460 results on '"Chavez, Miguel"'
Search Results
2. General Linear-Expansion Shooting Techniques Based on Minimization of Intra-Iteration Errors
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Garcia-Chavez, Miguel Angel, Yakovlev, Alexei, Chen, Ya Kun, Wang, Yan Alexander, Maruani, Jean, Series Editor, Hsu, Chao-Ping, Series Editor, Brändas, Erkki, Editorial Board Member, Cederbaum, Lorenz, Editorial Board Member, Glushkov, Alexander, Editorial Board Member, Gross, E. K. U., Editorial Board Member, Hirao, Kimihiko, Editorial Board Member, Levine, Raphael D., Editorial Board Member, Lindenberg, Katja, Editorial Board Member, Lund, Anders, Editorial Board Member, Nascimento, M. A. Chaer, Editorial Board Member, Piecuch, Piotr, Editorial Board Member, Quack, Martin, Editorial Board Member, Schwartz, Steven D., Editorial Board Member, Tadjer, Alia, Editorial Board Member, Taieb, Richard, Editorial Board Member, Vasyutinskii, Oleg, Editorial Board Member, Wang, Yan A., Editorial Board Member, Grabowski, Ireneusz, editor, Słowik, Karolina, editor, and Brändas, Erkki J., editor
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- 2024
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3. E-commerce of Peruvian SMEs: Determinants of internet sales before and during COVID-19
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Ortiz-Chávez, Miguel Angel, Mendoza-Pumapillo, José Enrique, Dilas-Jiménez, Josue Otoniel, and Mugruza-Vassallo, Carlos Andrés
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- 2024
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4. The Digital Classroom: How to Leverage Social Media for Infectious Diseases Education
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Nematollahi, Saman, Minter, Daniel J, Barlow, Brooke, Nolan, Nathanial S, Spicer, Jennifer O, Wooten, Darcy, Cortes-Penfield, Nicolas, Barlow, Ashley, Chavez, Miguel A, McCarty, Todd, Abdoler, Emily, and Escota, Gerome V
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Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,COVID-19 ,Communicable Diseases ,Education ,Medical ,Humans ,Learning ,Social Media ,social media ,medical education ,digital strategy ,infectious diseases ,virtual learning ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Microbiology - Abstract
Social media (SoMe) platforms have been increasingly used by infectious diseases (ID) learners and educators in recent years. This trend has only accelerated with the changes brought to our educational spaces by the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. Given the increasingly diverse SoMe landscape, educators may find themselves struggling with how to effectively use these tools. In this Viewpoint we describe how to use SoMe platforms (e.g., Twitter, podcasts, and open-access online content portals) in medical education, highlight medical education theories supporting their use, and discuss how educators can engage with these learning tools effectively. We focus on how these platforms harness key principles of adult learning and provide a guide for educators in the effective use of SoMe tools in educating ID learners. Finally, we suggest how to effectively interact with and leverage these increasingly important digital platforms.
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- 2022
5. Associations of race and socioeconomic status with outcomes after intracranial meningioma resection: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Lei, Haoyi, Tabor, Joanna K., O’Brien, Joseph, Qin, Ruihan, Pappajohn, Alexandros F., Chavez, Miguel A. Millares, Morales-Valero, Saul F., and Moliterno, Jennifer
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- 2023
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6. Systemic Analysis as an Institutional Practice of Cultural Humility
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Abe, Jennifer Shimako, primary, Misa-Escalante, Kim, additional, Henderson, Hillary, additional, and Chavez, Miguel, additional
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- 2023
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7. The Gaia-ESO Survey: Oxygen abundance in the Galactic thin and thick disks
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Franchini, Mariagrazia, Morossi, Carlo, Di Marcantonio, Paolo, Chavez, Miguel, Adibekyan, Vardan, Bensby, Thomas, Bragaglia, Angela, Gonneau, Anais, Heiter, Ulrike, Kordopatis, Georges, Magrini, Laura, Romano, Donatella, Sbordone, Luca, Smiljanic, Rodolfo, Gilmore, Gerry, Randich, Sofia, Bayo, Amelia, Carraro, Giovanni, Morbidelli, Lorenzo, and Zaggia, Simone
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze the oxygen abundances of a stellar sample representative of the two major Galactic populations: the thin and thick disks. The aim is to investigate the differences between members of the Galactic disks and to contribute to the understanding on the origin of oxygen chemical enrichment in the Galaxy. The analysis is based on the [O\,{\sc i}]=6300.30\,\AA~ oxygen line in HR spectra ($R\sim$52,500) obtained from the GES Survey. By comparing the observed spectra with a theoretical dataset, computed in LTE with the SPECTRUM synthesis and ATLAS12 codes, we derive the oxygen abundances of 516 FGK dwarfs for which we have previously measured carbon abundances. Based on kinematic, chemical and dynamical considerations we identify 20 thin and 365 thick disk members. We study potential trends of both subsamples in terms of their chemistry ([O/H], [O/Fe], [O/Mg], and [C/O] versus [Fe/H] and [Mg/H]), age, and position in the Galaxy. Main results are: (a) [O/H] and [O/Fe] ratios versus [Fe/H] show systematic differences between thin and thick disk stars with enhanced O abundance of thick disk stars with respect to thin disk members and a monotonic decrement of [O/Fe] with increasing metallicity, even at metal-rich regime; (b) a smooth correlation of [O/Mg] with age in both populations, suggesting that this abundance ratio can be a good proxy of stellar ages within the Milky Way; (c) thin disk members with [Fe/H]$\simeq0$ display a [C/O] ratio smaller than the solar value, suggesting a possibly outward migration of the Sun from lower Galactocentric radii., Comment: 23 pages 9 figures Accepted on 30-October 2020; to be published in AJ
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- 2020
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8. AzTEC Survey of the Central Molecular Zone: Data Reduction, Analysis, and Preliminary Results
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Tang, Yuping, Wang, Q. Daniel, Wilson, Grant W., Heyer, Mark H., Gutermuth, Robert A., Schloerb, Peter, Yun, Min S., Bally, John, Loinard, Laurent, Silich, Sergiy, Chávez, Miguel, Haggard, Daryl, Montaña, Alfredo, Sánchez-Argüelles, David, Zeballos, Milagros, Zavala, Jorge A., and León-Tavares, Jonathan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a large-scale survey of the central molecular zone (CMZ) of our Galaxy, as well as a monitoring program of Sgr A*, with the AzTEC/Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT) in the 1.1 mm continuum. Our 1.1 mm map covers the main body of the CMZ over a field of $1.6 \times 1.1$ deg$^2$ with an angular resolution of $10.5''$ and a depth of 15 mJy/beam. To account for the intensity loss due to the background removal process, we combine this map with lower resolution CSO/Bolocam and \textit{Planck}/HFI data to produce an effective full intensity 1.1 mm continuum map. With this map and existing \textit{Herschel} surveys, we have carried out a comprehensive analysis of the spectral energy distribution (SED) of dust in the CMZ. A key component of this analysis is the implementation of a model-based deconvolution approach, incorporating the Point Spread Functions (PSFs) of the different instruments, and hence recovering a significant amount of spatial information on angular scales larger than $10.5''$. The monitoring of Sgr A* was carried out as part of a worldwide, multi-wavelength campaign when the so-called G2 object was undergoing the pericenter passage around the massive black hole (MBH). Our preliminary results include 1) high-resolution maps of column density, temperature and dust spectral index across the CMZ; 2) a 1.1~mm light curve of Sgr A* showing an outburst of $140\%$ maximum amplitude on 9th May, 2014 but otherwise only stochastic variations of $10\%$ and no systematic long-term change, consistent with other observations., Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS
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- 2020
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9. Dust Populations in the Iconic Vega Planetary System Resolved by ALMA
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Matrà, Luca, Dent, William R. F., Wilner, David J., Marino, Sebastián, Wyatt, Mark C., Marshall, Jonathan P., Su, Kate Y. L., Chavez, Miguel, Hales, Antonio, Hughes, A. Meredith, Greaves, Jane S., and Corder, Stuartt A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Vega planetary system hosts the archetype of extrasolar Kuiper belts, and is rich in dust from the sub-au region out to 100's of au, suggesting intense dynamical activity. We present ALMA mm observations that detect and resolve the outer dust belt from the star for the first time. The interferometric visibilities show that the belt can be fit by a Gaussian model or by power-law models with a steep inner edge (at 60-80 au). The belt is very broad, extending out to at least 150-200 au. We strongly detect the star and set a stringent upper limit to warm dust emission previously detected in the infrared. We discuss three scenarios that could explain the architecture of Vega's planetary system, including the new {ALMA} constraints: no outer planets, a chain of low-mass planets, and a single giant planet. The planet-less scenario is only feasible if the outer belt was born with the observed sharp inner edge. If instead the inner edge is currently being truncated by a planet, then the planet must be $\gtrsim$6 M$_{\oplus}$ and at $\lesssim71$ au to have cleared its chaotic zone within the system age. In the planet chain scenario, outward planet migration and inward scattering of planetesimals could produce the hot and warm dust observed in the inner regions of the system. In the single giant planet scenario, an asteroid belt could be responsible for the warm dust, and mean motion resonances with the planet could put asteroids on star-grazing orbits, producing the hot dust., Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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10. Bioengineered optogenetic model of human neuromuscular junction.
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Vila, Olaia, Chavez, Miguel, Ma, Stephen, Yeager, Keith, Zholudeva, Lyandysha, Colón-Mercado, Jennifer, Qu, Yihuai, Nash, Trevor, Lai, Carmen, Feliciano, Carissa, Carter, Matthew, Kamm, Roger, Judge, Luke, Conklin, Bruce, Ward, Michael, McDevitt, Todd, and Vunjak-Novakovic, Gordana
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Disease modeling ,Human tissue models ,Myasthenia gravis ,Neuromuscular junction ,Optogenetics ,iPS cells ,Humans ,Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells ,Muscle ,Skeletal ,Neuromuscular Junction ,Optogenetics ,Reproducibility of Results - Abstract
Functional human tissues engineered from patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) hold great promise for investigating the progression, mechanisms, and treatment of musculoskeletal diseases in a controlled and systematic manner. For example, bioengineered models of innervated human skeletal muscle could be used to identify novel therapeutic targets and treatments for patients with complex central and peripheral nervous system disorders. There is a need to develop standardized and objective quantitative methods for engineering and using these complex tissues, in order increase their robustness, reproducibility, and predictiveness across users. Here we describe a standardized method for engineering an isogenic, patient specific human neuromuscular junction (NMJ) that allows for automated quantification of NMJ function to diagnose disease using a small sample of blood serum and evaluate new therapeutic modalities. By combining tissue engineering, optogenetics, microfabrication, optoelectronics and video processing, we created a novel platform for the precise investigation of the development and degeneration of human NMJ. We demonstrate the utility of this platform for the detection and diagnosis of myasthenia gravis, an antibody-mediated autoimmune disease that disrupts the NMJ function.
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- 2021
11. Proposal for the Design of an Artisan Dam (Tape) for the Water Resources Sustainability in Libertador Bolivar Commune, Manglaralto-Ecuador
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Carrión-Mero, Paúl, Briones-Bitar, Josué, Rivera-Vinces, Gabriel, Chávez, Miguel Á., Blanco-Torrens, Roberto, Leal Filho, Walter, Series Editor, Frankenberger, Fernanda, editor, and Tortato, Ubirata, editor
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- 2023
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12. Post-Quantum Digital Signatures for Bitcoin
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León-Chávez, Miguel Ángel, Perin, Lucas Pandolfo, Rodríguez-Henríquez, Francisco, Daimi, Kevin, editor, Dionysiou, Ioanna, editor, and El Madhoun, Nour, editor
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- 2023
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13. Synthetic spectroscopic indices for identifying multiple stellar populations in globular clusters
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Bertone, Emanuele, Chávez, Miguel, and Mendoza, J. César
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an investigation of synthetic spectroscopic indices that can plausibly help in identifying the presence of multiple stellar populations in globular clusters. The study is based on a new grid of stellar model atmospheres and high-resolution (R=500,000) synthetic spectra, that consider chemical partitions that have been singled out in Galactic globular clusters. The database is composed of 3472 model atmospheres and theoretical spectra calculated with the collection of Fortran codes DFSYNTHE, ATLAS9 and SYNTHE, developed by Robert L. Kurucz. They cover a range of effective temperature from 4300 to 7000 K, surface gravity from 2.0 to 5.0 dex and four different chemical compositions. A set of 19 spectroscopic indices were calculated from a degraded version (R=2500) of the theoretical spectra dataset. The set includes five indices previously used in the context of globular clusters analyses and 14 indices that we have newly defined by maximizing the capability of differentiating the chemical compositions. We explored the effects of atmospheric parameters on the index values and identified the optimal spectral diagnostics that allow to trace the signatures of objects of different stellar populations, located in the main sequence, the red giant branch and the horizontal branch. We found a suitable set of indices, that mostly involve molecular bands (in particular NH, but also CH and CN), that are very promising for spectroscopically identifying multiple stellar populations in globular clusters., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS main journal; 13 pages, 10 figures. The material presented in the paper is available through a dedicated web page: https://www.inaoep.mx/~modelos/gcindices.html
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- 2020
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14. Controllability Under Positive Constraints for Quasilinear Parabolic PDEs
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Nuñez-Chávez, Miguel R.
