1,165 results on '"Hogan C"'
Search Results
2. Vacuum Energy Density Measured from Cosmological Data
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Prat, J., Hogan, C., Chang, C., and Frieman, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Within the $\Lambda$CDM cosmological model, the absolute value of Einstein's cosmological constant $\Lambda$, sometimes expressed as the gravitating mass-energy density $\rho_\Lambda$ of the physical vacuum, is a fundamental constant of nature, whose accurate measurement plays a central role in testing some proposed theories of quantum gravity. Several combinations of currently public cosmological data and an assumed flat $\Lambda$CDM cosmological model are used here to make a joint Bayesian inference on the combination of conventional parameters $\Omega_\Lambda h^2$ that corresponds to the absolute physical density $\rho_\Lambda$. In physical units, we obtain $\rho_\Lambda = \left(60.3\pm{1.3}\right)\times 10^{-31}{\rm g/cm^3}$, the most accurate constraint to date, with an absolute calibration of cosmological measurements based on CMB temperature. Significantly different values are obtained with calibrations that use a local distance scale, mainly connected to systematic differences in the value of the Hubble constant. It is suggested that future comprehensive cosmological parameter studies assuming the $\Lambda$CDM model include constraints on the vacuum density., Comment: 8 + 11 pages, 4 figures. Published by JCAP
- Published
- 2021
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3. Atomic wires on substrates: Physics between one and two dimensions
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Pfnür, H., Tegenkamp, C., Sanna, S., Jeckelmann, E., Horn-von Hoegen, M., Bovensiepen, U., Esser, N., Schmidt, W.G., Dähne, M., Wippermann, S., Bechstedt, F., Bode, M., Claessen, R., Ernstorfer, R., Hogan, C., Ligges, M., Pucci, A., Schäfer, J., Speiser, E., Wolf, M., and Wollschläger, J.
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- 2024
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4. Exploring the range of applicability of anisotropic optical detection in axially coordinated supramolecular structures
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Goto, F., Calloni, A., Majumdar, I., Yivlialin, R., Filoni, C., Hogan, C., Palummo, M., Biroli, A. Orbelli, Finazzi, M., Duò, L., Ciccacci, F., and Bussetti, G.
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- 2023
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5. Many-body perturbation theory calculations using the yambo code
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Sangalli, D., Ferretti, A., Miranda, H., Attaccalite, C., Marri, I., Cannuccia, E., Melo, P., Marsili, M., Paleari, F., Marrazzo, A., Prandini, G., Bonfà, P., Atambo, M. O., Affinito, F., Palummo, M., Molina-Sánchez, A., Hogan, C., Grüning, M., Varsano, D., and Marini, A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
yambo is an open source project aimed at studying excited state properties of condensed matter systems from first principles using many-body methods. As input, yambo requires ground state electronic structure data as computed by density functional theory codes such as quantum-espresso and abinit. yambo's capabilities include the calculation of linear response quantities (both independent-particle and including electron-hole interactions), quasi-particle corrections based on the GW formalism, optical absorption, and other spectroscopic quantities. Here we describe recent developments ranging from the inclusion of important but oft-neglected physical effects such as electron-phonon interactions to the implementation of a real-time propagation scheme for simulating linear and non-linear optical properties. Improvements to numerical algorithms and the user interface are outlined. Particular emphasis is given to the new and efficient parallel structure that makes it possible to exploit modern high performance computing architectures. Finally, we demonstrate the possibility to automate workflows by interfacing with the yambopy and AiiDA software tools.
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- 2019
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6. First report of eggplant mottled dwarf virus in Pittosporum tobria in the United Kingdom
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Frew, Leanne, Hogan, C., Andrews, K., Fowkes, A., Skelton, A., Webster, G., Dixon, M., Conyers, C., Adams, I., McGreig, S., and Fox, A.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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7. To Evaluate a Proprietary Breath Analyzer in the Evaluation of High-risk Lung Nodules for Non-small Cell Lung Cancer: Single-center Feasibility Study
- Author
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Cho, R.J., primary, Peterson, G., additional, Zhen, X., additional, Nelson, J., additional, Sherwood, G., additional, Finc, R., additional, Lyden, M., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Williams, T., additional, Buhlmann, P., additional, and Koester, S., additional
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- 2024
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8. P404 Monocyte distribution width differentiates bacterial gastroenteritis from Acute Severe Ulcerative Colitis in patients presenting with diarrhoea
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Li Wai Suen, C, primary, Kaul, S, additional, Tan, E, additional, Con, D, additional, Taylor, M, additional, Wiid, J, additional, Hogan, C, additional, Choy, M, additional, Visvanathan, K, additional, and De Cruz, P, additional
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- 2024
- Full Text
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9. Planning the Future of U.S. Particle Physics (Snowmass 2013): Chapter 8: Instrumentation Frontier
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Demarteau, M., Lipton, R., Nicholson, H., Shipsey, I., Akerib, D., Albayrak-Yetkin, A., Alexander, J., Anderson, J., Artuso, M., Asner, D., Ball, R., Battaglia, M., Bebek, C., Beene, J., Benhammou, Y., Bentefour, E., Bergevin, M., Bernstein, A., Bilki, B., Blucher, E., Bolla, G., Bortoletto, D., Bowden, N., Brooijmans, G., Byrum, K., Cabrera, B., Cancelo, G., Carlstrom, J., Casey, B., Chang, C., Chapman, J., Chen, C. H., Childres, I., Christian, D., Convery, M., Corso, W. Cooper J., Cumalat, J., Cushman, P., Da Via, C., Dazeley, S., Debbins, P., Deptuch, G., Dhawan, S., Di Benedetto, V., DiGiovene, B., Djurcic, Z., Dye, S., Elagin, A., Estrada, J., Evans, H., Etzion, E., Fast, J., Ferretti, C., Fisher, P., Fleming, B., Francis, K., Friedman, P., Frisch, H., Garcia-Sciveres, M., Gatto, C., Geronim, G., Gilchriese, G., Golwala, S., Grant, C., Grillo, A., Grünendahl, E., Gorham, P., Guan, L., Gutierrez, G., Haber, C., Hall, J., Haller, G., Hast, C., Heintz, U., Hemmick, T., Hitlin, D. G., Hogan, C., Hohlmann, M., Hoppe, E., Hsu, L., Huffer, M., Irwin, K., Izraelevitch, F., Jennings, G., Johnson, M., Jung, A., Kagan, H., Kenney, C., Kettell, S., Khanna, R., Khristenko, V., Krennrich, F., Kuehn, K., Kutschke, R., Learned, J., Lee, A. T., Levin, D., Liu, T., Liu, A. T. K., Lissauer, D., Love, J., Lynn, D., MacFarlane, D., Magill, S., Majewski, S., Mans, J., Maricic, J., Marleau, P., Mazzacane, A., McKinsey, D., Mehl, J., Mestvirisvilli, A., Meyer, S., Mokhov, N., Moshe, M., Mukherjee, A., Murat, P., Nahn, S., Narain, M., Nadel-Turonski, P., Newcomer, M., Nishimura, K., Nygren, D., Oberla, E., Onel, Y., Oreglia, M., Orrell, J., Paley, J., Para, A., Parker, S., Polychronakos, V., Pordes, S., Privitera, P., Prosser, A., Pyle, M., Raaf, J., Ramberg, E., Rameika, R., Rebel, B., Repond, J., Reyna, D., Ristori, L., Rivera, R., Ronzhin, A., Rusack, R., Russ, J., Ryd, A., Sadrozinski, H., Sahoo, H., Sanchez, M. C., Sanzeni, C., Schnetzer, S., Seidel, S., Seiden, A., Schmidt, I., Shenai, A., Shutt, T., Silver, Y., Smith, W., Snowden-Ifft, D., Sonnenschein, A., Southwick, D., Spiegel, L., Stanitzki, M., Striganov, S., Su, D., Sumner, R., Svoboda, R., Sweany, M., Talaga, R., Tayloe, R., Tentindo, S., Terentiev, N., Thom-Levy, J., Thorn, C., Tiffenberg, J., Trischuk, W., Tschirhart, R., Turner, M., Underwood, D., Uplegger, L., Urheim, J., Vagins, M., Van Bibber, K., Varner, G., Varner, R., Va'vra, J., Von der Lippe, H., Wagner, R., Wagner, S., Weaverdyck, C., Wenzel, H., Weinstein, A., Wetstein, M., White, A., Wigman, R., Wilson, P., Winn, D., Winter, P., Woody, C., Xia, L., Xie, J. Q., Ye, Z., Yeh, M. F., Yetkin, T., Yoo, J. H., Yu, J., Yu, J. M., Zeller, S., Zhang, J. L., Zhu, J. J., Zhou, B., Zhu, R. Y., and Zitzer, B.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
