31. Optimizing GPU Cache Policies for MI Workloads.
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Johnathan Alsop, Xianwei Zhang, Tsung Tai Yeh, Bradford M. Beckmann, Matthew D. Sinclair, Srikant Bharadwaj, Alexandru Dutu, Anthony Gutierrez, Onur Kayiran, Michael LeBeane, Brandon Potter, and Sooraj Puthoor
- Published
- 2019
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32. Mound-Building Ants and Associated Termites on Goodale's Cutoff along the Oregon Trail
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Kard, Bradford M., primary and Cook, Stephen P., additional
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- 2023
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33. Animal Husbandry and Colonial Adaptive Behavior : Isotopic Insights from the La Belle Shipwreck Fauna
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Guiry, Eric, Jones, Bradford M., deFrance, Susan, Bruseth, James E., Durst, Jeff, and Richards, Michael P.
- Published
- 2018
34. Neurotoxins and Fillers in Facial Esthetic Surgery
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Bradford M. Towne, Pushkar Mehra, Bradford M. Towne, Pushkar Mehra
- Published
- 2019
35. Disentangling resource acquisition from interspecific behavioral aggression to understand the ecological dominance of a common, widespread temperate forest ant
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Warren, II, R. J., King, J. R., and Bradford, M. A.
- Published
- 2020
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36. Shock Excited Molecules in NGC 1266: ULIRG conditions at the center of a Bulge Dominated Galaxy
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Pellegrini, E. W., Smith, J. D., Wolfire, M. G., Draine, B. T., Crocker, A. F., Croxall, K. V., van der Werf, P., Dale, D. A., Rigopoulou, D., Wilson, C. D., Schinnerer, E., Groves, B. A., Kreckel, K., Sandstrom, K. M., Armus, L., Calzetti, D., Murphy, E. J., Walter, F., Koda, J., Bayet, E., Beirao, P., Bolatto, A. D., Bradford, M., Brinks, E., Hunt, L., Kennicutt, R., Knapen, J. H., Leroy, A. K., Rosolowsky, E., Vigroux, L., and Hopwood, R. H. B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the far infrared spectrum of NGC 1266, a S0 galaxy that contains a massive reservoir of highly excited molecular gas. Using the SPIRE-FTS, we detect the $^{12}$CO ladder up to J=(13-12), [C I] and [N II] lines, and also strong water lines more characteristic of UltraLuminous IR Galaxies (ULIRGs). The 12CO line emission is modeled with a combination of a low-velocity C-shock and a PDR. Shocks are required to produce the H2O and most of the high-J 12CO emission. Despite having an infrared luminosity thirty times less than a typical ULIRG, the spectral characteristics and physical conditions of the ISM of NGC 1266 closely resemble those of ULIRGs, which often harbor strong shocks and large-scale outflows., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL 11/15/2013
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- 2013
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37. Oversubscribed Command Queues in GPUs.
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Sooraj Puthoor, Xulong Tang, Joseph Gross, and Bradford M. Beckmann
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- 2018
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38. Lost in Abstraction: Pitfalls of Analyzing GPUs at the Intermediate Language Level.
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Anthony Gutierrez, Bradford M. Beckmann, Alexandru Dutu, Joseph Gross, Michael LeBeane, John Kalamatianos, Onur Kayiran, Matthew Poremba, Brandon Potter, Sooraj Puthoor, Matthew D. Sinclair, Mark Wyse, Jieming Yin, Xianwei Zhang, Akshay Jain, and Timothy G. Rogers
- Published
- 2018
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39. Cyclic behaviour of bolt and screw shear connectors in steel-timber composite (STC) beams
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Ataei, A., Chiniforush, A.A., Bradford, M., and Valipour, H.