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,35K59, 93C20 (Primary) 35K15 (Secondary) - Abstract
This paper deals with the analysis of the internal control with constraint of positive kind of a parabolic PDE with nonlinear diffusion when the time horizon is large enough. The minimal controllability time will be strictly positive. We prove a global steady state constrained controllability result for a quasilinear parabolic with nonlinearity in the diffusion term. Then, under suitable dissipative assumption in the system and local controllability results, we conclude the result to any initial datum and any target trajectory., Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1711.07678 by other authors
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- 2019
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15. The Gaia-ESO Survey: Carbon abundance in the Galactic thin and thick disks
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Franchini, Mariagrazia, Morossi, Carlo, Di Marcantonio, Paolo, Chavez, Miguel, Adibekyan, Vardan Zh., Bayo, Amelia, Bensby, Thomas, Bragaglia, Angela, Calura, Francesco, Duffau, Sonia, Gonneau, Anais, Heiter, Ulrike, Kordopatis, Georges, Romano, Donatella, Sbordone, Luca, Smiljanic, Rodolfo, Tautvaisiene, Grazina, Van der Swaelmen, Mathieu, Mena, Elisa Delgado, Gilmore, Gerry, Randich, Sofia, Carraro, Giovanni, Hourihane, Anna, Magrini, Laura, Morbidelli, Lorenzo, Sousa, Sergio, and Worley, C. Clare
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
This paper focuses on carbon that is one of the most abundant elements in the Universe and is of high importance in the field of nucleosynthesis and galactic and stellar evolution. Even nowadays, the origin of carbon and the relative importance of massive and low- to intermediate-mass stars in producing it is still a matter of debate. In this paper we aim at better understanding the origin of carbon by studying the trends of [C/H], [C/Fe],and [C/Mg] versus [Fe/H], and [Mg/H] for 2133 FGK dwarf stars from the fifth Gaia-ESO Survey internal data release (GES iDR5). The availability of accurate parallaxes and proper motions from Gaia DR2 and radial velocities from GES iDR5 allows us to compute Galactic velocities, orbits and absolute magnitudes and, for 1751 stars, ages via a Bayesian approach. Three different selection methodologies have been adopted to discriminate between thin and thick disk stars. In all the cases, the two stellar groups show different abundance ratios, [C/H], [C/Fe], and [C/Mg], and span different age intervals, with the thick disk stars being, on average, older than those in the thin disk. The behaviours of [C/H], [C/Fe], and [C/Mg] versus [Fe/H], [Mg/H], and age all suggest that C is primarily produced in massive stars like Mg. The increase of [C/Mg] for young thin disk stars indicates a contribution from low-mass stars or the increased C production from massive stars at high metallicities due to the enhanced mass loss. The analysis of the orbital parameters Rmed and |Zmax| support an "inside-out" and "upside-down" formation scenario for the disks of Milky Way., Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures
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- 2019
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16. Gaia-ESO Survey: INTRIGOSS - A new library of High Resolution Synthetic Spectra
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Franchini, Mariagrazia, Morossi, Carlo, Di Marcantonio, Paolo, Chavez, Miguel, Gilmore, Gerry, Randich, Sofia, Flaccomio, Ettore, Koposov, Sergey E., Korn, Andreas J., Bayo, Amelia, Carraro, Giovanni, Casey, Andy, Franciosini, Elena, Hourihane, Anna, Jofre`, Paula, Lardo, Carmela, Lewis, James, Magrini, Laura, Morbidelli, Lorenzo, Sacco, G. G., Worley, Clare, and Zwitter, Tomaz
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a high resolution synthetic spectral library, INTRIGOSS, designed for studying FGK stars. The library is based on atmosphere models computed with specified individual element abundances via ATLAS12 code. Normalized SPectra (NSP) and surface Flux SPectra (FSP), in the 4830-5400 A, wavelength range, were computed with the SPECTRUM code. INTRIGOSS uses the solar composition by Grevesse et al. 2007 and four [alpha/Fe] abundance ratios and consists of 15,232 spectra. The synthetic spectra are computed with astrophysical gf-values derived by comparing synthetic predictions with a very high SNR solar spectrum and the UVES-U580 spectra of five cool giants. The validity of the NSPs is assessed by using the UVES-U580 spectra of 2212 stars observed in the framework of the Gaia-ESO Survey and characterized by homogeneous and accurate atmospheric parameter values and by detailed chemical compositions. The greater accuracy of NSPs with respect to spectra from the AMBRE, GES_Grid, PHOENIX, C14, and B17 synthetic spectral libraries is demonstrated by evaluating the consistency of the predictions of the different libraries for the UVES-U580 sample stars. The validity of the FSPs is checked by comparing their prediction with both observed spectral energy distribution and spectral indices. The comparison of FSPs with SEDs derived from ELODIE, INDO--U.S., and MILES libraries indicates that the former reproduce the observed flux distributions within a few percent and without any systematic trend. The good agreement between observational and synthetic Lick/SDSS indices shows that the predicted blanketing of FSPs well reproduces the observed one, thus confirming the reliability of INTRIGOSS FSPs., Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures
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- 2018
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17. Exposure to World Health Organization's AWaRe antibiotics and isolation of multidrug resistant bacteria: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Sulis, Giorgia, Sayood, Sena, Katukoori, Shashi, Bollam, Neha, George, Ige, Yaeger, Lauren H., Chavez, Miguel A., Tetteh, Emmanuel, Yarrabelli, Sindhu, Pulcini, Celine, Harbarth, Stephan, Mertz, Dominik, Sharland, Mike, Moja, Lorenzo, Huttner, Benedikt, and Gandra, Sumanth
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- 2022
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18. Operative Time as a Modifiable Risk Factor for Skull Base Surgical Morbidity: A Literature Review.
