30,455 results on '"Kauffmann A"'
Search Results
2. Phi-4 Technical Report
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Abdin, Marah, Aneja, Jyoti, Behl, Harkirat, Bubeck, Sébastien, Eldan, Ronen, Gunasekar, Suriya, Harrison, Michael, Hewett, Russell J., Javaheripi, Mojan, Kauffmann, Piero, Lee, James R., Lee, Yin Tat, Li, Yuanzhi, Liu, Weishung, Mendes, Caio C. T., Nguyen, Anh, Price, Eric, de Rosa, Gustavo, Saarikivi, Olli, Salim, Adil, Shah, Shital, Wang, Xin, Ward, Rachel, Wu, Yue, Yu, Dingli, Zhang, Cyril, and Zhang, Yi
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
We present phi-4, a 14-billion parameter language model developed with a training recipe that is centrally focused on data quality. Unlike most language models, where pre-training is based primarily on organic data sources such as web content or code, phi-4 strategically incorporates synthetic data throughout the training process. While previous models in the Phi family largely distill the capabilities of a teacher model (specifically GPT-4), phi-4 substantially surpasses its teacher model on STEM-focused QA capabilities, giving evidence that our data-generation and post-training techniques go beyond distillation. Despite minimal changes to the phi-3 architecture, phi-4 achieves strong performance relative to its size -- especially on reasoning-focused benchmarks -- due to improved data, training curriculum, and innovations in the post-training scheme.
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- 2024
3. ALMA Observations of Massive Clouds in the Central Molecular Zone: External-Pressure-Confined Dense Cores and Salpeter-like Core Mass Functions
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Zhang, Zhenying, Lu, Xing, Liu, Tie, Qin, Sheng-Li, Ginsburg, Adam, Cheng, Yu, Liu, Hauyu Baobab, Walker, Daniel L., Tang, Xindi, Li, Shanghuo, Zhang, Qizhou, Pillai, Thushara, Kauffmann, Jens, Battersby, Cara, Feng, Siyi, Zhang, Suinan, Gu, Qi-Lao, Xu, Fengwei, Jiao, Wenyu, Liu, Xunchuan, Chen, Li, Luo, Qiu-yi, Mai, Xiaofeng, Li, Zi-yang, Yang, Dongting, Shen, Xianjin, Liu, Meizhu, and Shen, Zhiqiang
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Band 6 (1.3 mm) observations of dense cores in three massive molecular clouds within the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) of the Milky Way, including the Dust Ridge cloud e, Sgr C, and the 20 km s-1 cloud, at a spatial resolution of 2000 au. Among the 834 cores identified from the 1.3 mm continuum, we constrain temperatures and linewidths of 253 cores using local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) methods to fit the H2CO and/or CH3CN spectra. We determine their masses using the 1.3 mm dust continuum and derived temperatures, and then evaluate their virial parameters using the H2CO and/or CH3CN linewidths and construct the core mass functions (CMFs). We find that the contribution of external pressure is crucial for the virial equilibrium of the dense cores in the three clouds, which contrasts with the environment in the Galactic disk where dense cores are already bound even without the contribution of external pressure. We also find that the CMFs show a Salpeter-like slope in the high-mass (>~3-6 Msun) end, a change from previous works with our new temperature estimates. Combined with the possible top-heavy initial mass functions (IMFs) in the CMZ, our result suggests that gas accretion and further fragmentation may play important roles in transforming the CMF to the IMF., Comment: ApJ accepted. The 4 figure sets with numerous panels will be published on the AAS journal website
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- 2024
4. A Survey of Magnetic Field Properties in Bok Globules
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Roychowdhury, Tamojeet, Pillai, Thushara G. S., Vilega-Rodrigues, Claudia, Kauffmann, Jens, Tram, Le Ngoc, Bourke, Tyler L., and Magalhaes, Victor de Souza
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Bok globules are small, dense clouds that act as isolated precursors for the formation of single or binary stars. Although recent dust polarization surveys, primarily with Planck, have shown that molecular clouds are strongly magnetized, the significance of magnetic fields in Bok globules has largely been limited to individual case studies, lacking a broader statistical understanding. In this work, we introduce a comprehensive optical polarimetric survey of 21 Bok globules. Using Gaia and near-IR photometric data, we produce extinction maps for each target. Using the radiative torque alignment model customized to the physical properties of the Bok globule, we characterize the polarization efficiency of one representative globule as a function of its visual extinction. We thus find our optical polarimetric data to be a good probe of the globule's magnetic field. Our statistical analysis of the orientation of elongated extinction structures relative to the plane-of-sky magnetic field orientations shows they do not align strictly parallel or perpendicular. Instead, the data is best explained by a bimodal distribution, with structures oriented at projected angles that are either parallel or perpendicular. The plane-of-sky magnetic field strengths on the scales probed by optical polarimetric data are measured using the Davis-Chandrasekhar-Fermi technique. We then derive magnetic properties such as Alfv\'en Mach numbers and mass-to-magnetic flux ratios. Our findings statistically place the large-scale (Av < 7 mag) magnetic properties of Bok globules in a dynamically important domain., Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures
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- 2024
5. High-quality hexagonal boron nitride selectively grown on patterned epigraphene by MOVPE
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Ottapilakkal, Vishnu, Juyal, Abhishek, Sundaram, Suresh, Vuong, Phuong, Beck, Collin, Dudeck, Noel L., Bencherif, Amira, Loiseau, Annick, Fossard, Frédéric, Mérot, Jean-Sebastien, Chapron, David, Kauffmann, Thomas H., Salvestrini, Jean-Paul, Voss, Paul L., de Heer, Walt A., Berger, Claire, and Ougazzaden, Abdallah
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Hexagonal boron nitride encapsulation is the method of choice for protecting graphene from environmental doping and impurity scattering. It was previously demonstrated that metal-organic vapor phase epitaxy (MOVPE) grows epitaxially ordered, uniform BN layers on epigraphene (graphene grown on SiC). Due to graphene non-wetting properties, h-BN growth starts preferentially from the graphene ledges. We use this fact here to selectively promote growth of high-quality flat h-BN on epigraphene by patterning epigraphene microstructures prior to BN growth. Thin h-BN films (down to 6 nm) grown by MOVPE show smooth and pleated surface morphology on epigraphene, while crumpled BN is observed on the SiC. Cross-sectional high-resolution transmission electron microscopy images and fluorescence imaging confirm the higher BN quality grown on the epigraphene. Transport measurements reveal p-doping as expected from hydrogen intercalation of epigraphene and regions of high and low mobility. This method can be used to produce structurally uniform high-quality h-BN/epigraphene micro/nano scale heterostructure.