These reports present the results of the 2013 Community Summer Study of the APS Division of Particles and Fields ("Snowmass 2013") on the future program of particle physics in the U.S. Chapter 8, on the Instrumentation Frontier, discusses the instrumentation needs of future experiments in the Energy, Intensity, and Cosmic Frontiers, promising new technologies for particle physics research, and issues of gathering resources for long-term research in this area., Comment: 50 pages
- Published
- 2014
10. Improved cosmological constraints from a joint analysis of the SDSS-II and SNLS supernova samples
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Betoule, M., Kessler, R., Guy, J., Mosher, J., Hardin, D., Biswas, R., Astier, P., El-Hage, P., Konig, M., Kuhlmann, S., Marriner, J., Pain, R., Regnault, N., Balland, C., Bassett, B. A., Brown, P. J., Campbell, H., Carlberg, R. G., Cellier-Holzem, F., Cinabro, D., Conley, A., D'Andrea, C. B., DePoy, D. L., Doi, M., Ellis, R. S., Fabbro, S., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Frieman, J. A., Fouchez, D., Galbany, L., Goobar, A., Gupta, R. R., Hill, G. J., Hlozek, R., Hogan, C. J., Hook, I. M., Howell, D. A., Jha, S. W., Guillou, L. Le, Leloudas, G., Lidman, C., Marshall, J. L., Möller, A., Mourão, A. M., Neveu, J., Nichol, R., Olmstead, M. D., Palanque-Delabrouille, N., Perlmutter, S., Prieto, J. L., Pritchet, C. J., Richmond, M., Riess, A. G., Ruhlmann-Kleider, V., Sako, M., Schahmaneche, K., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., Sollerman, J., Sullivan, M., Walton, N. A., and Wheeler, C. J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present cosmological constraints from a joint analysis of type Ia supernova (SN Ia) observations obtained by the SDSS-II and SNLS collaborations. The data set includes several low-redshift samples (z<0.1), all 3 seasons from the SDSS-II (0.05 < z < 0.4), and 3 years from SNLS (0.2
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- 2014
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11. Snowmass Cosmic Frontiers 6 (CF6) Working Group Summary --The Bright Side of the Cosmic Frontier: Cosmic Probes of Fundamental Physics
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Beatty, J. J., Nelson, A. E., Olinto, A., Sinnis, G., Abeysekara, A. U., Anchordoqui, L. A., Aramaki, T., Belz, J., Buckley, J. H., Byrum, K., Cameron, R., Chen, M-C., Clark, K., Connolly, A., Cowen, D., DeYoung, T., Dumm, P. von Doetinchem J., Errando, M., Farrar, G., Ferrer, F., Fortson, L., Funk, S., Grant, D., Griffiths, S., Groß, A., Hailey, C., Hogan, C., Holder, J., Humensky, B., Kaaret, P., Klein, S. R., Krawczynski, H., Krennrich, F., Krings, K., Krizmanic, J., Kusenko, A., Linnemann, J. T., MacGibbon, J. H., Matthews, J., McCann, A., Mitchell, J., Mukherjee, R., Nitz, D., Ong, R. A., Orr, M., Otte, N., Paul, T., Resconi, E., Sanchez-Conde, M. A., Sokolsky, P., Stecker, F., Stump, D., Taboada, I., Thomson, G. B., Tollefson, K., von Doetinchem, P., Ukwatta, T., Vandenbroucke, J., Vasileiou, V., Vassileiv, V. V., Weiler, T. J., Williams, D. A., Weinstein, A., Wood, M., and Zitzer, B.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Report of the CF6 Working Group at Snowmass 2013. Topics addressed include ultra-high energy cosmic rays, neutrinos, gamma rays, baryogenesis, and experiments probing the fundamental nature of spacetime., Comment: Snowmass 2013 CF6 Working Group Report; author list corrected
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- 2013
12. The Gravitational Universe
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Consortium, The eLISA, Seoane, P. Amaro, Aoudia, S., Audley, H., Auger, G., Babak, S., Baker, J., Barausse, E., Barke, S., Bassan, M., Beckmann, V., Benacquista, M., Bender, P. L., Berti, E., Binétruy, P., Bogenstahl, J., Bonvin, C., Bortoluzzi, D., Brause, N. C., Brossard, J., Buchman, S., Bykov, I., Camp, J., Caprini, C., Cavalleri, A., Cerdonio, M., Ciani, G., Colpi, M., Congedo, G., Conklin, J., Cornish, N., Danzmann, K., de Vine, G., DeBra, D., Freitag, M. Dewi, Di Fiore, L., Aguilo, M. Diaz, Diepholz, I., Dolesi, R., Dotti, M., Barranco, G. Fernández, Ferraioli, L., Ferroni, V., Finetti, N., Fitzsimons, E., Gair, J., Galeazzi, F., Garcia, A., Gerberding, O., Gesa, L., Giardini, D., Gibert, F., Grimani, C., Groot, P., Cervantes, F. Guzman, Haiman, Z., Halloin, H., Heinzel, G., Hewitson, M., Hogan, C., Holz, D., Hornstrup, A., Hoyland, D., Hoyle, C. D., Hueller, M., Hughes, S., Jetzer, P., Kalogera, V., Karnesis, N., Kilic, M., Killow, C., Klipstein, W., Kochkina, E., Korsakova, N., Krolak, A., Larson, S., Lieser, M., Littenberg, T., Livas, J., Lloro, I., Mance, D., Madau, P., Maghami, P., Mahrdt, C., Marsh, T., Mateos, I., Mayer, L., McClelland, D., McKenzie, K., McWilliams, S., Merkowitz, S., Miller, C., Mitryk, S., Moerschell, J., Mohanty, S., Monsky, A., Mueller, G., Müller, V., Nelemans, G., Nicolodi, D., Nissanke, S., Nofrarias, M., Numata, K., Ohme, F., Otto, M., Perreur-Lloyd, M., Petiteau, A., Phinney, E. S., Plagnol, E., Pollack, S., Porter, E., Prat, P., Preston, A., Prince, T., Reiche, J., Richstone, D., Robertson, D., Rossi, E. M., Rosswog, S., Rubbo, L., Ruiter, A., Sanjuan, J., Sathyaprakash, B. S., Schlamminger, S., Schutz, B., Schütze, D., Sesana, A., Shaddock, D., Shah, S., Sheard, B., Sopuerta, C. F., Spector, A., Spero, R., Stanga, R., Stebbins, R., Stede, G., Steier, F., Sumner, T., Sun, K. -X., Sutton, A., Tanaka, T., Tanner, D., Thorpe, I., Tröbs, M., Tinto, M., Tu, H. -B., Vallisneri, M., Vetrugno, D., Vitale, S., Volonteri, M., Wand, V., Wang, Y., Wanner, G., Ward, H., Ware, B., Wass, P., Weber, W. J., Yu, Y., Yunes, N., and Zweifel, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
The last century has seen enormous progress in our understanding of the Universe. We know the life cycles of stars, the structure of galaxies, the remnants of the big bang, and have a general understanding of how the Universe evolved. We have come remarkably far using electromagnetic radiation as our tool for observing the Universe. However, gravity is the engine behind many of the processes in the Universe, and much of its action is dark. Opening a gravitational window on the Universe will let us go further than any alternative. Gravity has its own messenger: Gravitational waves, ripples in the fabric of spacetime. They travel essentially undisturbed and let us peer deep into the formation of the first seed black holes, exploring redshifts as large as z ~ 20, prior to the epoch of cosmic re-ionisation. Exquisite and unprecedented measurements of black hole masses and spins will make it possible to trace the history of black holes across all stages of galaxy evolution, and at the same time constrain any deviation from the Kerr metric of General Relativity. eLISA will be the first ever mission to study the entire Universe with gravitational waves. eLISA is an all-sky monitor and will offer a wide view of a dynamic cosmos using gravitational waves as new and unique messengers to unveil The Gravitational Universe. It provides the closest ever view of the early processes at TeV energies, has guaranteed sources in the form of verification binaries in the Milky Way, and can probe the entire Universe, from its smallest scales around singularities and black holes, all the way to cosmological dimensions., Comment: 20 pages; submitted to the European Space Agency on May 24th, 2013 for the L2/L3 selection of ESA's Cosmic Vision program