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Alok, Khaled, Chavez, Miguel Millares, Dincer, Alper, and Moliterno, Jennifer
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PREOPERATIVE risk factors , *SKULL tumors , *MEDICAL drainage , *NEUROSURGEONS , *SKULL base , *SURGEONS - Abstract
The article "Operative Time as a Modifiable Risk Factor for Skull Base Surgical Morbidity: A Literature Review" discusses how operative time is a crucial factor in postoperative morbidity and mortality for skull base surgeries. The authors highlight the importance of reducing operative time through various surgical approaches and techniques to improve patient outcomes. Strategies such as surgical adjuncts, surgeon experience, and early tumor blood supply eradication have shown to decrease operative time and enhance surgical outcomes. The article emphasizes the need for further research into operative efficiency to minimize morbidity in skull base operations. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2025
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19. The GALEX View of 'Boyajian's Star' (KIC 8462852)
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Davenport, James. R. A., Covey, Kevin R., Clarke, Riley W., Laycock, Zachery, Fleming, Scott W., Boyajian, Tabetha S., Montet, Benjamin T., Shiao, Bernie, Million, Chase C., Wilson, David J., Olmedo, Manuel, Mamajek, Eric E., Olmedo, Daniel, Chavez, Miguel, and Bertone, Emanuele
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The enigmatic star KIC 8462852, informally known as "Boyajian's Star", has exhibited unexplained variability from both short timescale (days) dimming events, and years-long fading in the Kepler mission. No single physical mechanism has successfully explained these observations to date. Here we investigate the ultraviolet variability of KIC 8462852 on a range of timescales using data from the GALEX mission that occurred contemporaneously with the Kepler mission. The wide wavelength baseline between the Kepler and GALEX data provides a unique constraint on the nature of the variability. Using 1600 seconds of photon-counting data from four GALEX visits spread over 70 days in 2011, we find no coherent NUV variability in the system on 10-100 second or months timescales. Comparing the integrated flux from these 2011 visits to the 2012 NUV flux published in the GALEX-CAUSE Kepler survey, we find a 3% decrease in brightness for KIC 8462852. We find this level of variability is significant, but not necessarily unusual for stars of similar spectral type in the GALEX data. This decrease coincides with the secular optical fading reported by Montet & Simon (2016). We find the multi-wavelength variability is somewhat inconsistent with typical interstellar dust absorption, but instead favors a R$_V$ = 5.0 $\pm$ 0.9 reddening law potentially from circumstellar dust., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Accepted
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- 2017
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20. A dusty star-forming galaxy at z=6 revealed by strong gravitational lensing
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Zavala, Jorge A., Montaña, Alfredo, Hughes, David H., Yun, Min S., Ivison, R. J., Valiante, Elisabetta, Wilner, David, Spilker, Justin, Aretxaga, Itziar, Eales, Stephen, Avila-Reese, Vladimir, Chávez, Miguel, Cooray, Asantha, Dannerbauer, Helmut, Dunlop, James S., Dunne, Loretta, Gómez-Ruiz, Arturo I., Michalowski, Michal J., Narayanan, Gopal, Nayyeri, Hooshang, Oteo, Ivan, González, Daniel Rosa, Sánchez-Argüelles, David, Serjeant, Stephen, Smith, Matthew W. L., Terlevich, Elena, Vega, Olga, Villalba, Alan, van der Werf, Paul, Wilson, Grant W., and Zeballos, Milagros
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Since their discovery, submillimetre-selected galaxies (SMGs) have revolutionized the field of galaxy formation and evolution. From the hundreds of square degrees mapped at submillimetre wavelengths, only a handful of sources have been confirmed to lie at z>5 and only two at z>6. All of these SMGs are rare examples of extreme starburst galaxies with star formation rates (SFRs) of >1000 M_sun/yr and therefore are not representative of the general population of dusty star-forming galaxies. Consequently, our understanding of the nature of these sources, at the earliest epochs, is still incomplete. Here we report the spectroscopic identification of a gravitationally amplified (mu = 9.3 +/- 1.0) dusty star-forming galaxy at z=6.027. After correcting for gravitational lensing, we derive an intrinsic less-extreme SFR of 380 +/- 50 M_sun/yr for this source and find that its gas and dust properties are similar to those measured for local Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRGs), extending the local trends to a poorly explored territory in the early Universe. The star-formation efficiency of this galaxy is similar to those measured in its local analogues, despite a ~12 Gyr difference in cosmic time., Comment: Published in Nature Astronomy. This is the author's version of the accepted paper (posted 6 months after publication in accordance with Nature policy). The published version is available at https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-017-0297-8
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- 2017
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21. Infrared excesses in stars with and without planets using revised ${\it WISE}$ photometry
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Maldonado, Raul F., Chavez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, and de Miera, Fernando Cruz-Saenz
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis on the potential prevalence of mid infrared excesses in stars with and without planetary companions. Based on an extended database of stars detected with the ${\it WISE}$ satellite, we studied two stellar samples: one with 236 planet hosts and another with 986 objects for which planets have been searched but not found. We determined the presence of an excess over the photosphere by comparing the observed flux ratio at 22 $\mu$m and 12 $\mu$m ($f_{22}/f_{12}$) with the corresponding synthetic value, derived from results of classical model photospheres. We found a detection rate of 0.85$\%$ at 22 $\mu$m (2 excesses) in the sample of stars with planets and 0.1$\%$ (1 detection) for the stars without planets. The difference of the detection rate between the two samples is not statistically significant, a result that is independent of the different approaches found in the literature to define an excess in the wavelength range covered by ${\it WISE}$ observations. As an additional result, we found that the ${\it WISE}$ fluxes required a normalisation procedure to make them compatible with synthetic data, probably pointing out a revision of the ${\it WISE}$ data calibration., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
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22. Salvage Surgery for Local Control of Brain Metastases After Previous Stereotactic Radiosurgery: A Single-Center Series
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Cummins, Daniel D., Morshed, Ramin A., Chavez, Miguel M., Avalos, Lauro N., Sudhakar, Vivek, Chung, Jason E., Gallagher, Aaron, Saggi, Satvir, Daras, Mariza, Braunstein, Steve, Theodosopoulos, Philip V., McDermott, Michael W., and Aghi, Manish K.
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- 2022
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23. Effectiveness of the 10-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine on pediatric pneumonia confirmed by ultrasound: a matched case–control study
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Checkley, William, Hossen, Shakir, McCollum, Eric D., Pervaiz, Farhan, Miele, Catherine H., Chavez, Miguel A., Moulton, Lawrence H., Simmons, Nicole, Roy, Arunangshu D., Chowdhury, Nabidul H., Ahmed, Salahuddin, Begum, Nazma, Quaiyum, Abdul, Santosham, Mathuram, and Baqui, Abdullah H.