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- 2024
6. The Host Galaxies of Radio AGN: New Views from Combining LoTSS and MaNGA Observations
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Jin, Gaoxiang, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Best, Philip N., Shenoy, Shravya, and Małek, Katarzyna
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We utilize a combination of radio continuum observations and optical integral field spectroscopic (IFS) data to explore the impact of radio AGN on the evolution of their host galaxies at both global and sub-galactic scales. We construct a comprehensive radio-IFS sample comprising 5548 galaxies with redshift z<0.15 by cross-matching the LoTSS with the MaNGA survey. We revisit the tight linear radio continuum - star formation relation and quantify its intrinsic scatter, then use the relation to classify 616 radio-excess AGN with excessive radio luminosities over that expected from their star formation rate. Massive radio AGN host galaxies are predominantly quiescent systems, but the quenching level shows no correlation with the jet luminosity. The mass assembly histories derived from the stellar population synthesis model fitting agree with the cosmological simulations incorporating radio-mode AGN feedback models. We observe that radio AGN hosts grow faster than a control sample of galaxies matched in stellar mass, and the quenching age ($\sim$5 Gyr) is at larger lookback times than the typical radio jet age (<1 Gyr). By stacking the spectra in different radial bins and comparing results for radio AGN hosts and their controls, we find emission line excess features in the nuclear region of radio AGN hosts. This excess is more prominent in low-luminosity, low-mass, and compact radio AGN. The [NII]/H$\alpha$ ratios of the excessive emission line indicate that radio AGN or related jets are ionizing the surrounding interstellar medium in the vicinity of the nucleus. Our results support the scenario that the observed present-day radio AGN activity may help their host galaxies maintain quiescence through gas ionization and heating, but it is not responsible for the past quenching of their hosts., Comment: Accepted by A&A, 17 pages, 16 figures
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- 2024
7. QSO MUSEUM II: Search for extended Ly$\alpha$ emission around eight $z \sim 3$ quasar pairs
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Herwig, Eileen, Battaia, Fabrizio Arrigoni, Lobos, Jay González, Farina, Emanuele P., Man, Allison W. S., Bañados, Eduardo, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Cai, Zheng, Obreja, Aura, and Prochaska, J. Xavier
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Extended Ly$\alpha$ emission is routinely found around single quasars (QSO) across cosmic time. However, few studies have investigated how such emission changes in fields with physically associated QSO pairs, which should reside in dense environments and are predicted to be linked through intergalactic filaments. We present VLT/MUSE snapshot observations (45 min./source) to unveil extended Ly$\alpha$ emission on scales of the circumgalactic medium (CGM) around the largest sample of physically associated QSO pairs to date, encompassing 8 pairs (14 observed QSOs) at $z$~3 with $i$-band magnitude between 18 and 22.75. The pairs are either at close (~50-100 kpc, 5 pairs) or wide (~450-500 kpc, 3 pairs) separation with velocity differences of $\Delta$v < 2000 km s$^{-1}$. We detect extended emission around 12 of the 14 targeted QSOs and investigate the luminosity, size, kinematics and morphology of these Ly$\alpha$ nebulae. On average, they span 90 kpc and are 2.8 $\times 10^{43}$ erg s$^{-1}$ bright. Irrespective of the QSOs' projected distance, the nebulae often (~45 %) extend toward the other QSO in the pair, leading to asymmetric emission whose flux-weighted centroid is at an offset position from any QSO location. We show that large nebulae are preferentially aligned with the large-scale structure as traced by the two QSOs, and conclude that the cool gas (10$^4$ K) in the CGM traces well the direction of cosmic web filaments. Additionally, the radial profile of the Ly$\alpha$ surface brightness around QSO pairs can be described by a power law with a shallower slope (~$-1.6$) with respect to single QSOs (~$-2$), indicative of increased CGM densities out to large radii and/or enhanced contribution from the intergalactic medium (IGM). The sample presented in this study contains excellent targets for ultra-deep observations to directly study filamentary IGM structures in emission., Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, 3 appendices; published in A&A
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- 2024
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8. The Clever Hans Effect in Unsupervised Learning
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Kauffmann, Jacob, Dippel, Jonas, Ruff, Lukas, Samek, Wojciech, Müller, Klaus-Robert, and Montavon, Grégoire
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
Unsupervised learning has become an essential building block of AI systems. The representations it produces, e.g. in foundation models, are critical to a wide variety of downstream applications. It is therefore important to carefully examine unsupervised models to ensure not only that they produce accurate predictions, but also that these predictions are not "right for the wrong reasons", the so-called Clever Hans (CH) effect. Using specially developed Explainable AI techniques, we show for the first time that CH effects are widespread in unsupervised learning. Our empirical findings are enriched by theoretical insights, which interestingly point to inductive biases in the unsupervised learning machine as a primary source of CH effects. Overall, our work sheds light on unexplored risks associated with practical applications of unsupervised learning and suggests ways to make unsupervised learning more robust., Comment: 12 pages + supplement
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- 2024
9. Probing galaxy evolution from $z=0$ to $z\simeq10$ through galaxy scaling relations in three L-Galaxies flavours
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Vani, Akash, Ayromlou, Mohammadreza, Kauffmann, Guinevere, and Springel, Volker
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a comprehensive examination of the three latest versions of the L-Galaxies semi-analytic galaxy formation model, focusing on the evolution of galaxy properties across a broad stellar mass range ($10^7\:{\rm M}_{\odot}\lesssim{M_\star}\lesssim10^{12}\:{\rm M}_{\odot}$) from $z=0$ to $z\simeq10$. This study is the first to compare predictions of L-Galaxies with high-redshift observations well outside the original calibration regime, utilising multiband data from surveys such as SDSS, CANDELS, COSMOS, HST, JWST, and ALMA. We assess the models' ability to reproduce various time-dependent galaxy scaling relations for star-forming and quenched galaxies. Key focus areas include global galaxy properties such as stellar mass functions, cosmic star formation rate density, and the evolution of the main sequence of star-forming galaxies. Additionally, we examine resolved morphological properties such as the galaxy mass-size relation, alongside core $(R<1\,{\rm{kpc}})$ and effective $(R