- Published
- 2013
13. The Dark Energy Spectrometer (DESpec): A Multi-Fiber Spectroscopic Upgrade of the Dark Energy Camera and Survey for the Blanco Telescope
- Author
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Abdalla, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bridle, S., Castander, F., Colless, M., DePoy, D., Diehl, H. T., Eriksen, M., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Gaztanaga, E., Hogan, C., Jouvel, S., Kent, S., Kirk, D., Kron, R., Kuhlmann, S., Lahav, O., Lawrence, J., Lin, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J., Mohr, J., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Saunders, W., Soares-Santos, M., Thomas, D., Wechsler, R., West, A., and Wu, H.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe an initiative to build and use the Dark Energy Spectrometer (DESpec), a wide-field spectroscopic survey instrument for the Blanco 4 meter telescope at Cerro Tololo InterAmerican Observatory (CTIO) in Chile. A new system with about 4000 robotically positioned optical fibers will be interchangeable with the CCD imager of the existing Dark Energy Camera (DECam), accessing a field of view of 3.8 square degrees in a single exposure. The proposed instrument will be operated by CTIO and available for use by the astronomy community. Our collaboration proposes to use DESpec to conduct a wide, deep spectroscopic survey to study Dark Energy. In a survey of about 350 nights, the DESpec collaboration proposes to obtain spectroscopic redshifts for about 8 million galaxies over 5000 square degrees selected from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). This Dark Energy Spectroscopic Survey will advance our knowledge of cosmic expansion and structure growth significantly beyond that obtainable with imaging-only surveys. Since it adds a spectroscopic third dimension to the same sky as DES, DESpec will enable increasingly precise techniques to discriminate among alternative explanations of cosmic acceleration, such as Dark Energy and Modified Gravity., Comment: 57 pages, 28 figures
- Published
- 2012
14. First-year Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) supernova results: consistency and constraints with other intermediate-redshift datasets
- Author
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Lampeitl, H., Nichol, R. C., Seo, H. -J., Giannantonio, T., Shapiro, C., Bassett, B., Percival, W. J., Davis, T. M., Dilday, B., Frieman, J., Garnavich, P., Sako, M., Smith, M., Sollerman, J., Becker, A. C., Cinabro, D., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Hogan, C. J., Holtzman, J. A., Jha, S. W., Konishi, K., Marriner, J., Richmond, M. W., Riess, A. G., Schneider, D. P., Stritzinger, M., van der Heyden, K. J., VanderPlas, J. T., Wheeler, J. C., and Zheng, C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the luminosity distances of Type Ia Supernovae from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) Supernova Survey in conjunction with other intermediate redshift (z<0.4) cosmological measurements including redshift-space distortions from the Two-degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS), the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect seen by the SDSS, and the latest Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) distance scale from both the SDSS and 2dFGRS. We have analysed the SDSS-II SN data alone using a variety of "model-independent" methods and find evidence for an accelerating universe at >97% level from this single dataset. We find good agreement between the supernova and BAO distance measurements, both consistent with a Lambda-dominated CDM cosmology, as demonstrated through an analysis of the distance duality relationship between the luminosity (d_L) and angular diameter (d_A) distance measures. We then use these data to estimate w within this restricted redshift range (z<0.4). Our most stringent result comes from the combination of all our intermediate-redshift data (SDSS-II SNe, BAO, ISW and redshift-space distortions), giving w = -0.81 +0.16 -0.18(stat) +/- 0.15(sys) and Omega_M=0.22 +0.09 -0.08 assuming a flat universe. This value of w, and associated errors, only change slightly if curvature is allowed to vary, consistent with constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background. We also consider more limited combinations of the geometrical (SN, BAO) and dynamical (ISW, redshift-space distortions) probes., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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15. Erratum: Gas transport in firn: Multiple-tracer characterisation and model intercomparison for NEEM, Northern Greenland (Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (2012) 12 (4259-4277))
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Buizert, C, Martinerie, P, Petrenko, VV, Severinghaus, JP, Trudinger, CM, Witrant, E, Rosen, JL, Orsi, AJ, Rubino, M, Etheridge, DM, Steele, LP, Hogan, C, Laube, JC, Sturges, WT, Levchenko, VA, Smith, AM, Levin, I, Conway, TJ, Dlugokencky, EJ, Lang, PM, Kawamura, K, Jenk, TM, White, JWC, Sowers, T, Schwander, J, and Blunier, T
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Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences - Published
- 2014
16. Planning the Future of U.S. Particle Physics (Snowmass 2013): Chapter 8: Instrumentation Frontier
- Author
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Demarteau, M, Lipton, R, Nicholson, H, Shipsey, I, Akerib, D, Albayrak-Yetkin, A, Alexander, J, Anderson, J, Artuso, M, Asner, D, Ball, R, Battaglia, M, Bebek, C, Beene, J, Benhammou, Y, Bentefour, E, Bergevin, M, Bernstein, A, Bilki, B, Blucher, E, Bolla, G, Bortoletto, D, Bowden, N, Brooijmans, G, Byrum, K, Cabrera, B, Cancelo, G, Carlstrom, J, Casey, B, Chang, C, Chapman, J, Chen, CH, Childres, I, Christian, D, Convery, M, Corso, W Cooper J, Cumalat, J, Cushman, P, Via, C Da, Dazeley, S, Debbins, P, Deptuch, G, Dhawan, S, Benedetto, V Di, DiGiovene, B, Djurcic, Z, Dye, S, Elagin, A, Estrada, J, Evans, H, Etzion, E, Fast, J, Ferretti, C, Fisher, P, Fleming, B, Francis, K, Friedman, P, Frisch, H, Garcia-Sciveres, M, Gatto, C, Geronim, G, Gilchriese, G, Golwala, S, Grant, C, Grillo, A, Grünendahl, E, Gorham, P, Guan, L, Gutierrez, G, Haber, C, Hall, J, Haller, G, Hast, C, Heintz, U, Hemmick, T, Hitlin, DG, Hogan, C, Hohlmann, M, Hoppe, E, Hsu, L, Huffer, M, Irwin, K, Izraelevitch, F, Jennings, G, Johnson, M, Jung, A, Kagan, H, Kenney, C, Kettell, S, Khanna, R, Khristenko, V, Krennrich, F, Kuehn, K, Kutschke, R, Learned, J, Lee, AT, Levin, D, Liu, T, Liu, ATK, and Lissauer, D
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hep-ex ,hep-ph ,physics.ins-det - Abstract
These reports present the results of the 2013 Community Summer Study of theAPS Division of Particles and Fields ("Snowmass 2013") on the future program ofparticle physics in the U.S. Chapter 8, on the Instrumentation Frontier,discusses the instrumentation needs of future experiments in the Energy,Intensity, and Cosmic Frontiers, promising new technologies for particlephysics research, and issues of gathering resources for long-term research inthis area.