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- 2022
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24. Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Fe, and Ni abundance for a sample of solar analogues
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López-Valdivia, Ricardo, Bertone, Emanuele, and Chávez, Miguel
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the determination of chemical abundances of 38 solar analogues, including 11 objects previously identified as super metal-rich stars. We have measured the equivalent widths for 34 lines of 7 different chemical elements (Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti, Fe, and Ni) in high-resolution ($\mathcal{R} \sim 80\,000$) spectroscopic images, obtained at the Observatorio Astrof\'isico Guillermo Haro (Sonora, Mexico), with the Cananea High-resolution Spectrograph. We derived chemical abundances using ATLAS12 model atmospheres and the Fortran code MOOG. We confirmed the super metallicity status of 6 solar analogues. Within our sample, BD+60 600 is the most metal-rich star ([Fe/H]=+0.35 dex), while for HD 166991 we obtained the lowest iron abundance ([Fe/H]=$-0.53$ dex). We also computed the so-called [Ref] index for 25 of our solar analogues, and we found, that BD+60 600 ([Ref]=+0.42) and BD+28 3198 ([Ref]=+0.34) are good targets for exoplanet search., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS main journal. 10 pages, 6 tables, 5 figures
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- 2017
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25. Bioengineered optogenetic model of human neuromuscular junction
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Vila, Olaia F., Chavez, Miguel, Ma, Stephen P., Yeager, Keith, Zholudeva, Lyandysha V., Colón-Mercado, Jennifer M., Qu, Yihuai, Nash, Trevor R., Lai, Carmen, Feliciano, Carissa M., Carter, Matthew, Kamm, Roger D., Judge, Luke M., Conklin, Bruce R., Ward, Michael E., McDevitt, Todd C., and Vunjak-Novakovic, Gordana
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- 2021
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26. Deep GALEX UV Survey of the Kepler Field I: Point Source Catalog
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Olmedo, Manuel, Lloyd, James, Mamajek, Eric E., Chávez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, Martin, D. Christopher, and Neill, James D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We report observations of a deep near-ultraviolet (NUV) survey of the Kepler field made in 2012 with the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) Complete All-Sky UV Survey Extension (CAUSE). The GALEX-CAUSE Kepler survey (GCK) covers 104 square degrees of the Kepler field and reaches limiting magnitude NUV=22.6 at 3{\sigma}. Analysis of the GCK survey has yielded a catalog of 669,928 NUV sources, of which 475,164 are cross-matched with stars in the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC). Approximately 327 of 451 confirmed exoplanet host stars and 2614 of 4696 candidate exoplanet host stars identified by Kepler have NUV photometry in the GCK survey. The GCK catalog should enable the identification and characterization of UV-excess stars in the Kepler field (young solar-type and low-mass stars, chromospherically active binaries, white dwarfs, horizontal branch stars, etc.), and elucidation of various astrophysics problems related to the stars and planetary systems in the Kepler field., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 10 pages, 10 figures
- Published
- 2015
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27. Pathophysiologic Vasodilation in Cardiogenic Shock and Its Impact on Mortality.
- Author
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Chavez, Miguel A., Anderson, McHale, Kyriakopoulos, Christos P., Scott, Monte, Dranow, Elizabeth, Maneta, Eleni, Hamouche, Rana, Taleb, Iosif, Leon, Jacy, Kogelschatz, Benjamin, Goldstein, Jake, Billia, Filio, Baran, David A., Tehran, Behnam, Goodwin, Matt, Selzman, Craig H., Tonna, Joseph E., Fang, James C., Drakos, Stavros G., and Hanff, Thomas C.
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiogenic shock (CS) mortality remains near 40%. In addition to inadequate cardiac output, patients with severe CS may exhibit vasodilation. We aimed to examine the prevalence and consequences of vasodilation in CS. METHODS: We analyzed all patients hospitalized at a CS referral center who were diagnosed with CS stages B to E and did not have concurrent sepsis or recent cardiac surgery. Vasodilation was defined by lower systemic vascular resistance (SVR), higher norepinephrine equivalent dose, or a blunted SVR response to pressors. Threshold SVR values were determined by their relation to 14-day mortality in spline models. The primary outcome was death within 14 days of CS onset in multivariable-adjusted Cox models. RESULTS: This study included 713 patients with a mean age of 60 years and 27% females; 14-day mortality was 28%, and 38% were vasodilated. The median SVR was 1308 dynes•s•cm
−5 (interquartile range, 870–1652), median norepinephrine equivalent was 0.11 µg/kg per minute (interquartile range, 0–0.2), and 28% had a blunted pressor response. Each 100-dynes•s•cm−5 decrease in SVR below 800 was associated with 20% higher mortality (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.23; P=0.004). Each 0.1-µg/kg per minute increase in norepinephrine equivalent dose was associated with 15% higher mortality (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.12; P<0.001). A blunted pressor response was associated with a nearly 2-fold mortality increase (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.74; P=0.003). CONCLUSIONS: Pathophysiologic vasodilation is prevalent in CS and independently associated with an increased risk of death. CS vasodilation can be identified by SVR <800 dynes•s•cm−5 , high doses of pressors, or a blunted SVR response to pressors. Additional studies exploring mechanisms and treatments for CS vasodilation are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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28. Variations in the genomic profiles and clinical behavior of meningioma by racial and ethnic group.