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- 2024
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10. Simulated [CII] in high-z galaxies
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Muñoz-Elgueta, N., Battaia, F. Arrigoni, Kauffmann, G., Pakmor, R., Walch, S., Obreja, A., and Buhlmann, L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Extended [CII] emission on tens of kpc, also known as a [CII] halo, is being currently reported around z$\sim$4-6 star-forming galaxies, especially thanks to the statistics of the ALPINE survey. The [CII] emission is expected to trace dense cold gas in the inner CGM of these galaxies. The origin of this emission is still debated. In this paper, we present a post-processing model applied to Illustris-TNG50 star-forming galaxies at $z\sim$4-6, and we compare our results with the ALPINE observations. By incorporating C$^{+}$ abundances derived from UV background and young stars as radiation sources, we generate mock observations, from which we extract surface-brightness (SB) profiles. We found that our model predicts similar [CII] emission values on galactic scales as the observations, providing validation for our approach. However, we find that the predicted [CII] emission in the inner circumgalactic medium (CGM) falls below the observed values by a factor of $\sim$10. We discuss several model limitations that may contribute to this discrepancy. We also find discrepancies with observations when comparing SB profiles of low and high-SFR galaxies. Unlike the observations, simulations exhibit no discernible difference in the extended [CII] emission between the two subsamples. This discrepancy may reflect shortcomings in feedback model of the simulation. Finally, our analysis suggests that the extended [CII] emission is likely a result of both gas from satellite galaxies and outflows from central galaxies, with satellites playing a dominant role within 0.6$<$R/R$_{\rm vir}<$1. A firm estimate of the importance of each contribution is beyond the scope of the current simulations., Comment: Accepted on July 23, A&A. 17 pages, 16 figures
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- 2024
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11. The Black Hole Explorer: Motivation and Vision
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Johnson, Michael D., Akiyama, Kazunori, Baturin, Rebecca, Bilyeu, Bryan, Blackburn, Lindy, Boroson, Don, Cardenas-Avendano, Alejandro, Chael, Andrew, Chan, Chi-kwan, Chang, Dominic, Cheimets, Peter, Chou, Cathy, Doeleman, Sheperd S., Farah, Joseph, Galison, Peter, Gamble, Ronald, Gammie, Charles F., Gelles, Zachary, Gomez, Jose L., Gralla, Samuel E., Grimes, Paul, Gurvits, Leonid I., Hadar, Shahar, Haworth, Kari, Hada, Kazuhiro, Hecht, Michael H., Honma, Mareki, Houston, Janice, Hudson, Ben, Issaoun, Sara, Jia, He, Jorstad, Svetlana, Kauffmann, Jens, Kovalev, Yuri Y., Kurczynski, Peter, Lafon, Robert, Lupsasca, Alexandru, Lehmensiek, Robert, Ma, Chung-Pei, Marrone, Daniel P., Marscher, Alan P., Melnick, Gary J., Narayan, Ramesh, Niinuma, Kotaro, Noble, Scott C., Palmer, Eric J., Palumbo, Daniel C. M., Paritsky, Lenny, Peretz, Eliad, Pesce, Dominic, Plavin, Alexander, Quataert, Eliot, Rana, Hannah, Ricarte, Angelo, Roelofs, Freek, Shtyrkova, Katia, Sinclair, Laura C., Small, Jeffrey, Kumara, Sridharan Tirupati, Srinivasan, Ranjani, Strominger, Andrew, Tiede, Paul, Tong, Edward, Wang, Jade, Weintroub, Jonathan, Wielgus, Maciek, Wong, George, and Zhang, Xinyue Alice
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We present the Black Hole Explorer (BHEX), a mission that will produce the sharpest images in the history of astronomy by extending submillimeter Very-Long-Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) to space. BHEX will discover and measure the bright and narrow "photon ring" that is predicted to exist in images of black holes, produced from light that has orbited the black hole before escaping. This discovery will expose universal features of a black hole's spacetime that are distinct from the complex astrophysics of the emitting plasma, allowing the first direct measurements of a supermassive black hole's spin. In addition to studying the properties of the nearby supermassive black holes M87* and Sgr A*, BHEX will measure the properties of dozens of additional supermassive black holes, providing crucial insights into the processes that drive their creation and growth. BHEX will also connect these supermassive black holes to their relativistic jets, elucidating the power source for the brightest and most efficient engines in the universe. BHEX will address fundamental open questions in the physics and astrophysics of black holes that cannot be answered without submillimeter space VLBI. The mission is enabled by recent technological breakthroughs, including the development of ultra-high-speed downlink using laser communications, and it leverages billions of dollars of existing ground infrastructure. We present the motivation for BHEX, its science goals and associated requirements, and the pathway to launch within the next decade., Comment: Proceedings for SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation
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- 2024
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12. Cost containment analysis of superparamagnetic iron oxide (SPIO) injection in patients with ductal carcinoma in situ
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Solís, Odette, Addae, Jamin, Sweeting, Raeshell, Meszoely, Ingrid, Grau, Ana, Kauffmann, Rondi, Kelley, Mark, McCaffrey, Rachel, and Hewitt, Kelly
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- 2024
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13. NMR resonance assignment of the cell death execution domain BELL2 from multicellular bacterial signalosomes
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Delcourte, Loic, Sanchez, Corinne, Morvan, Estelle, Berbon, Mélanie, Grélard, Axelle, Saragaglia, Claire, Dakhli, Thierry, Thore, Stéphane, Bardiaux, Benjamin, Habenstein, Birgit, Kauffmann, Brice, Saupe, Sven J., and Loquet, Antoine
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- 2024
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14. Disease recurrence in patients undergoing mastectomy for ductal carcinoma in situ
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Kuo, Marissa C., Sims, Jessica, Solis, Odette K., Meszoely, Ingrid M., Sweeting, Raeshell S., Grau, Ana M., Hewitt, Kelly C., Kauffmann, Rondi M., Kelley, Mark C., and McCaffrey, Rachel L.