- Published
- 2014
17. Corrigendum to ``Gas transport in firn: multiple-tracer characterisation and model intercomparison for NEEM, Northern Greenland'' published in Atmos. Chem. Phys., 12, 4259–-4277, 2012
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Buizert, C, Martinerie, P, Petrenko, VV, Severinghaus, JP, Trudinger, CM, Witrant, E, Rosen, JL, Orsi, AJ, Rubino, M, Etheridge, DM, Steele, LP, Hogan, C, Laube, JC, Sturges, WT, Levchenko, VA, Smith, AM, Levin, I, Conway, TJ, Dlugokencky, EJ, Lang, PM, Kawamura, K, Jenk, TM, White, JWC, Sowers, T, Schwander, J, and Blunier, T
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Earth Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Climate Change Science ,Climate Action ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,Climate change science - Published
- 2014
18. P16-32: Characterization of Robust and Consistent Human iPSC-derived Induced Excitatory Neurons for Disease Modeling and Drug Discovery
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Kutsch, A., primary, Bradley, R.A., additional, Ma, J., additional, Fathi, A., additional, Fiene, R., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Carlson, C., additional, Hilcove, S., additional, Schachtele, S., additional, and Liu, J., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A Measurement of the Rate of type-Ia Supernovae at Redshift $z\approx$ 0.1 from the First Season of the SDSS-II Supernova Survey
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Dilday, Benjamin, Kessler, R., Frieman, J. A., Holtzman, J., Marriner, J., Miknaitis, G., Nichol, R. C., Romani, R., Sako, M., Bassett, B., Becker, A., Cinabro, D., DeJongh, F., Depoy, D. L., Doi, M., Garnavich, P. M., Hogan, C. J., Jha, S., Konishi, K., Lampeitl, H., Marshall, J. L., McGinnis, D., Prieto, J. L., Riess, A. G., Richmond, M. W., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., Takanashi, N., Tokita, K., van der Heyden, K., Yasuda, N., Zheng, C., Barentine, J., Brewington, H., Choi, C., Crotts, A., Dembicky, J., Harvanek, M., Im, M., Ketzeback, W., Kleinman, S. J., Krzesiński, J., Long, D. C., Malanushenko, E., Malanushenko, V., McMillan, R. J., Nitta, A., Pan, K., Saurage, G., Snedden, S. A., Watters, S., Wheeler, J. C., and York, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a measurement of the rate of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the first of three seasons of data from the SDSS-II Supernova Survey. For this measurement, we include 17 SNe Ia at redshift $z\le0.12$. Assuming a flat cosmology with $\Omega_m = 0.3=1-\Omega_\Lambda$, we find a volumetric SN Ia rate of $[2.93^{+0.17}_{-0.04}({\rm systematic})^{+0.90}_{-0.71}({\rm statistical})] \times 10^{-5} {\rm SNe} {\rm Mpc}^{-3} h_{70}^3 {\rm year}^{-1}$, at a volume-weighted mean redshift of 0.09. This result is consistent with previous measurements of the SN Ia rate in a similar redshift range. The systematic errors are well controlled, resulting in the most precise measurement of the SN Ia rate in this redshift range. We use a maximum likelihood method to fit SN rate models to the SDSS-II Supernova Survey data in combination with other rate measurements, thereby constraining models for the redshift-evolution of the SN Ia rate. Fitting the combined data to a simple power-law evolution of the volumetric SN Ia rate, $r_V \propto (1+z)^{\beta}$, we obtain a value of $\beta = 1.5 \pm 0.6$, i.e. the SN Ia rate is determined to be an increasing function of redshift at the $\sim 2.5 \sigma$ level. Fitting the results to a model in which the volumetric SN rate, $r_V=A\rho(t)+B\dot \rho(t)$, where $\rho(t)$ is the stellar mass density and $\dot \rho(t)$ is the star formation rate, we find $A = (2.8 \pm 1.2) \times 10^{-14} \mathrm{SNe} \mathrm{M}_{\sun}^{-1} \mathrm{year}^{-1}$, $B = (9.3^{+3.4}_{-3.1})\times 10^{-4} \mathrm{SNe} \mathrm{M}_{\sun}^{-1}$., Comment: 65 pages, 12 figures
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- 2008
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20. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Search Algorithm and Follow-up Observations
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Sako, Masao, Bassett, B., Becker, A., Cinabro, D., DeJongh, F., Depoy, D. L., Dilday, B., Doi, M., Frieman, J. A., Garnavich, P. M., Hogan, C. J., Holtzman, J., Jha, S., Kessler, R., Konishi, K., Lampeitl, H., Marriner, J., Miknaitis, G., Nichol, R. C., Prieto, J. L., Riess, A. G., Richmond, M. W., Romani, R., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., SubbaRao, M., Takanashi, N., Tokita, K., van der Heyden, K., Yasuda, N., Zheng, C., Barentine, J., Brewington, H., Choi, C., Dembicky, J., Harnavek, M., Ihara, Y., Im, M., Ketzeback, W., Kleinman, S. J., Krzesiński, J., Long, D. C., Malanushenko, E., Malanushenko, V., McMillan, R. J., Morokuma, T., Nitta, A., Pan, K., Saurage, G., and Snedden, S. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey has identified a large number of new transient sources in a 300 sq. deg. region along the celestial equator during its first two seasons of a three-season campaign. Multi-band (ugriz) light curves were measured for most of the sources, which include solar system objects, Galactic variable stars, active galactic nuclei, supernovae (SNe), and other astronomical transients. The imaging survey is augmented by an extensive spectroscopic follow-up program to identify SNe, measure their redshifts, and study the physical conditions of the explosions and their environment through spectroscopic diagnostics. During the survey, light curves are rapidly evaluated to provide an initial photometric type of the SNe, and a selected sample of sources are targeted for spectroscopic observations. In the first two seasons, 476 sources were selected for spectroscopic observations, of which 403 were identified as SNe. For the Type Ia SNe, the main driver for the Survey, our photometric typing and targeting efficiency is 90%. Only 6% of the photometric SN Ia candidates were spectroscopically classified as non-SN Ia instead, and the remaining 4% resulted in low signal-to-noise, unclassified spectra. This paper describes the search algorithm and the software, and the real-time processing of the SDSS imaging data. We also present the details of the supernova candidate selection procedures and strategies for follow-up spectroscopic and imaging observations of the discovered sources., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal (66 pages, 13 figures); typos corrected
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- 2007
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21. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Technical Summary
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Frieman, Joshua A., Bassett, B., Becker, A., Choi, C., Cinabro, D., DeJongh, F., Depoy, D. L., Dilday, B., Doi, M., Garnavich, P. M., Hogan, C. J., Holtzman, J., Im, M., Jha, S., Kessler, R., Konishi, K., Lampeitl, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., McGinnis, D., Miknaitis, G., Nichol, R. C., Prieto, J. L., Riess, A. G., Richmond, M. W., Romani, R., Sako, M., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., Takanashi, N., Tokita, K., van der Heyden, K., Yasuda, N., Zheng, C., Adelman-McCarthy, J., Annis, J., Assef, R. J., Barentine, J., Bender, R., Blandford, R. D., Boroski, W. N., Bremer, M., Brewington, H., Collins, C. A., Crotts, A., Dembicky, J., Eastman, J., Edge, A., Edmondson, E., Elson, E., Eyler, M. E., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Frank, S., Goobar, A., Gueth, T., Gunn, J. E., Harvanek, M., Hopp, U., Ihara, Y., Ivezić, Ž., Kahn, S., Kaplan, J., Kent, S., Ketzeback, W., Kleinman, S. J., Kollatschny, W., Kron, R. G., Krzesiński, J., Lamenti, D., Leloudas, G., Lin, H., Long, D. C., Lucey, J., Lupton, R. H., Malanushenko, E., Malanushenko, V., McMillan, R. J., Mendez, J., Morgan, C. W., Morokuma, T., Nitta, A., Ostman, L., Pan, K., Rockosi, C. M., Romer, A. K., Ruiz-Lapuente, P., Saurage, G., Schlesinger, K., Snedden, S. A., Sollerman, J., Stoughton, C., Stritzinger, M., SubbaRao, M., Tucker, D., Vaisanen, P., Watson, L. C., Watters, S., Wheeler, J. C., Yanny, B., and York, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) has embarked on a multi-year project to identify and measure light curves for intermediate-redshift (0.05 < z < 0.35) Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) using repeated five-band (ugriz) imaging over an area of 300 sq. deg. The survey region is a stripe 2.5 degrees wide centered on the celestial equator in the Southern Galactic Cap that has been imaged numerous times in earlier years, enabling construction of a deep reference image for discovery of new objects. Supernova imaging observations are being acquired between 1 September and 30 November of 2005-7. During the first two seasons, each region was imaged on average every five nights. Spectroscopic follow-up observations to determine supernova type and redshift are carried out on a large number of telescopes. In its first two three-month seasons, the survey has discovered and measured light curves for 327 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia, 30 probable SNe Ia, 14 confirmed SNe Ib/c, 32 confirmed SNe II, plus a large number of photometrically identified SNe Ia, 94 of which have host-galaxy spectra taken so far. This paper provides an overview of the project and briefly describes the observations completed during the first two seasons of operation., Comment: Submitted to The Astronomical Journal (24 pages, 10 figures)
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- 2007
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22. A Study of the Type Ia/IIn Supernova 2005gj from X-ray to the Infrared: Paper I