- Author
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Tabor, Joanna K., Dincer, Alper, O'Brien, Joseph, Haoyi Lei, Vetsa, Shaurey, Vasandani, Sagar, Jalal, Muhammad I., Yalcin, Kanat, Morales-Valero, Saul F., Marianayagam, Neelan, Alanya, Hasan, Elsamadicy, Aladine A., Millares Chavez, Miguel A., Aguilera, Stephanie M., Mishra-Gorur, Ketu, McGuone, Declan, Fulbright, Robert K., Lan Jin, Erson-Omay, E. Zeynep, and Günel, Murat
- Published
- 2024
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29. The Chromospheric Solar Millimeter-wave Cavity; a Common Property in the Semi-empirical Models
- Author
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De la Luz, Victor, Chavez, Miguel, and Bertone, Emanuele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The semi-empirical models of the solar chromosphere are useful in the study of the solar radio emission at millimeter - infrared wavelengths. However, current models do not reproduce the observations of the quiet sun. In this work we present a theoretical study of the radiative transfer equation for four semi- empirical models at these wavelengths. We found that the Chromospheric Solar Milimeter-wave Cavity (CSMC), a region where the atmosphere becomes locally optically thin at millimeter wavelengths, is present in the semi-empirical models under study. We conclude that the CSMC is a general property of the solar chromosphere where the semi-empirical models shows temperature minimum., Comment: Accepted in Geofisica Internacional
- Published
- 2014
30. The Relation between the Radial Temperature Profile in the Chromosphere and the Solar Spectrum at Centimeter, Millimeter, Sub-millimeter, and Infrared Wavelengths
- Author
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De la Luz, Victor, Chavez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, and de Castro, Guillermo Gimenez
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Solar observations from millimeter to ultraviolet wavelengths show that there is a temperature minimum between photosphere and chromosphere. Analysis based on semi-empirical models locate this point at about 500 km over the photosphere. The consistency of these models has been tested by means of millimeter to infrared observations. In the present work, we show that variations of the theoretical radial temperature profile near the temperature minimum impacts the brightness temperature at centimeter, submillimeter, and infrared wavelengths, but the millimeter wavelength emission remains unchanged. We found a region between 500 and 1000 km over the photosphere that remains hidden to observations at the frequencies under study in this work., Comment: Accepted in Solar Physics
- Published
- 2014
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31. The Limb Brightening and its Relationship with the Millimeter-wave Cavity
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De la Luz, Victor, Chavez, Miguel, and Bertone, Emanuele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Through a detailed theoretical analysis of the local emission at millimeter,sub-millimeter and infrared wavelength regimes (from \~ 10 GHz up to \~ 10 THz), we found that, associated with the temperature minimum, there is an optically thin cavity surrounded by two regions of high local emissivity. We call this structure the Chromospheric Solar Millimeter Cavity (CSMC). In order to search for traces of this cavity in the available radio observations on the solar limb, we have developed a robust method to associate the radiation at different heights with the observed brightness temperatures. We foresee that this approach will allow us to determine the relationship between the CSMC and the solar limb brightening., Comment: conference: New Quests in Stellar Astrophysics III
- Published
- 2014
32. Mg II h+k Flux - Rotational Period Correlation for G-type stars
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Olmedo, Manuel, Chávez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, and De la Luz, Víctor
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the correlation between the mid-UV Mg II h and k emission lines and measured rotational periods of G-type stars. Based on IUE and HST high resolution spectra of a sample of 36 stars, we derive an exponential function that best represents the correlation. We found that the variation of the Mg II h + k fluxes is about a factor of 2.5 larger than that of Ca II H+K, indicating that the UV features are more sensitive to the decline of rotational period. The comparison of UV-predicted rotational periods with those derived from empirical Prot - Ca II H+K flux calibrations are consistent, with some scatter at large periods, where the emission are less intense. We present newly derived rotational periods for 15 G-type stars., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in PASP (corrected references)
- Published
- 2013
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33. Searching for IR excesses in Sun-like stars observed by WISE
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de Miera, Fernando Cruz-Saenz, Chavez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, and Vega, Olga
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a search of infrared excess candidates in a comprehensive (29\,000 stars) magnitude limited sample of dwarf stars, spanning the spectral range F2-K0, and brighter than V$=$15 mag. We searched the sample within the {\em WISE} all sky survey database for objects within 1 arcsecond of the coordinates provided by SIMBAD database and found over 9\,000 sources detected in all {\em WISE} bands. This latter sample excludes objects that are flagged as extended sources and those images which are affected by various optical artifacts. For each detected object, we compared the observed W4/W2 (22$\mu$m/4.6$\mu$m) flux ratio with the expected photospheric value and identified 197 excess candidates at 3$\sigma$. For the vast majority of candidates, the results of this analysis represent the first reported evidence of an IR excess. Through the comparison with a simple black-body emission model, we derive estimates of the dust temperature, as well as of the dust fractional luminosities. For more than 80% of the sample this temperature is higher than 120 K, suggesting the presence of warm circumstellar dust. Complementary observations at longer wavelengths (far-IR and sub-mm) are required for better characterising and explaining the origin of this emission., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 6 pages, 8 figures. The electronic table will be available upon request to the authors
- Published
- 2013
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34. Targeting Young Stars with Kepler: Planet Formation, Migration Mechanisms and the Early History of Planetary Systems
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Lloyd, James P., Lunine, Jonathan I., Mamajek, Eric, Spiegel, David S., Covey, Kevin R., Shkolnik, Evgenya L., Walkowicz, Lucianne, Chavez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, and Aguilar, Jose Manuel Olmedo
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
This white paper discusses a repurposed mission for the Kepler spacecraft that focusses on solving outstanding problems in planet formation and evolution by targeting the study of the hot Jupiter population of young stars. This mission can solve the question of the mode of migration of hot Jupiters, address the problem of whether Jupiters form by hot-start (gravitational instability) or cold-start (core accretion) mechanisms, and provide a wealth of data on the early stages of planetary system evolution during the active phases of stars which impact planetary habitability. In one year of observations of three weeks dwell time per field, Kepler would increase by more than an order of magnitude the number of known hot Jupiters, which can be followed up with fast cadence observations to to search for transit timing variations and to perform asteroseismological characterization of the host stars. This mission scenario continues to operate Kepler in the photometric monitoring mode for which it was designed, and is generally flexible with regards to field selection enabling prioritization of fuel usage and attitude control constraints., Comment: White Paper submitted to Call for White Papers: Soliciting Community Input for Alternate Science Investigations for the Kepler Spacecraft
- Published
- 2013
35. A machine learning approach for traffic-noise annoyance assessment
- Author
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Bravo-Moncayo, Luis, Lucio-Naranjo, José, Chávez, Miguel, Pavón-García, Ignacio, and Garzón, Christiam
- Published
- 2019
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36. A cost-effective approach to the evaluation of traffic noise exposure in the city of Quito, Ecuador
- Author
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Bravo-Moncayo, Luis, Chávez, Miguel, Puyana, Virginia, Lucio-Naranjo, José, Garzón, Christiam, and Pavón-García, Ignacio
- Published
- 2019