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- 2024
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15. Phi-3 Technical Report: A Highly Capable Language Model Locally on Your Phone
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Abdin, Marah, Aneja, Jyoti, Awadalla, Hany, Awadallah, Ahmed, Awan, Ammar Ahmad, Bach, Nguyen, Bahree, Amit, Bakhtiari, Arash, Bao, Jianmin, Behl, Harkirat, Benhaim, Alon, Bilenko, Misha, Bjorck, Johan, Bubeck, Sébastien, Cai, Martin, Cai, Qin, Chaudhary, Vishrav, Chen, Dong, Chen, Dongdong, Chen, Weizhu, Chen, Yen-Chun, Chen, Yi-Ling, Cheng, Hao, Chopra, Parul, Dai, Xiyang, Dixon, Matthew, Eldan, Ronen, Fragoso, Victor, Gao, Jianfeng, Gao, Mei, Gao, Min, Garg, Amit, Del Giorno, Allie, Goswami, Abhishek, Gunasekar, Suriya, Haider, Emman, Hao, Junheng, Hewett, Russell J., Hu, Wenxiang, Huynh, Jamie, Iter, Dan, Jacobs, Sam Ade, Javaheripi, Mojan, Jin, Xin, Karampatziakis, Nikos, Kauffmann, Piero, Khademi, Mahoud, Kim, Dongwoo, Kim, Young Jin, Kurilenko, Lev, Lee, James R., Lee, Yin Tat, Li, Yuanzhi, Li, Yunsheng, Liang, Chen, Liden, Lars, Lin, Xihui, Lin, Zeqi, Liu, Ce, Liu, Liyuan, Liu, Mengchen, Liu, Weishung, Liu, Xiaodong, Luo, Chong, Madan, Piyush, Mahmoudzadeh, Ali, Majercak, David, Mazzola, Matt, Mendes, Caio César Teodoro, Mitra, Arindam, Modi, Hardik, Nguyen, Anh, Norick, Brandon, Patra, Barun, Perez-Becker, Daniel, Portet, Thomas, Pryzant, Reid, Qin, Heyang, Radmilac, Marko, Ren, Liliang, de Rosa, Gustavo, Rosset, Corby, Roy, Sambudha, Ruwase, Olatunji, Saarikivi, Olli, Saied, Amin, Salim, Adil, Santacroce, Michael, Shah, Shital, Shang, Ning, Sharma, Hiteshi, Shen, Yelong, Shukla, Swadheen, Song, Xia, Tanaka, Masahiro, Tupini, Andrea, Vaddamanu, Praneetha, Wang, Chunyu, Wang, Guanhua, Wang, Lijuan, Wang, Shuohang, Wang, Xin, Wang, Yu, Ward, Rachel, Wen, Wen, Witte, Philipp, Wu, Haiping, Wu, Xiaoxia, Wyatt, Michael, Xiao, Bin, Xu, Can, Xu, Jiahang, Xu, Weijian, Xue, Jilong, Yadav, Sonali, Yang, Fan, Yang, Jianwei, Yang, Yifan, Yang, Ziyi, Yu, Donghan, Yuan, Lu, Zhang, Chenruidong, Zhang, Cyril, Zhang, Jianwen, Zhang, Li Lyna, Zhang, Yi, Zhang, Yue, Zhang, Yunan, and Zhou, Xiren
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
We introduce phi-3-mini, a 3.8 billion parameter language model trained on 3.3 trillion tokens, whose overall performance, as measured by both academic benchmarks and internal testing, rivals that of models such as Mixtral 8x7B and GPT-3.5 (e.g., phi-3-mini achieves 69% on MMLU and 8.38 on MT-bench), despite being small enough to be deployed on a phone. Our training dataset is a scaled-up version of the one used for phi-2, composed of heavily filtered publicly available web data and synthetic data. The model is also further aligned for robustness, safety, and chat format. We also provide parameter-scaling results with a 7B, 14B models trained for 4.8T tokens, called phi-3-small, phi-3-medium, both significantly more capable than phi-3-mini (e.g., respectively 75%, 78% on MMLU, and 8.7, 8.9 on MT-bench). To enhance multilingual, multimodal, and long-context capabilities, we introduce three models in the phi-3.5 series: phi-3.5-mini, phi-3.5-MoE, and phi-3.5-Vision. The phi-3.5-MoE, a 16 x 3.8B MoE model with 6.6 billion active parameters, achieves superior performance in language reasoning, math, and code tasks compared to other open-source models of similar scale, such as Llama 3.1 and the Mixtral series, and on par with Gemini-1.5-Flash and GPT-4o-mini. Meanwhile, phi-3.5-Vision, a 4.2 billion parameter model derived from phi-3.5-mini, excels in reasoning tasks and is adept at handling both single-image and text prompts, as well as multi-image and text prompts., Comment: 24 pages
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- 2024
16. FEASTS Combined with Interferometry (I): Overall Properties of Diffuse HI and Implications for Gas Accretion in Nearby Galaxies
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Wang, Jing, Lin, Xuchen, Yang, Dong, Staveley-Smith, Lister, Walter, Fabian, Wang, Q. Daniel, Wang, Ran, Battisti, A. J., Catinella, Barbara, Chen, Hsiao-Wen, Cortese, Luca, Fisher, D. B., Ho, Luis C., Ji, Suoqing, Jiang, Peng, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Kong, Xu, Liu, Ziming, Shao, Li, Wang, Jie, Wang, Lile, and Wang, Shun
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a statistical study of the properties of diffuse HI in ten nearby galaxies, comparing the HI detected by the single-dish telescope FAST (FEASTS program) and the interferometer VLA (THINGS program), respectively. The THINGS' observation missed HI with a median of 23% due to the short-spacing problem of interferometry and limited sensitivity. We extract the diffuse HI by subtracting the dense HI, which is obtained from the THINGS data with a uniform flux-density threshold, from the total HI detected by FAST. Among the sample, the median diffuse-HI fraction is 34%, and more diffuse HI is found in galaxies exhibiting more prominent tidal-interaction signatures. The diffuse HI we detected seems to be distributed in disk-like layers within a typical thickness of $1\,\text{kpc}$, different from the more halo-like diffuse HI detected around NGC 4631 in a previous study. Most of the diffuse HI is cospatial with the dense HI and has a typical column density of $10^{17.7}$-$10^{20.1}\,\text{cm}^{-2}$. The diffuse and dense HI exhibits a similar rotational motion, but the former lags by a median of 25% in at least the inner disks, and its velocity dispersions are typically twice as high. Based on a simplified estimation of circum-galactic medium properties and assuming pressure equilibrium, the volume density of diffuse HI appears to be constant within each individual galaxy, implying its role as a cooling interface. Comparing with existing models, these results are consistent with a possible link between tidal interactions, the formation of diffuse HI, and gas accretion., Comment: 45 pages, 23 figures. In press at ApJ. Data will be released at the FEASTS site upon publication