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- 2019
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40. Herschel-SPIRE Imaging Spectroscopy of Molecular Gas in M82
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Kamenetzky, J., Glenn, J., Rangwala, N., Maloney, P., Bradford, M., Wilson, C. D., Bendo, G. J., Baes, M., Boselli, A., Cooray, A., Isaak, K. G., Lebouteiller, V., Madden, S., Panuzzo, P., Schirm, M. R. P., Spinoglio, L., and Wu, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present new Herschel-SPIRE imaging spectroscopy (194-671 microns) of the bright starburst galaxy M82. Covering the CO ladder from J=4-3 to J=13-12, spectra were obtained at multiple positions for a fully sampled ~ 3 x 3 arcminute map, including a longer exposure at the central position. We present measurements of 12CO, 13CO, [CI], [NII], HCN, and HCO+ in emission, along with OH+, H2O+ and HF in absorption and H2O in both emission and absorption, with discussion. We use a radiative transfer code and Bayesian likelihood analysis to model the temperature, density, column density, and filling factor of multiple components of molecular gas traced by 12CO and 13CO, adding further evidence to the high-J lines tracing a much warmer (~ 500 K), less massive component than the low-J lines. The addition of 13CO (and [CI]) is new and indicates that [CI] may be tracing different gas than 12CO. No temperature/density gradients can be inferred from the map, indicating that the single-pointing spectrum is descriptive of the bulk properties of the galaxy. At such a high temperature, cooling is dominated by molecular hydrogen. Photon-dominated region (PDR) models require higher densities than those indicated by our Bayesian likelihood analysis in order to explain the high-J CO line ratios, though cosmic-ray enhanced PDR models can do a better job reproducing the emission at lower densities. Shocks and turbulent heating are likely required to explain the bright high-J emission., Comment: Accepted to The Astrophysical Journal. 17 pages + 20 pages of appendix figures
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- 2012
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41. A Comprehensive View of a Strongly Lensed Planck-Associated Submillimeter Galaxy
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Fu, Hai, Jullo, E., Cooray, A., Bussmann, R. S., Ivison, R. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Djorgovski, S. G., Scoville, N., Yan, L., Riechers, D. A., Aguirre, J., Auld, R., Baes, M., Baker, A. J., Bradford, M., Cava, A., Clements, D. L., Dannerbauer, H., Dariush, A., De Zotti, G., Dole, H., Dunne, L., Dye, S., Eales, S., Frayer, D., Gavazzi, R., Gurwell, M., Harris, A. I., Herranz, D., Hopwood, R., Hoyos, C., Ibar, E., Jarvis, M. J., Kim, S., Leeuw, L., Lupu, R., Maddox, S., Martinez-Navajas, P., Michalowski, M. J., Negrello, M., Omont, A., Rosenman, M., Scott, D., Serjeant, S., Smail, I., Swinbank, A. M., Valiante, E., Verma, A., Vieira, J., Wardlow, J. L., and van der Werf, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-resolution maps of stars, dust, and molecular gas in a strongly lensed submillimeter galaxy (SMG) at z = 3.259. HATLAS12--00 is selected from the Herschel-Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) as a strong lens candidate mainly based on its unusually high 500um flux density (~300 mJy). It is the only high-redshift Planck detection in the 130 deg^2 H-ATLAS Phase 1 area. Keck Adaptive Optics images reveal a quadruply imaged galaxy in the K-band while the Submillimeter Array and the Extended Very Large Array show doubly imaged 880um and CO(1-0) sources, indicating differentiated distributions of the various components in the galaxy. In the source plane, the stars reside in three major kpc-scale clumps extended over ~1.6 kpc, the dust in a compact (~1 kpc) region ~3 kpc north of the stars, and the cold molecular gas in an extended (~7 kpc) disk ~5 kpc northeast of the stars. The emission from the stars, dust, and gas are magnified by ~17, 8, and 7 times, respectively, by four lensing galaxies at z ~ 1. Intrinsically, the lensed galaxy is a warm (T_dust ~ 40-65 K), hyper-luminous (L_IR ~ 1.7e13 Lsun; SFR ~ 2000 Msun/yr), gas-rich (M_gas/M_baryon ~ 70%), young (M_stellar/SFR ~ 20 Myr), and short-lived (M_gas/SFR ~ 40 Myr) starburst, without a significant active galactic nucleus. With physical properties similar to unlensed z > 2 SMGs, HATLAS12--00 offers a detailed view of a typical SMG through a powerful cosmic microscope., Comment: ApJ accepted version. Minor revisions. 12 pages, 4 figures, emulateapj style
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- 2012
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42. High Spectral Resolution Measurement of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect Null with Z-Spec