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37. Syntaxin 3, but not syntaxin 4, is required for mast cell–regulated exocytosis, where it plays a primary role mediating compound exocytosis
- Author
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Sanchez, Elizabeth, Gonzalez, Erika A., Moreno, David S., Cardenas, Rodolfo A., Ramos, Marco A., Davalos, Alfredo J., Manllo, John, Rodarte, Alejandro I., Petrova, Youlia, Moreira, Daniel C., Chavez, Miguel A., Tortoriello, Alejandro, Lara, Adolfo, Gutierrez, Berenice A., Burns, Alan R., Heidelberger, Ruth, and Adachi, Roberto
- Published
- 2019
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38. Open Issues on the Synthesis of Evolved Stellar Populations at Ultraviolet Wavelengths
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Chavez, Miguel and Bertone, Emanuele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we briefly review three topics that have motivated our (and others') investigations in recent years within the context of evolutionary population synthesis techniques. These are: The origin of the FUV up-turn in elliptical galaxies, the age-metallicity degeneracy, and the study of the mid-UV rest-frame spectra of distant red galaxies. We summarize some of our results and present a very preliminary application of a UV grid of theoretical spectra in the analysis of integrated properties of aged stellar populations. At the end, we concisely suggest how these topics can be tackled once the World Space Observatory enters into operation in the midst of this decade., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Science, UV Universe special issue
- Published
- 2011
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39. Statistical properties of the GALEX spectroscopic stellar sample
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Bertone, Emanuele and Chavez, Miguel
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The GALEX General Data Release 4/5 includes 174 spectroscopic tiles, obtained from slitless grism observations, for a total of more than 60,000 ultraviolet spectra. We have determined statistical properties of the sample of GALEX stars. We have defined a suitable system of spectroscopic indices, which measure the main mid-UV features at the GALEX low spectral resolution and we have employed it to determine the atmospheric parameters of of stars in the range 4500
-1 dex., Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Science, UV universe special issue - Published
- 2011
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40. Snapshot metallicity estimate of resolved stellar systems through Lick Fe5270 diagnostic
- Author
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Buzzoni, Alberto, Bertone, Emanuele, and Chavez, Miguel
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We outline a new method to derive a "snapshot" metallicity estimate of stellar systems (providing one resolves at least the brightest part of the CMD) just on the basis of low-resolution (i.e., 6-8A FWHM) spectroscopy of a small stellar sample. Our method relies on the Fe5270 Lick index measurements and takes advantage of the special behavior of this spectral feature, that reaches its maximum strength among the ubiquitous component of K-type giants. This makes the Fe5270(max} estimate a robust and model-independent tracer of cluster [Fe/H], being particularly insensitive to the age of the stellar population. A comparison of the Fe5270(max) distribution derived from globular and open clusters, as well as from the field giant population in the Galaxy disk, confirms a tight correlation of the index maximum vs. cluster [Fe/H] allover the entire metallicity range for stellar population with [Fe/H] >~ -2.0. Relying on a theoretical calibration of the feature, we trust to effectively infer cluster metallicity within a typical uncertainty of 0.1-0.2dex, depending on RGB luminosity sampling of the observations., Comment: 5 pages with 4 figures - To appear in the October issue of the Astrophysical Journal (Letters), 703, L127 (2009) - See http://www.bo.astro.it/~eps/home.html for high-res colour figures and supplementary infos for popsynth models
- Published
- 2009
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41. Mid-UV Narrow-Band Indices of Evolved Simple Stellar Populations
- Author
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Chavez, Miguel, Bertone, Emanuele, Morales-Hernandez, Javier, and Bressan, Alessandro
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We explore the properties of selected mid-ultraviolet (1900-3200 angstrom) spectroscopic indices of simple stellar populations (SSPs). We incorporate the high resolution UVBLUE stellar spectral library into an evolutionary population synthesis code, based on the most recent Padova isochrones. We analyze the trends of UV indices with respect to age and chemical composition. As a first test against observations, we compare our results with the empirical mid-UV spectral indices of Galactic globular clusters, observed with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE). We find that synthetic indices exhibit a variety of properties, the main one being the slight age sensitivity of most of them for ages>2 Gyr. However, for high metallicity, two indices, Fe II 2332 and Fe II 2402, display a remarkably different pattern, with a sharp increase within the first two Gyr and, thereafter, a rapid decline. These indices clearly mark the presence of young (~1 Gyr) metal rich (Z > Z_sun) stellar populations. We complement existing UV indices of Galactic globular clusters with new measurements, and carefully identify a sub-sample of ten indices suitable for comparison with theoretical models. The comparison shows a fair agreement and, in particular, the strong trend of the indices with metallicity is well reproduced. We also discuss the main improvements that should be considered in future modelling concerning, among others, the effects of alpha-enhancement in the spectral energy distributions., Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication The Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2009
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42. The Synoptic All-Sky Infrared (SASIR) Survey
- Author
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Bloom, Joshua S., Prochaska, J. Xavier, Lee, William, González, J. Jesús, Ramírez-Ruiz, Enrico, Bolte, Michael, Franco, José, Guichard, José, Carramiñana, Alberto, Strittmatter, Peter, Avila-Reese, Vladimir, Bernstein, Rebecca, Bigelow, Bruce, Brodwin, Mark, Burgasser, Adam, Butler, Nat, Chávez, Miguel, Cobb, Bethany, Cook, Kem, Cruz-González, Irene, de Diego, José Antonio, Farah, Alejandro, Georgiev, Leonid, Girard, Julien, Hernández-Toledo, Hector, Jiménez-Bailón, Elena, Krongold, Yair, Mayya, Divakara, Meza, Juan, Miyaji, Takamitsu, Mújica, Raúl, Nugent, Peter, Porras, Alicia, Poznanski, Dovi, Raga, Alejandro, Richer, Michael, Rodríguez, Lino, Rosa, Daniel, Stanford, Adam, Szentgyorgyi, Andrew, Tenorio-Tagle, Guillermo, Thomas, Rollin, Valenzuela, Octavio, Watson, Alan M., and Wehinger, Peter
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We are proposing to conduct a multicolor, synoptic infrared (IR) imaging survey of the Northern sky with a new, dedicated 6.5-meter telescope at San Pedro M\'artir (SPM) Observatory. This initiative is being developed in partnership with astronomy institutions in Mexico and the University of California. The 4-year, dedicated survey, planned to begin in 2017, will reach more than 100 times deeper than 2MASS. The Synoptic All-Sky Infrared (SASIR) Survey will reveal the missing sample of faint red dwarf stars in the local solar neighborhood, and the unprecedented sensitivity over such a wide field will result in the discovery of thousands of z ~ 7 quasars (and reaching to z > 10), allowing detailed study (in concert with JWST and Giant Segmented Mirror Telescopes) of the timing and the origin(s) of reionization. As a time-domain survey, SASIR will reveal the dynamic infrared universe, opening new phase space for discovery. Synoptic observations of over 10^6 supernovae and variable stars will provide better distance measures than optical studies alone. SASIR also provides significant synergy with other major Astro2010 facilities, improving the overall scientific return of community investments. Compared to optical-only measurements, IR colors vastly improve photometric redshifts to z ~ 4, enhancing dark energy and dark matter surveys based on weak lensing and baryon oscillations. The wide field and ToO capabilities will enable a connection of the gravitational wave and neutrino universe - with events otherwise poorly localized on the sky - to transient electromagnetic phenomena., Comment: Revised version of submitted whitepaper to the "Optical and IR Astronomy from the Ground" Program Prioritization Panel of the Astro2010 Decadal Survey; 23 pages
- Published
- 2009
43. Local food system resilience in the context of shocks and crises: vulnerabilities and responses of agroecology-based farmers in Peru, Germany, and the United States.