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- 2024
17. A broad linewidth, compact, millimeter-bright molecular emission line source near the Galactic Center
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Ginsburg, Adam, Bally, John, Barnes, Ashley T., Battersby, Cara, Budaiev, Nazar, Butterfield, Natalie O., Caselli, Paola, Colzi, Laura, Dutkowska, Katarzyna M., García, Pablo, Gramze, Savannah, Henshaw, Jonathan D., Hu, Yue, Jeff, Desmond, Jiménez-Serra, Izaskun, Kauffmann, Jens, Klessen, Ralf S., Levesque, Emily M., Longmore, Steven N., Lu, Xing, Mills, Elisabeth A. C., Morris, Mark R., Nogueras-Lara, Francisco, Oka, Tomoharu, Pineda, Jaime E., Pillai, Thushara G. S., Rivilla, Víctor M., Sánchez-Monge, Álvaro, Santa-Maria, Miriam G., Smith, Howard A., Sofue, Yoshiaki, Sormani, Mattia C., Tremblay, Grant R., Vermariën, Gijs, Vikhlinin, Alexey, Viti, Serena, Walker, Dan, Wang, Q. Daniel, Xu, Fengwei, and Zhang, Qizhou
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
A compact source, G0.02467-0.0727, was detected in ALMA \threemm observations in continuum and very broad line emission. The continuum emission has a spectral index $\alpha\approx3.3$, suggesting that the emission is from dust. The line emission is detected in several transitions of CS, SO, and SO$_2$ and exhibits a line width FWHM $\approx160$ \kms. The line profile appears Gaussian. The emission is weakly spatially resolved, coming from an area on the sky $\lesssim1"$ in diameter ($\lesssim10^4$ AU at the distance of the Galactic Center; GC). The centroid velocity is $v_{LSR}\approx40$-$50$ \kms, which is consistent with a location in the Galactic Center. With multiple SO lines detected, and assuming local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) conditions, $T_\mathrm{LTE} = 13$ K, which is colder than seen in typical GC clouds, though we cannot rule out low-density, subthermally excited, warmer gas. Despite the high velocity dispersion, no emission is observed from SiO, suggesting that there are no strong ($\gtrsim10~\mathrm{km~s}^{-1}$) shocks in the molecular gas. There are no detections at other wavelengths, including X-ray, infrared, and radio. We consider several explanations for the Millimeter Ultra-Broad Line Object (MUBLO), including protostellar outflow, explosive outflow, collapsing cloud, evolved star, stellar merger, high-velocity compact cloud, intermediate mass black hole, and background galaxy. Most of these conceptual models are either inconsistent with the data or do not fully explain it. The MUBLO is, at present, an observationally unique object., Comment: Accepted to ApJL
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- 2024
18. Magnetic field morphology and evolution in the Central Molecular Zone and its effect on gas dynamics
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Tress, R. G., Sormani, M. C., Girichidis, P., Glover, S. C. O., Klessen, R. S., Smith, R. J., Sobacchi, E., Armillotta, L., Barnes, A. T., Battersby, C., Bogue, K. R. J., Brucy, N., Colzi, L., Federrath, C., García, P., Ginsburg, A., Göller, J., Hatchfield, H P., Henkel, C., Hennebelle, P., Henshaw, J. D., Hirschmann, M., Hu, Y., Kauffmann, J., Kruijssen, J. M. D., Lazarian, A., Lipman, D., Longmore, S. N., Morris, M. R., Nogueras-Lara, F., Petkova, M. A., Pillai, T. G. S., Rivilla, V. M., Sánchez-Monge, Á., Soler, J. D., Whitworth, D., and Zhang, Q.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The interstellar medium in the Milky Way's Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) is known to be strongly magnetised, but its large-scale morphology and impact on the gas dynamics are not well understood. We explore the impact and properties of magnetic fields in the CMZ using three-dimensional non-self gravitating magnetohydrodynamical simulations of gas flow in an external Milky Way barred potential. We find that: (1) The magnetic field is conveniently decomposed into a regular time-averaged component and an irregular turbulent component. The regular component aligns well with the velocity vectors of the gas everywhere, including within the bar lanes. (2) The field geometry transitions from parallel to the Galactic plane near $z=0$ to poloidal away from the plane. (3) The magneto-rotational instability (MRI) causes an in-plane inflow of matter from the CMZ gas ring towards the central few parsecs of $0.01-0.1$ M$_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$ that is absent in the unmagnetised simulations. However, the magnetic fields have no significant effect on the larger-scale bar-driven inflow that brings the gas from the Galactic disc into the CMZ. (4) A combination of bar inflow and MRI-driven turbulence can sustain a turbulent vertical velocity dispersion of $\sigma_z \simeq 5$ km s$^{-1}$ on scales of $20$ pc in the CMZ ring. The MRI alone sustains a velocity dispersion of $\sigma_z \simeq 3$ km s$^{-1}$. Both these numbers are lower than the observed velocity dispersion of gas in the CMZ, suggesting that other processes such as stellar feedback are necessary to explain the observations. (5) Dynamo action driven by differential rotation and the MRI amplifies the magnetic fields in the CMZ ring until they saturate at a value that scales with the average local density as $B \simeq 102 (n/10^3 cm^{-3})^{0.33}$ $\mu$G. Finally, we discuss the implications of our results within the observational context in the CMZ.