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Zemcov, M., Aguirre, J., Bock, J., Bradford, M., Czakon, N., Glenn, J., Golwala, S. R., Lupu, R., Maloney, P., Mauskopf, P., Million, E., Murphy, E. J., Naylor, B., Nguyen, H., Rosenman, M., Sayers, J., Scott, K. S., and Zmuidzinas, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect spectrum crosses through a null where dT_CMB = 0 near nu_0 = 217 GHz. In a cluster of galaxies, nu_0 can be shifted from the canonical thermal SZ effect value by corrections to the SZ effect scattering due to the properties of the inter-cluster medium. We have measured the SZ effect in the hot galaxy cluster RX J1347.5-1145 with Z-Spec, an R ~ 300 grating spectrometer sensitive between 185 and 305 GHz. These data comprise a high spectral resolution measurement around the null of the SZ effect and clearly exhibit the transition from negative to positive dT_CMB over the Z-Spec band. The SZ null position is measured to be nu_0 = 225.8 \pm 2.5 (stat.) \pm 1.2 (sys.) GHz, which differs from the canonical null frequency by 3.0 sigma and is evidence for modifications to the canonical thermal SZ effect shape. Assuming the measured shift in nu_0 is due only to relativistic corrections to the SZ spectrum, we place the limit T_e = 17.1 \pm 5.3 keV from the zero-point measurement alone. By simulating the response of the instrument to the sky, we are able to generate likelihood functions in {y_0, T_e, v_pec} space. For v_pec = 0 km/s, we measure the best fitting SZ model to be y_0 = 4.6 (+0.6, -0.9) x 10^-4, T_e,0 = 15.2 (+12,-7.4) keV. When v_pec is allowed to vary, a most probable value of v_pec = +450 \pm 810 km/s is found., Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, matches version published in April 2012 ApJ
- Published
- 2012
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43. Experimental and Numerical Study of Flexural-Torsional Buckling of Web-Tapered High-Strength Steel I-Beams
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Le, T., primary, Bradford, M. A., additional, and Valipour, H. R., additional
- Published
- 2020
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44. On the origin of M81 group extended dust emission
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Davies, J. I., Wilson, C. D., Auld, R., Baes, M., Barlow, M. J., Bendo, G. J., Bock, J. J., Boselli, A., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Cortese, L., Dwek, E., Eales, S. A., Elbaz, D., Galametz, M., Galliano, F., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Gomez, H. L., Griffin, M., Hony, S., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Madden, S., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Pohlen, M., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Sauvage, M., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Smith, M. W. L., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Srinivasan, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Galactic cirrus emission at far-infrared wavelengths affects many extragalactic observations. Separating this emission from that associated with extragalactic objects is both important and difficult. In this paper we discuss a particular case, the M81 group, and the identification of diffuse structures prominent in the infrared, but also detected at optical wavelengths. The origin of these structures has previously been controversial, ranging from them being the result of a past interaction between M81 and M82 or due to more local Galactic emission. We show that over of order a few arcminute scales the far-infrared (Herschel 250 &\mu&m) emission correlates spatially very well with a particular narrow velocity (2-3 km/s) component of the Galactic HI. We find no evidence that any of the far-infrared emission associated with these features actually originates in the M81 group. Thus we infer that the associated diffuse optical emission must be due to galactic light back scattered off dust in our galaxy. Ultra-violet observations pick out young stellar associations around M81, but no detectable far-infrared emission. We consider in detail one of the Galactic cirrus features, finding that the far-infrared HI relation breaks down below arc minute scales and that at smaller scales there can be quite large dust temperature variations., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2010
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45. Radial distribution of gas and dust in the two spiral galaxies M99 and M100
- Author
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Pohlen, M., Cortese, L., Smith, M. W. L., Eales, S. A., Boselli, A., Bendo, G. J., Gomez, H. L., Papageorgiou, A., Auld, R., Baes, M., Bock, J. J., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Dwek, E., Elbaz, D., Galametz, M., Galliano, F., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Griffin, M., Hony, S., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Madden, S., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Sauvage, M., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Srinivasan, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wilson, C. D., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeiliner, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