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Prieto, J. L., Garnavich, P. M., Phillips, M. M., DePoy, D. L., Parrent, J., Pooley, D., Dwarkadas, V. V., Baron, E., Bassett, B., Becker, A., Cinabro, D., DeJongh, F., Dilday, B., Doi, M., Frieman, J. A., Hogan, C. J., Holtzman, J., Jha, S., Kessler, R., Konishi, K., Lampeitl, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., Miknaitis, G., Nichol, R. C., Riess, A. G., Richmond, M. W., Romani, R., Sako, M., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., Takanashi, N., Tokita, K., van der Heyden, K., Yasuda, N., Zheng, C., Wheeler, J. C., Barentine, J., Dembicky, J., Eastman, J., Frank, S., Ketzeback, W., McMillan, R. J., Morrell, N., Folatelli, G., Contreras, C., Burns, C. R., Freedman, W. L., Gonzalez, S., Hamuy, M., Krzeminski, W., Madore, B. F., Murphy, D., Persson, S. E., Roth, M., and Suntzeff, N. B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present extensive ugrizYHJK photometry and optical spectroscopy of SN 2005gj obtained by the SDSS-II and CSP Supernova Projects, which give excellent coverage during the first 150 days after the time of explosion. These data show that SN 2005gj is the second clear case, after SN 2002ic, of a thermonuclear explosion in a dense circumstellar environment. Both the presence of singly and doubly ionized iron-peak elements (FeIII and weak SII, SiII) near maximum light as well as the spectral evolution show that SN 2002ic-like events are Type Ia explosions. Independent evidence comes from the exponential decay in luminosity of SN 2005gj, pointing to an exponential density distribution of the ejecta. The interaction of the supernova ejecta with the dense circumstellar medium is stronger than in SN 2002ic: (1) the supernova lines are weaker; (2) the Balmer emission lines are more luminous; and (3) the bolometric luminosity is higher close to maximum light. The velocity evolution of the Halpha components suggest that the CSM around SN 2005gj is clumpy and it has a flatter density distribution compared with the steady wind solution, in agreement with SN 2002ic. An early X-ray observation with Chandra gives an upper-limit on the mass loss rate from the companion of < 2x10^{-4} Msun/yr., Comment: 63 pages, 16 figures, submitted to AJ
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- 2007
23. Hubble Space Telescope and Ground-Based Observations of Type Ia Supernovae at Redshift 0.5: Cosmological Implications
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Clocchiatti, A., Schmidt, B., Filippenko, A., Challis, P., Coil, A., Covarrubias, R., Diercks, A., Garnavich, P., Germany, L., Gilliland, R., Hogan, C., Jha, S., Kirshner, R., Leibundgut, B., Leonard, D., Li, W., Matheson, T., Phillips, M., Prieto, J., Reiss, D., Riess, A., Schommer, R., Smith, R., Soderberg, A., Spyromilio, J., Stubbs, C., Suntzeff, N., Tonry, J., and Woudt, P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of the Type Ia supernovae (SNe) 1999M, 1999N, 1999Q, 1999S, and 1999U, at redshift z~0.5. They were discovered in early 1999 with the 4.0~m Blanco telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory by the High-z Supernova Search Team (HZT) and subsequently followed with many ground-based telescopes. SNe 1999Q and 1999U were also observed with the Hubble Space Telescope. We computed luminosity distances to the new SNe using two methods, and added them to the high-z Hubble diagram that the HZT has been constructing since 1995. The new distance moduli confirm the results of previous work. At z~0.5, luminosity distances are larger than those expected for an empty universe, implying that a ``Cosmological Constant,'' or another form of ``dark energy,'' has been increasing the expansion rate of the Universe during the last few billion years., Comment: 68 pages, 22 figures. Scheduled for the 01 February 2006 issue of Ap.J. (v637)
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- 2005
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24. The Fall 2004 SDSS Supernova Survey
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Sako, Masao, Romani, Roger, Frieman, Josh, Adelman-McCarthy, Jen, Becker, Andrew, DeJongh, Fritz, Dilday, Ben, Estrada, Juan, Hendry, John, Holtzman, Jon, Kaplan, Jared, Kessler, Rick, Lampeitl, Hubert, Marriner, John, Miknaitis, Gajus, Riess, Adam, Tucker, Douglas, Barentine, J., Blandford, R., Brewington, H., Dembicky, J., Harvanek, M., Hawley, S., Hogan, C., Johnston, D., Kahn, S., Ketzeback, B., Kleinman, S., Krzesinski, J., Lamenti, D., Long, D., McMillan, R., Newman, P., Nitta, A., Nichol, R., Scranton, R., Sheldon, E., Snedden, S., Stoughton, C., York, D., and Collaboration, the SDSS
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In preparation for the Supernova Survey of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II, a proposed 3-year extension to the SDSS, we have conducted an early engineering and science run during the fall of 2004, which consisted of approximately 20 scheduled nights of repeated imaging of half of the southern equatorial stripe. Transient supernova-like events were detected in near real-time and photometric measurements were made in the five SDSS filter bandpasses with a cadence of ~2 days. Candidate type Ia supernovae (SNe) were pre-selected based on their colors, light curve shape, and the properties of the host galaxy. Follow-up spectroscopic observations were performed with the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5m telescope and the 9.2m Hobby-Eberly Telescope to confirm their types and measure the redshifts. The 2004 campaign resulted in 22 spectroscopically confirmed SNe, which includes 16 type Ia, 5 type II, and 1 type Ib/c. These SN Ia will help fill in the sparsely sampled redshift interval of z = 0.05 - 0.35, the so-called 'redshift desert', in the Hubble diagram. Detailed investigation of the spectral properties of these moderate-redshift SNe Ia will also provide a bridge between local SNe and high-redshift objects, and will help us understand the systematics for future cosmological applications that require high photometric precision. Finally, the large survey volume also provides the opportunity to select unusual supernovae for spectroscopic study that are poorly sampled in other surveys. We report on some of the early results from this program and discuss potential future applications., Comment: 6 pages; Presentation at the 22nd Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics; minor revisions
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- 2005
25. Detection of Intergalactic HeII Absorption at Redshift 3.5
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Zheng, W., Chiu, K., Anderson, S. F., Schneider, D. P., Hogan, C. J., York, D. G., Burles, S., and Brinkmann, J. V.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The large number of quasars found in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey has allowed searches for elusive, clear lines of sight towards HeII Ly-alpha absorption, a sensitive probe of the intergalactic medium. The few known systems indicate that HeII reionization occurs at z>3. We report the detection of a HeII Ly-alpha absorption edge in a quasar spectrum at z=3.50, the most distant such feature found to date. The candidate quasar was selected from a z~3 sample in the SDSS spectroscopic quasar survey and confirmed as part of an HST/STIS SNAP survey. We discuss the general characteristics of the absorption feature, as well as the probability for discovery of additional such objects., Comment: 11 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses Aastex.sty The Astronomical Journal, in press
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- 2003
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26. Functional characterisation of the fission yeast Ino80 complex
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Hogan, C.
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571.29 - Abstract
INOsitol-requiring 80 (Ino80) is a catalytic ATP-dependent nucleosome remodelling enzyme of the Ino80 complex which is involved in transcription, replication and the DNA damage response. In this thesis, I characterise for the first time the Ino80 complex from Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Purification of the Ino80-associated complex identified a highly conserved complex and the presence of a novel zinc finger protein, lec1, with similarities to the mammalian transcriptional regulator Yin Yang 1 (YY1) and other members of the GLI-Krüppel family of proteins. Deletion of this lec1 protein or the Ino80 complex subunits: Arp8, les6 or les2 causes defects in DNA damage repair, response to replication stress and nucleotide metabolism. I demonstrate that lec1 is important for the correct expression of genes involved in nucleotide metabolism such as ribonucleotide reductase subunit cdc22. Ino80 is recruited to a large number of promoter regions upon phosphate starvation, including those of phosphate and adenine responsive genes that depend on lec1 for correct expression. lec1 is required for binding of Ino80 to target genes and subsequent histone loss at the promoter and throughout the body of these genes. this suggests that the lec1-Ino80 complex promotes transcription through nucleosome eviction. My study of the Ino80 complex subunits lec1 and Arp8 shows that they act together or oppose one another, depending on the target locus. These subunits affect gene expression, histone density and deposition of histone marks: H3K4me3, H3K9me3 and H3K36me3. Arp8 affects iec1 gene expression and regulates the presence of lec1 at target genes. These results reveal the modular nature of the Ino80 complex. Finally, I show that deletion of Ino80 subunits leads to sensitivity to drugs that inhibit transcription elongation.
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- 2010
27. Supernova Limits on the Cosmic Equation of State
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Garnavich, P. M., Jha, S., Challis, P., Clocchiatti, A., Diercks, A., Filippenko, A. V., Gilliland, R. L., Hogan, C. J., Kirshner, R. P., Leibundgut, B., Phillips, M. M., Reiss, D., Riess, A. G., Schmidt, B. P., Schommer, R. A., Smith, R. C., Spyromilio, J., Stubbs, C., Suntzeff, N. B., Tonry, J., and Carroll, S. M.