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- 2024
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19. Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST) Science: Our Galaxy
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Klaassen, Pamela, Traficante, Alessio, Beltrán, Maria T., Pattle, Kate, Booth, Mark, Lovell, Joshua B., Marshall, Jonathan P., Hacar, Alvaro, Gaches, Brandt A. L., Bot, Caroline, Peretto, Nicolas, Stanke, Thomas, Arzoumanian, Doris, Cabral, Ana Duarte, Duchêne, Gaspard, Eden, David J., Hales, Antonio, Kauffmann, Jens, Luppe, Patricia, Marino, Sebastian, Redaelli, Elena, Rigby, Andrew J., Sánchez-Monge, Álvaro, Schisano, Eugenio, Semenov, Dmitry A., Spezzano, Silvia, Thompson, Mark A., Wyrowski, Friedrich, Cicone, Claudia, Mroczkowski, Tony, Cordiner, Martin A., Di Mascolo, Luca, Johnstone, Doug, van Kampen, Eelco, Lee, Minju M., Liu, Daizhong, Maccarone, Thomas J., Saintonge, Amélie, Smith, Matthew, Thelen, Alexander E., and Wedemeyer, Sven
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
As we learn more about the multi-scale interstellar medium (ISM) of our Galaxy, we develop a greater understanding for the complex relationships between the large-scale diffuse gas and dust in Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs), how it moves, how it is affected by the nearby massive stars, and which portions of those GMCs eventually collapse into star forming regions. The complex interactions of those gas, dust and stellar populations form what has come to be known as the ecology of our Galaxy. Because we are deeply embedded in the plane of our Galaxy, it takes up a significant fraction of the sky, with complex dust lanes scattered throughout the optically recognisable bands of the Milky Way. These bands become bright at (sub-)millimetre wavelengths, where we can study dust thermal emission and the chemical and kinematic signatures of the gas. To properly study such large-scale environments, requires deep, large area surveys that are not possible with current facilities. Moreover, where stars form, so too do planetary systems, growing from the dust and gas in circumstellar discs, to planets and planetesimal belts. Understanding the evolution of these belts requires deep imaging capable of studying belts around young stellar objects to Kuiper belt analogues around the nearest stars. Here we present a plan for observing the Galactic Plane and circumstellar environments to quantify the physical structure, the magnetic fields, the dynamics, chemistry, star formation, and planetary system evolution of the galaxy in which we live with AtLAST; a concept for a new, 50m single-dish sub-mm telescope with a large field of view which is the only type of facility that will allow us to observe our Galaxy deeply and widely enough to make a leap forward in our understanding of our local ecology., Comment: 27 pages, submitted to Open Research Europe as part of the AtLAST collection: https://open-research-europe.ec.europa.eu/collections/atlast/about
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- 2024
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20. Nationwide cost-effectiveness and quality of life analysis of minimally invasive distal pancreatectomy
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De Pastena, Matteo, Esposito, Alessandro, Paiella, Salvatore, Montagnini, Greta, Zingaretti, Caterina C., Ramera, Marco, Azzolina, Danila, Gregori, Dario, Kauffmann, Emanuele F., Giardino, Alessandro, Moraldi, Luca, Butturini, Giovanni, Boggi, Ugo, and Salvia, Roberto
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- 2024
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21. Enthalpies and entropies of sublimation and vaporization of aza crown ethers and cryptands measured by TGA
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Esparza-Rivera, Daniel, Treviño-Kauffmann, Marco Antonio, and Rojas, Aarón
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- 2024
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22. REDISCOVER guidelines for borderline-resectable and locally advanced pancreatic cancer: management algorithm, unanswered questions, and future perspectives
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Boggi, Ugo, Kauffmann, Emanuele F., Napoli, Niccolò, Barreto, S. George, Besselink, Marc G., Fusai, Giuseppe K., Hackert, Thilo, Hilal, Mohammad Abu, Marchegiani, Giovanni, Salvia, Roberto, Shrikhande, Shailesh V., Truty, Mark, Werner, Jens, Wolfgang, Christopher, Bannone, Elisa, Capretti, Giovanni, Cattelani, Alice, Coppola, Alessandro, Cucchetti, Alessandro, De Sio, Davide, Di Dato, Armando, Di Meo, Giovanna, Fiorillo, Claudio, Gianfaldoni, Cesare, Ginesini, Michael, Hidalgo Salinas, Camila, Lai, Quirino, Miccoli, Mario, Montorsi, Roberto, Pagnanelli, Michele, Poli, Andrea, Ricci, Claudio, Sucameli, Francesco, Tamburrino, Domenico, Viti, Virginia, Cameron, John, Clavien, Pierre-Alain, and Asbun, Horacio J.
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- 2024
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23. CMZoom IV. Incipient High-Mass Star Formation Throughout the Central Molecular Zone
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Hatchfield, H Perry, Battersby, Cara, Barnes, Ashley T., Butterfield, Natalie, Ginsburg, Adam, Henshaw, Jonathan D., Longmore, Steven N., Lu, Xing, Svoboda, Brian, Walker, Daniel, Callanan, Daniel, Mills, Elisabeth A. C., Ho, Luis C., Kauffmann, Jens, Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Ott, Jürgen, Pillai, Thushara, and Zhang, Qizhou
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In this work, we constrain the star-forming properties of all possible sites of incipient high-mass star formation in the Milky Way's Galactic Center. We identify dense structures using the CMZoom 1.3mm dust continuum catalog of objects with typical radii of $\sim$0.1pc, and measure their association with tracers of high-mass star formation. We incorporate compact emission at 8, 21, 24, 25, and 70um from MSX, Spitzer, Herschel, and SOFIA, catalogued young stellar objects, and water and methanol masers to characterize each source. We find an incipient star formation rate (SFR) for the CMZ of ~0.08 Msun yr^{-1} over the next few 10^5 yr. We calculate upper and lower limits on the CMZ's incipient SFR of ~0.45 Msun yr^{-1} and ~0.05 Msun yr^{-1} respectively, spanning between roughly equal to and several times greater than other estimates of CMZ's recent SFR. Despite substantial uncertainties, our results suggest the incipient SFR in the CMZ may be higher than previously estimated. We find that the prevalence of star formation tracers does not correlate with source volume density, but instead ~75% of high-mass star formation is found in regions above a column density ratio (N_{SMA}/N_{Herschel}) of ~1.5. Finally, we highlight the detection of ``atoll sources'', a reoccurring morphology of cold dust encircling evolved infrared sources, possibly representing HII regions in the process of destroying their envelopes., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
24. Arachis mottle-associated virus, a new polerovirus infecting Pinto peanut: Arachis mottle-associated virus
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Kauffmann, Caterynne Melo, de Jesus Boari, Alessandra, Silva, Bruno Arcanjo, de Morais, Ivair José, dos Santos Cárdenas, Stephanny Barreto, do Vale Batista, Amanda Moraes, da Silva Mota, Helena Beatriz, de Souza Queiroz, Paloma, Pantoja, Késsia Fátima Cunha, De Marchi, Bruno Rossitto, Assis, Giselle Mariano Lessa, Krause-Sakate, Renate, and Nagata, Tatsuya
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- 2024
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25. An automatic tracking method to measure the mandibula movement during real time MRI
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Mouchoux, Jérémy, Sojka, Florian, Kauffmann, Philipp, Dechent, Peter, Meyer-Marcotty, Philipp, and Quast, Anja
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- 2024
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26. The current landscape of global international surgical rotations for general surgery residents in the United States: a survey by the Association for Program Directors in Surgery’s (APDS) global surgery taskforce
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Strain, S., Adjei, E., Edelman, D., Fischer, L., Haisch, C., Jeffcoach, D., Kim, J., Kington, D., Lee, J. K., Lindsey, H., Nelson, W., Nepomnayshy, D., Patidar, S., Petitt, T., Rivera, M., Shelton, J., Shim, J., Webb, K., Zhang, C., Hochman, B., and Kauffmann, R. M.