By combining Herschel-SPIRE data with archival Spitzer, HI, and CO maps, we investigate the spatial distribution of gas and dust in the two famous grand-design spirals M99 and M100 in the Virgo cluster. Thanks to the unique resolution and sensitivity of the Herschel-SPIRE photometer, we are for the first time able to measure the distribution and extent of cool, submillimetre (submm)-emitting dust inside and beyond the optical radius. We compare this with the radial variation in both the gas mass and the metallicity. Although we adopt a model-independent, phenomenological approach, our analysis provides important insights. We find the dust extending to at least the optical radius of the galaxy and showing breaks in its radial profiles at similar positions as the stellar distribution. The colour indices f350/f500 and f250/f350 decrease radially consistent with the temperature decreasing with radius. We also find evidence of an increasing gas to dust ratio with radius in the outer regions of both galaxies., Comment: LaTeX, 5 pages, 5 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics, Herschel Special Issue, in press as a Letter
- Published
- 2010
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46. Herschel-SPIRE observations of the disturbed galaxy NGC4438
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Cortese, L., Bendo, G. J., Boselli, A., Davies, J. I., Gomez, H. L., Pohlen, M., Auld, R., Baes, M., Bock, J. J., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Dwek, E., Eales, S. A., Elbaz, D., Galametz, M., Galliano, F., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Griffin, M., Hony, S., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Madden, S., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Sauvage, M., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Smith, M. W. L., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Srinivasan, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wilson, C. D., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Herschel-SPIRE observations of the perturbed galaxy NGC4438 in the Virgo cluster. These images reveal the presence of extra-planar dust up to ~4-5 kpc away from the galaxy's disk. The dust closely follows the distribution of the stripped atomic and molecular hydrogen, supporting the idea that gas and dust are perturbed in a similar fashion by the cluster environment. Interestingly, the extra-planar dust lacks a warm temperature component when compared to the material still present in the disk, explaining why it was missed by previous far-infrared investigations. Our study provides evidence for dust stripping in clusters of galaxies and illustrates the potential of Herschel data for our understanding of environmental effects on galaxy evolution., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication on the A&A Herschel Special Issue
- Published
- 2010
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47. Herschel photometric observations of the low metallicity dwarf galaxy NGC 1705
- Author
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O'Halloran, B., Galametz, M., Madden, S. C., Galliano, F., Hony, S., Sauvage, M., Pohlen, M., Bendo, G. J., Auld, R., Baes, M., Barlow, M. J., Bock, J. J., Boselli, A., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Cortese, L., Davies, J. I., Dwek, E., Eales, S. A., Elbaz, D., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Gomez, H. L., Griffin, M., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Smith, M. W. L., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Sundar, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wilson, C. D., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Herschel SPIRE and PACS photometeric observations of the low metallicity (Z ~ 0.35 solar) nearby dwarf galaxy, NGC 1705, in six wavelength bands as part of the Dwarf Galaxy Survey guaranteed time Herschel Key Program. We confirm the presence of two dominant circumnuclear IR-bright regions surrounding the central super star cluster that had been previously noted at mid-IR wavelengths and in the sub-mm by LABOCA. On constructing a global spectral energy distribution using the SPIRE and PACS photometry, in conjunction with archival IR measurements, we note the presence of an excess at sub-mm wavelengths. This excess suggests the presence of a significant cold dust component within NGC 1705 and was modeled as an additional cold component in the SED. Although alternative explanations for the sub-mm excess beyond 350 microns, such as changes to the dust emissivity cannot be ruled out, the most likely explanation for the observed submillimetre excess is that of an additional cold dust component., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A&A (Herschel special issue)
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
48. Mapping the interstellar medium in galaxies with Herschel/SPIRE