- Author
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Chavez-Miguel, Giovanna, Hämmerle, Janika, González, Antonio, Canetti, Chiara, Gleich, Pia, Halfast, Rebecca Lynn, Feuchter, Moritz, Buszydlo, Dominika, Schwarz, Laura, Scheepstra, Imke, de Haan, Stef, Ccanto, Raul, Sieber, Stefan, and Bonatti, Michelle
- Subjects
- *
LABOR market , *COMPARATIVE method , *ENERGY shortages , *ENERGY industries , *FARMERS , *LOCAL foods - Abstract
Multiple crises have disrupted food systems around the world. The shocks induced by the COVID-19 pandemic, coupled with increased energy prices and shortages of fertilizers and agricultural inputs, have affected farmers everywhere. By applying inductive, qualitative, and comparative research approaches, we investigate the impact of shocks and crises on diverse food systems. Using mixed qualitative methods, we integrate the voices of (n = 25) farmers belonging to agroecology-based local food systems in Peru, Germany, and the United States with the aims of: (i) understanding the different crisis scenarios; (ii) determining the vulnerabilities induced in farmers; and (iii) identifying the responses and coping mechanisms that farmers deploy in response to shocks. The results illustrate how farmers are affected by the combined effects of labor shortages, rising input costs, high energy prices, and climate change. Farmers' responses to stressors are then analyzed and compared using attributes of food system resilience. Based on our results, we argue that resilience-building is determined not only by the environment in which agroecology is embedded, but also by the responsive capacities of farmers. We emphasize the need for more proactive policies aimed at promoting agroecological and localized production to enhance the resilience of food systems against recurrent shocks and crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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44. Numerical and Parametric Study of MVGs on a UAV Geometry in Subsonic Flow
- Author
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Chavez, Miguel, Sanvido, Silvia, Browne, Oliver M. F., Valero, Eusebio, Oñate, Eugenio, Series editor, Diez, Pedro, editor, Neittaanmäki, Pekka, editor, Periaux, Jacques, editor, Tuovinen, Tero, editor, and Bräysy, Olli, editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Local Null Controllability of the N-Dimensional Ladyzhenskaya-Smagorinsky with N-1 Scalar Controls
- Author
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Huaman, Dany Nina, Límaco, Juan, Chávez, Miguel R. Nuñez, Formaggia, Luca, Editor-in-Chief, Larson, Mats G., Series Editor, Martínez-Seara Alonso, Tere, Series Editor, Parés, Carlos, Series Editor, Pareschi, Lorenzo, Series Editor, Pedregal, Pablo, Editor-in-Chief, Tosin, Andrea, Series Editor, Vazquez, Elena, Series Editor, Zubelli, Jorge P., Series Editor, Zunino, Paolo, Series Editor, Doubova, Anna, editor, González-Burgos, Manuel, editor, Guillén-González, Francisco, editor, and Marín Beltrán, Mercedes, editor
- Published
- 2018
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- View/download PDF
46. An IoT-Based Urban Infrastructure System for Smart Cities
- Author
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Tamariz-Flores, Edna Iliana, García-Juárez, Kevin Abid, Torrealba-Meléndez, Richard, Muñoz-Pacheco, Jesús Manuel, León-Chávez, Miguel Ángel, Maheswaran, Muthucumaru, editor, and Badidi, Elarbi, editor
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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47. Building a Prediction Model for Radiographically Confirmed Pneumonia in Peruvian Children: From Symptoms to Imaging
- Author
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Pervaiz, Farhan, Chavez, Miguel A., Ellington, Laura E., Grigsby, Matthew, Gilman, Robert H., Miele, Catherine H., Figueroa-Quintanilla, Dante, Compen-Chang, Patricia, Marin-Concha, Julio, McCollum, Eric D., and Checkley, William
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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48. Numerical simulation of hydraulic fracture propagation in naturally fractured formations using the cohesive zone model
- Author
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Dahi Taleghani, Arash, Gonzalez-Chavez, Miguel, Yu, Hao, and Asala, Hope
- Published
- 2018
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49. Munc18-2, but not Munc18-1 or Munc18-3, controls compound and single-vesicle–regulated exocytosis in mast cells
- Author
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Gutierrez, Berenice A., Chavez, Miguel A., Rodarte, Alejandro I., Ramos, Marco A., Dominguez, Andrea, Petrova, Youlia, Davalos, Alfredo J., Costa, Renan M., Elizondo, Ramon, Tuvim, Michael J., Dickey, Burton F., Burns, Alan R., Heidelberger, Ruth, and Adachi, Roberto
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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50. A Grid of Synthetic Stellar UV Fluxes
- Author
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Rodriguez-Merino, Lino H., Chavez, Miguel, Buzzoni, Alberto, and Bertone, Emanuele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present preliminary results of a large project aimed at creating an extended theoretical and observational database of stellar spectra in the ultraviolet wavelength range. This library will consist of IUE spectra at low and high resolution, and a set of LTE and NLTE theoretical fluxes. A first grid of 50 model fluxes with solar metallicity, in the wavelength interval 1000 - 4400 AA, is reported here. Calculations are based on the Kurucz (1993) SYNTHE code. The models span effective temperatures between 10,000 K and 50,000 K, and a surface gravity in the range 2.5 <= log g <= 5.0 dex., Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, To appear in proceedings, "New Quests in Stellar Astrophysics: The Link Between Stars and Cosmology ", March 26-30, 2001, Eds. M. Chavez, A. Bressan, A. Buzzoni & D. Mayya
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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