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- 2024
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27. Establishing a global surgery experience for surgical residents and students
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Rosario, Angel, Fox, Chris, Terhune, Kyla, Choi, Jennifer, Jarman, Benjamin, Dodgion, Chris, Hochman, Beth, and Kauffmann, Rondi
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- 2024
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28. Two-stage palatal repair in non-syndromic CLP patients using anterior to posterior closure is associated with minimal need for secondary palatal surgery
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Kauffmann, Philipp, Kolle, Johanna, Quast, Anja, Wolfer, Susanne, Schminke, Boris, Meyer-Marcotty, Philipp, and Schliephake, Henning
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- 2024
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29. Henri Cochet's theory of angles in tennis (1933) reveals a new facet of anticipation
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Benguigui, Nicolas, Rioult, François, Kauffmann, François, Miller-Dicks, Matt, and Murphy, Colm P.
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- 2024
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30. Deformation twins as a probe for tribologically induced stress states
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Dollmann, Antje, Kübel, Christian, Tavakkoli, Vahid, Eder, Stefan J., Feuerbacher, Michael, Liening, Tim, Kauffmann, Alexander, Rau, Julia, and Greiner, Christian
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- 2024
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31. The JWST Galactic Center Survey -- A White Paper
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Schoedel, Rainer, Longmore, Steve, Henshaw, Jonny, Ginsburg, Adam, Bally, John, Feldmeier, Anja, Hosek, Matt, Lara, Francisco Nogueras, Ciurlo, Anna, Chevance, Mélanie, Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Klessen, Ralf, Ponti, Gabriele, Amaro-Seoane, Pau, Anastasopoulou, Konstantina, Anderson, Jay, Arias, Maria, Barnes, Ashley T., Battersby, Cara, Bono, Giuseppe, Ferres, Lucía Bravo, Bryant, Aaron, Gonzáalez, Miguel Cano, Cassisi, Santi, Chaves-Velasquez, Leonardo, Conte, Francesco, Ramos, Rodrigo Contreras, Cotera, Angela, Crowe, Samuel, di Teodoro, Enrico, Do, Tuan, Eisenhauer, Frank, Enokiya, Rei, Fedriani, Rubén, Friske, Jennifer K. S., Gadotti, Dimitri, Gallart, Carme, Calvente, Teresa Gallego, Cano, Eulalia Gallego, Fuentes, Pablo García, Marín, Macarena García, Gardini, Angela, Gautam, Abhimat K., Ghez, Andrea, Gillessen, Stefan, Gouda, Naoteru, Gualandris, Alessia, Guarcello, Mario Giuseppe, Gutermuth, Robert, Haggard, Daryl, Hankins, Matthew, Hu, Yue, Kano, Ryohei, Kauffmann, Jens, Lau, Ryan, Lazarian, Alexandre, Libralato, Mattia, Lu, Anan, Lu, Xing, Lu, Jessica R., Luetzgendorf, Nora, Magorrian, John, Mandel, Shifra, Markoff, Sera, Arranz, Álvaro Martínez, Mastrobuono-Battisti, Alessandra, Melamed, Maria, Mills, Elisabeth, Mori, Kaya, Morris, Mark, Murchikova, Elena, Nagata, Tetsuya, Najarro, Francisco, Nandakumar, Govind, Nataf, David, Neumayer, Nadine, Nishiyama, Shogo, Nobukawa, Masayoshi, Paré, Dylan M, Peissker, Florian, Petkova, Maya, Pillai, Thushara G. S., Román, Mike Rich Carlos, Rugel, Michael, Ryde, Nils, Sabha, Nadeen, Bermúdez, Joel Sánchez, Sánchez-Monge, Álvaro, Schultheis, Mathias, Shao, Lijing, Shinnaga, Hiroko, Simpson, Janet, Takekawa, Shunya, Tan, Jonathan C., Thorsbro, Brian, Torne, Pablo, Tress, Robin Goppala, Uchiyam, Hideki, Valenti, Elena, van der Marel, Roeland, Verberne, Sill, Vermot, Pierre, von Fellenberg, Sebastiano, Walker, Daniel, Witzel, Gunther, Xu, Siyao, Yano, Taihei, Yusef-Zadeh, Farhad, Zajaček, Michal, and Zoccali, Manuela
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The inner hundred parsecs of the Milky Way hosts the nearest supermassive black hole, largest reservoir of dense gas, greatest stellar density, hundreds of massive main and post main sequence stars, and the highest volume density of supernovae in the Galaxy. As the nearest environment in which it is possible to simultaneously observe many of the extreme processes shaping the Universe, it is one of the most well-studied regions in astrophysics. Due to its proximity, we can study the center of our Galaxy on scales down to a few hundred AU, a hundred times better than in similar Local Group galaxies and thousands of times better than in the nearest active galaxies. The Galactic Center (GC) is therefore of outstanding astrophysical interest. However, in spite of intense observational work over the past decades, there are still fundamental things unknown about the GC. JWST has the unique capability to provide us with the necessary, game-changing data. In this White Paper, we advocate for a JWST NIRCam survey that aims at solving central questions, that we have identified as a community: i) the 3D structure and kinematics of gas and stars; ii) ancient star formation and its relation with the overall history of the Milky Way, as well as recent star formation and its implications for the overall energetics of our galaxy's nucleus; and iii) the (non-)universality of star formation and the stellar initial mass function. We advocate for a large-area, multi-epoch, multi-wavelength NIRCam survey of the inner 100\,pc of the Galaxy in the form of a Treasury GO JWST Large Program that is open to the community. We describe how this survey will derive the physical and kinematic properties of ~10,000,000 stars, how this will solve the key unknowns and provide a valuable resource for the community with long-lasting legacy value., Comment: This White Paper will be updated when required (e.g. new authors joining, editing of content). Most recent update: 24 Oct 2023
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- 2023
32. DIISC-III: Signatures of Stellar Disk Growth in Nearby Galaxies
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Padave, Mansi, Borthakur, Sanchayeeta, Gim, Hansung B., Thilker, David, Jansen, Rolf A., Monckiewicz, Jacqueline, Kennicutt, Robert C., Kauffmann, Guinevere, Fox, Andrew J., Momjian, Emmanuel, and Heckman, Timothy