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Eales, S. A., Smith, M. W. L., Wilson, C. D., Bendo, G. J., Cortese, L., Pohlen, M., Boselli, A., Gomez, H. L., Auld, R., Baes, M., Barlow, M. J., Bock, J. J., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Davies, J. I., Dwek, E., Elbaz, D., Galametz, M., Galliano, F., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Griffin, M., Hony, S., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Madden, S., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Sauvage, M., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Spinoglio, L., Srinivasan, S., Stevens, J. A., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The standard method of mapping the interstellar medium in a galaxy, by observing the molecular gas in the CO 1-0 line and the atomic gas in the 21-cm line, is largely limited with current telescopes to galaxies in the nearby universe. In this letter, we use SPIRE observations of the galaxies M99 and M100 to explore the alternative approach of mapping the interstellar medium using the continuum emission from the dust. We have compared the methods by measuring the relationship between the star-formation rate and the surface density of gas in the galaxies. We find the two methods give relationships with a similar dispersion, confirming that observing the continuum emission from the dust is a promising method of mapping the interstellar medium in galaxies., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics in press
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Herschel photometric observations of the nearby low metallicity irregular galaxy NGC 6822
- Author
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Galametz, M., Madden, S. C., Galliano, F., Hony, S., Sauvage, M., Pohlen, M., Bendo, G. J., Auld, R., Baes, M., Barlow, M. J., Bock, J. J., Boselli, A., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Cortese, L., Davies, J. I., Dwek, E., Eales, S. A., Elbaz, D., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Gomez, H. L., Griffin, M., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Sacchi, N., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Smith, M. W. L., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Sundar, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wilson, C. D., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first Herschel PACS and SPIRE images of the low-metallicity galaxy NGC6822 observed from 70 to 500 mu and clearly resolve the HII regions with PACS and SPIRE. We find that the ratio 250/500 is dependent on the 24 mu surface brightness in NGC6822, which would locally link the heating processes of the coldest phases of dust in the ISM to the star formation activity. We model the SEDs of some regions HII regions and less active regions across the galaxy and find that the SEDs of HII regions show warmer ranges of dust temperatures. We derive very high dust masses when graphite is used in our model to describe carbon dust. Using amorphous carbon, instead, requires less dust mass to account for submm emission due to its lower emissivity properties. This indicates that SED models including Herschel constraints may require different dust properties than commonly used., Comment: Accepted for publication in the A&A Herschel first results Special Issue
- Published
- 2010
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- View/download PDF
50. The central region of spiral galaxies as seen by Herschel. M81, M99 and M100
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Sauvage, M., Sacchi, N., Bendo, G. J., Boselli, A., Pohlen, M., Wilson, C. D., Auld, R., Baes, M., Barlow, M. J., Bock, J. J., Bradford, M., Buat, V., Castro-Rodriguez, N., Chanial, P., Charlot, S., Ciesla, L., Clements, D. L., Cooray, A., Cormier, D., Cortese, L., Davies, J. I., Dwek, E., Eales, S. A., Elbaz, D., Galametz, M., Galliano, F., Gear, W. K., Glenn, J., Gomez, H. L., Griffin, M., Hony, S., Isaak, K. G., Levenson, L. R., Lu, N., Madden, S. C., O'Halloran, B., Okumura, K., Oliver, S., Page, M. J., Panuzzo, P., Papageorgiou, A., Parkin, T. J., Perez-Fournon, I., Rangwala, N., Rigby, E. E., Roussel, H., Rykala, A., Schulz, B., Schirm, M. R. P., Smith, M. W. L., Spinoglio, L., Stevens, J. A., Srinivasan, S., Symeonidis, M., Trichas, M., Vaccari, M., Vigroux, L., Wozniak, H., Wright, G. S., and Zeilinger, W. W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
With appropriate spatial resolution, images of spiral galaxies in thermal infrared (~10 micron and beyond) often reveal a bright central component, distinct from the stellar bulge, superimposed on a disk with prominent spiral arms. ISO and Spitzer studies have shown that much of the scatter in the mid-infrared colors of spiral galaxies is related to changes in the relative importance of these two components, rather than to other modifications, such as the morphological type or star formation rate, that affect the properties of the galaxy as a whole. With the Herschel imaging capability from 70 to 500 micron, we revisit this two-component approach at longer wavelengths, to see if it still provides a working description of the brightness distribution of galaxies, and to determine its implications on the interpretation of global far-infrared properties of galaxies., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for the A&A Herschel Special Issue
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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