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Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We use Type Ia supernovae studied by the High-Z Supernova Search Team to constrain the properties of an energy component which may have contributed to accelerating the cosmic expansion. We find that for a flat geometry the equation of state parameter for the unknown component, alpha_x=P_x/rho_x, must be less than -0.55 (95% confidence) for any value of Omega_m and is further limited to alpha_x<-0.60 (95%) if Omega_m is assumed to be greater than 0.1 . These values are inconsistent with the unknown component being topological defects such as domain walls, strings, or textures. The supernova data are consistent with a cosmological constant (alpha_x=-1) or a scalar field which has had, on average, an equation of state parameter similar to the cosmological constant value of -1 over the redshift range of z=1 to the present. Supernova and cosmic microwave background observations give complementary constraints on the densities of matter and the unknown component. If only matter and vacuum energy are considered, then the current combined data sets provide direct evidence for a spatially flat Universe with Omega_tot=Omega_m+Omega_Lambda = 0.94 +/- 0.26 (1-sigma)., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 3 figures
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- 1998
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28. Topologization of β-antimonene on Bi2Se3 via proximity effects
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Holtgrewe, K., Mahatha, S. K., Sheverdyaeva, P. M., Moras, P., Flammini, R., Colonna, S., Ronci, F., Papagno, M., Barla, A., Petaccia, L., Aliev, Z. S., Babanly, M. B., Chulkov, E. V., Sanna, S., Hogan, C., and Carbone, C.
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- 2020
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29. The Cosmic Baryon Budget
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Fukugita, M., Hogan, C. J., and Peebles, P. J. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an estimate of the global budget of baryons in all states, with conservative estimates of the uncertainties, based on all relevant information we have been able to marshal. Most of the baryons today are still in the form of ionized gas, which contributes a mean density uncertain by a factor of about four. Stars and their remnants are a relatively minor component, comprising for our best-guess plasma density only about 17% of the baryons, while populations contributing most of the blue starlight comprise less than 5%. The formation of galaxies and of stars within them appears to be a globally inefficient process. The sum over our budget, expressed as a fraction of the critical Einstein-de Sitter density, is in the range $0.007\lsim\Omega_B\lsim 0.041$, with a best guess $\Omega_B\sim 0.021$ (at Hubble constant 70 km/s/Mpc). The central value agrees with the prediction from the theory of light element production and with measures of the density of intergalactic plasma at redshift $z\sim 3$. This apparent concordance suggests we may be close to a complete survey of the major states of the baryons., Comment: 30 pages, AAS Latex, submitted to the Astrophysical Journal
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- 1997
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30. Constraints on Cosmological Models from Hubble Space Telescope Observations of High-z Supernovae
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Garnavich, P. M., Kirshner, R. P., Challis, P., Tonry, J., Gilliland, R. L., Smith, R. C., Clocchiatti, A., Diercks, A., Filippenko, A. V., Hamuy, M., Hogan, C. J., Leibundgut, B., Phillips, M. M., Reiss, D., Riess, A. G., Schmidt, B. P., Spyromilio, J., Stubbs, C., Suntzeff, N. B., and Wells, L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have coordinated Hubble Space Telescope photometry with ground-based discovery for three supernovae: two SN Ia near z~0.5 (SN 1997ce, SN 1997cj) and a third event at z=0.97 (SN 1997ck). The superb spatial resolution of HST separates each supernova from its host galaxy and leads to good precision in the light curves. The HST data combined with ground-based photometry provide good temporal coverage. We use these light curves and relations between luminosity, light curve shape, and color calibrated from low-z samples to derive relative luminosity distances which are accurate to 10% at z~0.5 and 20% at z=1. The redshift-distance relation is used to place constraints on the global mean matter density, Omega_matter, and the normalized cosmological constant, Omega_Lambda. When the HST sample is combined with the distance to SN 1995K (z=0.48), analyzed by the same precepts, it suggests that matter alone is insufficient to produce a flat Universe. Specifically, for Omega_matter+Omega_Lambda=1, Omega_matter is less than 1 with >95% confidence, and our best estimate of Omega_matter is -0.1 +/- 0.5 if Omega_Lambda=0. Although the present result is based on a very small sample whose systematics remain to be explored, it demonstrates the power of HST measurements for high redshift supernovae., Comment: Submitted to ApJ Letters, 3 figures, 1 plate, additional table
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- 1997
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31. Confirmation of high deuterium abundance in QSO absorbers
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Rugers, M. and Hogan, C. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a new analysis of a Keck spectrum of Q0014+813, with a new model of the $z=3.32$ absorbing cloud. We fit Lyman series absorption of the dominant HI components, including components identified with hydrogen and associated deuterium at two discrete velocities, with thermal line broadening of each species. The deuterium features are too narrow to be interlopers, and the good agreement in temperature and redshift with their hydrogen counterparts confirms the identification as deuterium. The abundance is measured to be $D/H$ $ = 1.9 \pm 0.5$ and $1.9 \pm 0.4 \times 10^{-4}$ in the two components, with an independent lower limit of D/H $> 1.3 \times 10^{-4}$ for the sum, derived from the Lyman Limit opacity. The impact on cosmological theory is briefly discussed., Comment: 15 pages, AAS Latex, final version, to appear in ApJ Letters
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- 1995
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32. Patients Who Trigger Rapid Response Immediately Upon Hospital Admission Have Higher Mortality Than Equivalent Patients Without Rapid Responses
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Freedman, M.T., primary, Lykins, J.D., additional, Zenmore, Z., additional, Sedhai, Y.R., additional, Lubin, S., additional, Sessler, C.N., additional, Hogan, C., additional, and Kashiouris, M.G., additional
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- 2023
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33. Diagnostic Woes: The Challenge of Spotting Sepsis
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Clouse, T., primary, Karlic, K.J., additional, Wang, X., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Seelye, S., additional, Sussman, J.B., additional, and Prescott, H.C., additional
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- 2023
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34. A Multi-Hospital Survey of Current Practices for Supporting Recovery From Sepsis
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Hechtman, R.K., primary, Cano, J., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Sussman, J., additional, and Prescott, H.C., additional
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- 2023
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35. Keeping Tabs on Sepsis: A Modified CDC Adult Sepsis Event (CDC-ASE) Definition
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Karlic, K.J., primary, Clouse, T., additional, Wang, X.Q., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Seelye, S., additional, Sussman, J.B., additional, and Prescott, H.C., additional
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- 2023
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36. Dexmedetomidine and Propofol Sedation in Critically Ill Patients and Dose-associated 90-Day Mortality: A Secondary Cohort Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial (SPICE III)
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Shehabi, Yahya, primary, Serpa Neto, Ary, additional, Bellomo, Rinaldo, additional, Howe, Belinda D., additional, Arabi, Yaseen M., additional, Bailey, Michael, additional, Bass, Frances E., additional, Bin Kadiman, Suhaini, additional, McArthur, Colin J., additional, Reade, Michael C., additional, Seppelt, Ian M., additional, Takala, Jukka, additional, Wise, Matt P., additional, Webb, Steve A., additional, Mashonganyika, C., additional, McKee, H., additional, Tonks, A., additional, Donnelly, A., additional, Hemmings, N., additional, O’Kane, S., additional, Blakemore, A., additional, Butler, M., additional, Cowdrey, K., additional, Dalton, J., additional, Gilder, E., additional, Long, S., additional, McCarthy, L., additional, McGuinness, S., additional, Parke, R., additional, Chen, Y., additional, McArthur, C., additional, McConnochie, R., additional, Newby, L., additional, Bellomo, R., additional, Eastwood, G., additional, Peck, L., additional, Young, H., additional, Boschert, C., additional, Edington, J., additional, Fletcher, J., additional, Smith, J., additional, Nand, K., additional, Raza, A., additional, Sara, T., additional, Bennett-Britton, J., additional, Bewley, J., additional, Bodenham, V., additional, Cole, L., additional, Driver, K., additional, Grimmer, L., additional, Howie, L., additional, Searles, C., additional, Sweet, K., additional, Webster, D., additional, van Berkel, A., additional, Connor, H., additional, Dennett, J., additional, van Der Graaff, M., additional, Henderson, S., additional, Mehrtens, J., additional, Miller, K., additional, Minto, E., additional, Morris, A., additional, Noble, S., additional, Parker, K., additional, Bulfin, L., additional, Hart, N., additional, Shepherd, K., additional, Vij, S., additional, Dickson, S., additional, Elloway, E., additional, Ferguson, C., additional, Jackson, R., additional, MacNaughton, P., additional, Marner, M., additional, Squire, R., additional, Waddy, S., additional, Wafer, P., additional, Welbourne, J., additional, Ashcroft, P., additional, Chambler, D., additional, Dukes, S., additional, Harris, A., additional, Horton, S., additional, Sharpe, S., additional, Williams, P., additional, Williams, S., additional, Bailey, M., additional, Blazquez, E., additional, France, D., additional, Hutchison, R., additional, O’Connor, A., additional, Comadira, G., additional, Gough, M., additional, Tallott, M., additional, Bastick, M., additional, Cameron, R., additional, Donovan, S., additional, Ellis, K., additional, Gaur, A., additional, Gregory, R., additional, Naumoff, J., additional, Turner, E., additional, White, M., additional, Au, K. F. J., additional, Fratzia, J., additional, Treloar, S., additional, Lim, C. H., additional, Maseeda, Y., additional, Tan, A. P., additional, Tang, C. L., additional, Yong, C. Y., additional, Akaltan, M., additional, Berger, S., additional, Blaser, D., additional, Fazlija, L., additional, Jong, M. L., additional, Lensch, M., additional, Ludwig, R., additional, Merz, T., additional, Nettelbeck, K., additional, Roth, M., additional, Schafer, M., additional, Takala, J., additional, Wehr, A., additional, Zacharias, D., additional, Amran, R., additional, Ashraf, H. N., additional, Azmi, N., additional, Basri, N., additional, Burhanuddin, H., additional, Hadinata, Y., additional, Hamdan, A., additional, Kadiman, S., additional, Rashid, A. I. Y. M., additional, Sabran, I. N., additional, Sulaiman, S., additional, Zabidi, I. N., additional, Al-Dawood, A., additional, Aljuaid, M., additional, Anizi, H. Al, additional, Saeedi, A. Al, additional, Arabi, Y., additional, Dbsawy, M., additional, Deeb, A., additional, Hegazy, M., additional, Magdi, I., additional, Clarey, E., additional, Corcoran, E., additional, Finney, C., additional, Harris, C., additional, Hopkins, P., additional, Noble, H., additional, Thompson, L., additional, Williams, T., additional, Dumlao, L. A., additional, Bassam, R., additional, Hassan, M. A., additional, Naseem, N., additional, Al-Kurdi, M. H., additional, Al-Harthy, A. M., additional, Bernard, S., additional, Sebafundi, L., additional, Serban, C., additional, Lim, S. K., additional, Mazidah, N., additional, Saidin, N., additional, Sjamsuddin, N., additional, Tan, I. T. A., additional, Zabidi, N., additional, Brain, M., additional, Mineall, S., additional, Kanhere, M., additional, Soar, N., additional, Kadir, N. Abd, additional, Abdullah, N. H., additional, Awang, R., additional, Emperan, Z., additional, Husin, N. S., additional, Ismail, N. I., additional, Ismail, S. Z., additional, Khadzali, F. N. A. Mohd, additional, Norddin, M. F., additional, Aguila, J., additional, Bold, C., additional, Clatworthy, B., additional, Dias, A., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Kazemi, A., additional, Lai, V., additional, Song, R., additional, Williams, A., additional, Bhatia, D., additional, Elliot, S., additional, Galt, P., additional, Lavrans, K., additional, Ritchie, P., additional, Wang, A., additional, Gresham, R., additional, Lowrey, J., additional, Masters, K., additional, Palejs, P., additional, Seppelt, I., additional, Symonds, F., additional, Weisbrodt, L., additional, Whitehead, C., additional, Babio-Galan, M., additional, Calder, V., additional, Clement, I., additional, Harrison, A., additional, McCullagh, I., additional, Scott, C., additional, Bevan, R., additional, Caniba, S., additional, Hacking, D., additional, Maher, L., additional, Azzolini, M. L., additional, Beccaria, P., additional, Colombo, S., additional, Landoni, G., additional, Leggieri, C., additional, Luca, C., additional, Mamo, D., additional, Moizo, E., additional, Monti, G., additional, Mucci, M., additional, Zangrillo, A., additional, Albania, M., additional, Arora, S., additional, Shi, Y., additional, Abudayah, A., additional, Almekhlafi, G., additional, Al Amodi, E., additional, Al Samarrai, S., additional, Badawi, M., additional, Caba, R. Cubio, additional, Elffaki, O., additional, Mandourah, Y., additional, Valerio, J., additional, Joyce, C., additional, Meyer, J., additional, Saylor, E., additional, Venkatesh, B., additional, Venz, E., additional, Walsham, J., additional, Wetzig, K., additional, Khoo, T. M., additional, Liew, J. E. S., additional, Sakthi, A. N., additional, Zulkurnain, A., additional, Bamford, A., additional, Bergin, C., additional, Carrera, R., additional, Cooper, L., additional, Despy, L., additional, Harkett, S., additional, Mee, L., additional, Reeves, E., additional, Snelson, C., additional, Spruce, E., additional, Cooper, G., additional, Hodgson, R., additional, Pearson, D., additional, Rosbergen, M., additional, Ali, M. N., additional, Bahar, N. I., additional, Ismail, A., additional, Ismail, W. N. W., additional, Samat, N. M., additional, Piah, N. S. M., additional, Rahman, R. Abd, additional, Duroux, M., additional, Ratcliffe, M., additional, Warhurst, T., additional, Buehner, U., additional, Williams, E., additional, Jacques, N., additional, Keating, L., additional, Macgill, S., additional, Tamang, K. L., additional, Tolan, N., additional, Walden, A., additional, Bower, R., additional, Cranshaw, J., additional, Molloy, K., additional, Pitts, S., additional, Butler, J., additional, Dunlop, R., additional, Fourie, C., additional, Jarrett, P., additional, Lassig-Smith, M., additional, Livermore, A., additional, O’Donoghue, S., additional, Reade, M., additional, Starr, T., additional, Stuart, J., additional, Campbell, L., additional, Phillips, M., additional, Stephens, D., additional, Thomas, J., additional, Cooper, D., additional, McAllister, R., additional, Andrew, G., additional, Barclay, L., additional, Dawson, H., additional, Griffith, D. M., additional, Hope, D., additional, Wojcik, G., additional, McCulloch, C., additional, Paterson, R., additional, Ascough, L., additional, Paisley, C., additional, Patrick-Heselton, J., additional, Shaw, D., additional, Waugh, V., additional, Williams, K., additional, Welters, I., additional, Barge, D., additional, Jordan, A., additional, MacIsaac, C., additional, Rechnitzer, T., additional, Bass, F., additional, Gatward, J., additional, Hammond, N., additional, Janin, P., additional, Stedman, W., additional, Yarad, E., additional, Razak, N. A., additional, Dzulkipli, N., additional, Jong, S. L., additional, Asen, K., additional, Voon, W. L., additional, Liew, S., additional, Ball, J., additional, Barnes, V., additional, Dalton, C., additional, Farnell-Ward, S., additional, Farrah, H., additional, Maher, K., additional, Mellinghoff, J., additional, Ryan, C., additional, Shirley, P., additional, Conlon, L., additional, Glover, A., additional, Martin-Loeches, I., additional, O’Toole, E., additional, Ewan, J., additional, Ferrier, J., additional, Litton, E., additional, Webb, S. A., additional, Berry, W., additional, Blanco Alonso, U., additional, Bociek, A., additional, Campos, S., additional, Jawara, S., additional, Hanks, F., additional, Kelly, A., additional, Lei, K., additional, McKenzie, C., additional, Ostermann, M., additional, Wan, R., additional, Al-Soufi, S., additional, Leow, S., additional, McCann, K., additional, Reynolds, C., additional, Brickell, K., additional, Fahey, C., additional, Hays, L., additional, Hyde, N., additional, Nichol, A., additional, Ryan, D., additional, Brailsford, J., additional, Buckley, A., additional, Forbes, L., additional, Maguire, T., additional, Moore, J., additional, Murray, L., additional, Ghosh, A., additional, Park, M., additional, Said, S., additional, Visser, A., additional, Abidin, H. Z., additional, Ali, S., additional, Hassan, M. H., additional, Omar, S. C., additional, Shukeri, W. F. W., additional, Brealey, D., additional, Bercades, G., additional, Blackburn, E., additional, Macallum, N., additional, Macklin, A., additional, Ryu, J. H., additional, Tam, K., additional, Smyth, D., additional, Arif, A., additional, Bassford, C., additional, Morgan, C., additional, Swann, C., additional, Ward, G., additional, Wild, L., additional, Bone, A., additional, Elderkin, T., additional, Green, D., additional, Sach, D., additional, Salerno, T., additional, Simpson, N., additional, Brohi, F., additional, Clark, M., additional, Williams, L., additional, Brooks, J., additional, Cocks, E., additional, Cole, J., additional, Curtin, J., additional, Davies, R., additional, Hill, H., additional, Morgan, M., additional, Palmer, N., additional, Whitton, C., additional, Wise, M., additional, Baskaran, P., additional, Hasan, M. S., additional, Tham, L. Y., additional, Sol Cruz, R., additional, Dinsdale, D., additional, Edney, S., additional, Firkin, C., additional, FitzJohn, F., additional, Hill, G., additional, Hunt, A., additional, Hurford, S., additional, Jones, G., additional, Judd, H., additional, Latimer-Bell, C., additional, Lawrence, C., additional, Lesona, E., additional, Navarra, L., additional, Robertson, Y., additional, Smellie, H., additional, Vucago, A. M., additional, Young, P., additional, Clark, P., additional, Kong, J., additional, Ho, J., additional, Nayyar, V., additional, and Skelly, C., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
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37. Labour self-sufficiency on family dairy farms in Ireland: a case study approach considering labour requirement, input and management
- Author
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Beecher, M., primary, Gormley, M., additional, Deming, J., additional, Hogan, C., additional, and O’Brien, B., additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The transition from 3C SiC (1 1 1) to graphene captured by Ultra High Vacuum Scanning Tunneling Microscopy
- Author
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Gupta, B., Placidi, E., Hogan, C., Mishra, N., Iacopi, F., and Motta, N.
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- 2015
- Full Text
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39. Physiological evidence for involvement of a kinesin-related protein during anaphase spindle elongation in diatom central spindles.
- Author
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Hogan, C, Stephens, L, Shimizu, T, and CANDE, W. Zacheus
- Subjects
Adenosine Triphosphate ,Anaphase ,Cell Membrane Permeability ,Cytidine Triphosphate ,Diatoms ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Guanosine Triphosphate ,Inosine Triphosphate ,Kinesin ,Movement ,Nucleotides ,Spindle Apparatus ,Subcellular Fractions ,Tubulin ,Uridine Triphosphate - Abstract
We have developed a new model system for studying spindle elongation in vitro using the pennate, marine diatom Cylindrotheca fusiformis. C. fusiformis can be grown in bulk to high densities while in log phase growth and synchronized by a simple light/dark regime. Isolated spindles can be attained in quantities sufficient for biochemical analysis and spindle tubulin is approximately 5% of the total protein present. The spindle isolation procedure results in a 10-fold enrichment of diatom tubulin and a calculated 40-fold increase in spindle protein. Isolated spindles or spindles in permeabilized cells can elongate in vitro by the same mechanism and with the same pharmacological sensitivities as described for other anaphase B models (Cande and McDonald, 1986; Masuda et al., 1990). Using this model, in vitro spindle elongation rate profiles were developed for a battery of nucleotide triphosphates and ATP analogs. The relative rates of spindle elongation produced by various nucleotide triphosphates parallel relative rates seen for kinesin-based motility in microtubule gliding assays. Likewise ATP analogs that allow discrimination between myosin-, dynein-, and kinesin-mediated motility produce relative spindle elongation rates characteristic of kinesin motility. Also, isolated spindle fractions are enriched for a kinesin related protein as identified by a peptide antibody against a conserved region of the kinesin superfamily. These data suggest that kinesin-like motility contributes to spindle elongation during anaphase B of mitosis.
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- 1992
40. ABO Incompatible Renal Transplantation Without Antibody Removal Using Conventional Immunosuppression Alone
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Masterson, R., Hughes, P., Walker, R.G., Hogan, C., Haeusler, M., Robertson, A.R., Millar, R., Suh, N., and Cohney, S.J.
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- 2014
- Full Text
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41. Moody and Clarke: College members in focus for Black History Month.
- Author
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Hogan, C
- Subjects
- *
CIVIL rights movements , *BLACK history - Abstract
We celebrate the lives of Cecil Belfield Clarke and Harold Moody who founded the League of Coloured Peoples, the first civil rights movement in the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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42. P070 Does exercise reduce fat free mass loss during very low energy diet-induced rapid weight loss? A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Lowrie, F, primary, Phillips, C, additional, Hogan, C, additional, Tran, D, additional, Marshall, N, additional, Gordon, C, additional, Yee, B, additional, and Cayanan, E, additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. First report of Konjac mosaic virus in Zantedeschia aethiopica from the United Kingdom
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Chisnall, K. A. M., primary, Frew, L., additional, Hogan, C., additional, Harju, V., additional, Ward, R., additional, Long, M., additional, Buxton‐Kirk, A., additional, Fowkes, A. R., additional, Skelton, A., additional, and Fox, A., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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44. The Library in 1947 and 2022: what has changed?
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Isaac, S, primary and Hogan, C, additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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45. 1656TiP The STAMPEDE2 niraparib-abiraterone acetate + prednisolone trial: A phase III, randomised, open-label trial in patients with metastatic prostate cancer (mPC) with a deleterious alteration in a homologous recombination repair (HRR) gene starting androgen deprivation therapy (ADT)
- Author
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Howlett, S., Kayani, M., Brown, L.C., Amos, C.L., Dutey-Magni, P., Yogeswaran, Y., O'Shea, L., Hogan, C., Wingate, A., Lall, S., Eeles, R., Hubank, M., Williams, P., Cross, W., Sachdeva, A., Clarke, N., Parmar, M.K., James, N.D., Grist, E., and Attard, G.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. An examination of labor time-use on spring-calving dairy farms in Ireland
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Hogan, C., primary, Kinsella, J., additional, O'Brien, B., additional, Gorman, M., additional, and Beecher, M., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Estimating the effect of different work practices and technologies on labor efficiency within pasture-based dairy systems
- Author
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Hogan, C., primary, Kinsella, J., additional, O'Brien, B., additional, Markey, A., additional, and Beecher, M., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
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48. Vacuum energy density measured from cosmological data
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Prat, J., primary, Hogan, C., additional, Chang, C., additional, and Frieman, J., additional
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Multiple Mössbauer Spectra Data Acquisition with an In-situ Cyclic Voltammetry System
- Author
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Greaves, T L, Cashion, J D, Benci, A L, Jaggi, N K, Hogan, C, Bond, A M, Thomas, Michael F., editor, Williams, John M., editor, and Gibb, Terence C., editor
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Troponin is unrelated to outcomes in heart failure patients discharged from the emergency department.
- Author
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Fermann, GJ, Schrock, JW, Levy, PD, Pang, P, Butler, J, Chang, AM, Char, D, Diercks, D, Han, JH, Hiestand, B, Hogan, C, Jenkins, CA, Kampe, C, Khan, Y, Kumar, VA, Lee, S, Lindenfeld, J, Liu, D, Miller, KF, Peacock, WF, Reilly, CM, Robichaux, C, Rothman, RL, Self, WH, Singer, AJ, Sterling, SA, Storrow, AB, Stubblefield, WB, Walsh, C, Wilburn, J, Collins, SP, Fermann, GJ, Schrock, JW, Levy, PD, Pang, P, Butler, J, Chang, AM, Char, D, Diercks, D, Han, JH, Hiestand, B, Hogan, C, Jenkins, CA, Kampe, C, Khan, Y, Kumar, VA, Lee, S, Lindenfeld, J, Liu, D, Miller, KF, Peacock, WF, Reilly, CM, Robichaux, C, Rothman, RL, Self, WH, Singer, AJ, Sterling, SA, Storrow, AB, Stubblefield, WB, Walsh, C, Wilburn, J, and Collins, SP
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prior data has demonstrated increased mortality in hospitalized patients with acute heart failure (AHF) and troponin elevation. No data has specifically examined the prognostic significance of troponin elevation in patients with AHF discharged after emergency department (ED) management. OBJECTIVE: Evaluate the relationship between troponin elevation and outcomes in patients with AHF who are treated and released from the ED. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of the Get with the Guidelines to Reduce Disparities in AHF Patients Discharged from the ED (GUIDED-HF) trial, a randomized, controlled trial of ED patients with AHF who were discharged. Patients with elevated conventional troponin not due to acute coronary syndrome (ACS) were included. Our primary outcome was a composite endpoint: time to 30-day cardiovascular death and/or heart failure-related events. RESULTS: Of the 491 subjects included in the GUIDED-HF trial, 418 had troponin measured during the ED evaluation and 66 (16%) had troponin values above the 99th percentile. Median age was 63 years (interquartile range, 54-70), 62% (n = 261) were male, 63% (n = 265) were Black, and 16% (n = 67) experienced our primary outcome. There were no differences in our primary outcome between those with and without troponin elevation (12/66, 18.1% vs 55/352, 15.6%; P = 0.60). This effect was maintained regardless of assignment to usual care or the intervention arm. In multivariable regression analysis, there was no association between our primary outcome and elevated troponin (hazard ratio, 1.00; 95% confidence interval, 0.49-2.01, P = 0.994). CONCLUSION: If confirmed in a larger cohort, these findings may facilitate safe ED discharge for a group of patients with AHF without ACS when an elevated troponin is the primary reason for admission.
- Published
- 2022
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