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We explore the growth of the stellar disks in 14 nearby spiral galaxies as part of the Deciphering the Interplay between the Interstellar medium, Stars, and the Circumgalactic medium (DIISC) survey. We study the radial distribution of specific star formation rates (sSFR) and investigate the ratio of the difference in the outer and inner sSFR ($\Delta_{sSFR}~={\rm sSFR}_{out}-{\rm sSFR}_{in}$) of the disk and the total sSFR, $\Delta_{sSFR}$/sSFR to quantify disk growth. We find $\Delta_{sSFR}$/sSFR and the HI gas fraction to show a mild correlation of Spearman's $\rho=0.30$, indicating that star formation and disk growth are likely to proceed outward in galactic disks with high HI gas fractions. The HI gas fractions and $\Delta_{sSFR}$/sSFR of the galaxies also increase with the distance to the nearest L$_\star$ neighbor, suggesting that galaxies are likely to sustain their ISM cold gas and exhibit inside-out growth in isolated environments. However, the HI content in their circumgalactic medium, probed by the Ly$\alpha$ equivalent width (W$_{Ly\alpha}$) excess, is observed to be suppressed in isolated environments, apparent from the strong anti-correlation between the W$_{Ly\alpha}$ excess and the distance to the 5$^{\rm th}$ nearest L$_\star$ neighbor (Spearman's $\rho=-0.62$). As expected, W$_{Ly\alpha}$ is also found to be suppressed in cluster galaxies. We find no relation between the W$_{Ly\alpha}$ excess of the detected CGM absorber and $\Delta_{sSFR}$/sSFR implying that the enhancement and suppression of the circumgalactic HI gas does not affect the direction in which star formation proceeds in a galactic disk or vice-versa., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
33. The Farmer: A reproducible profile-fitting photometry package for deep galaxy surveys
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Weaver, J. R., Zalesky, L., Kokorev, V., McPartland, C. J. R., Chartab, N., Gould, K. M. L., Shuntov, M., Davidzon, I., Faisst, A., Stickley, N., Capak, P. L., Toft, S., Masters, D., Mobasher, B., Sanders, D. B., Kauffmann, O. B., McCracken, H. J., Ilbert, O., Brammer, G., and Moneti, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
While space-borne optical and near-infrared facilities have succeeded in delivering a precise and spatially resolved picture of our Universe, their small survey area is known to under-represent the true diversity of galaxy populations. Ground-based surveys have reached comparable depths but at lower spatial resolution, resulting in source confusion that hampers accurate photometry extractions. What once was limited to the infrared regime has now begun to challenge ground-based ultra-deep surveys, affecting detection and photometry alike. Failing to address these challenges will mean forfeiting a representative view into the distant Universe. We introduce The Farmer: an automated, reproducible profile-fitting photometry package that pairs a library of smooth parametric models from The Tractor (Lang et al. 2016) with a decision tree that determines the best-fit model in concert with neighboring sources. Photometry is measured by fitting the models on other bands leaving brightness free to vary. The resulting photometric measurements are naturally total, and no aperture corrections are required. Supporting diagnostics (e.g. $\chi^2$) enable measurement validation. As fitting models is relatively time intensive, The Farmer is built with high-performance computing routines. We benchmark The Farmer on a set of realistic COSMOS-like images and find accurate photometry, number counts, and galaxy shapes. The Farmer is already being utilized to produce catalogs for several large-area deep extragalactic surveys where it has been shown to tackle some of the most challenging optical and near-infrared data available, with the promise of extending to other ultra-deep surveys expected in the near future. The Farmer is available to download from GitHub and Zenodo., Comment: 30 pages, 17 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS. The Farmer software is publicly accessible on Github at https://github.com/astroweaver/the_farmer
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- 2023
34. A resolved study of the inner regions of nearby galaxies with an excess of young massive stars: missing link in the AGN-starburst connection?
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Kauffmann, Guinevere, Millán-Irigoyen, Iker, Crowther, Paul, and Maraston, Claudia
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have selected galaxies with very high levels of H$\alpha$ emission (EQW(H$\alpha$)$>$700 \AA.) in their central regions from the final data release of the MaNGA survey . Our study focuses on 14 very well-resolved nearby galaxies with stellar masses in the range $9.5 < \log M_*/(M_{\odot}) < 11.5$. We investigate a variety of procedures for selecting galaxy regions that are likely to harbour excess populations of young massive stars, finding that selection in the 2-dimensional space of extinction-corrected H$\alpha$ EQW and [SIII]/[SII] line ratio produces the best results. By comparing stacked spectra covering these regions with stacked spectra covering normal starburst regions with 100\AA$<$EQW(H$\alpha$)$<$200\AA, we obtain the following main results: 1) Clear signatures of excess Wolf Rayet stars are found in half of the H$\alpha$ excess regions, 2) Galaxy regions containing excess Wolf Rayet stars are more often associated with the presence of high-ionization emission lines characteristic of accreting black holes. Excess [NeIII] is detected in 4 out of 8 of the WR regions and there are tentative [FeX] detections in 2 galaxies. 3) Regions of the galaxy with excess Wolf Rayet stars are located where the interstellar medium has larger ionized gas turbulent velocities and higher neutral gas overdensities. We make a first attempt to constrain changes in the high mass end of the stellar initial mass function (IMF) using the HR-pyPopStar evolutionary population synthesis models that include high wavelength-resolution theoretical atmosphere libraries for Wolf Rayet stars., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2023
35. Deformation twins as a probe for tribologically induced stress states
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Dollmann, Antje, Kuebel, Christian, Tavakolli, Vahid, Eder, Stefan J., Feuerbacher, Michael, Liening, Tim, Kauffmann, Alexander, Rau, Julia, and Greiner, Christian
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Friction and wear of metals are critically influenced by the microstructures of the bodies constituting the tribological contact. Understanding the microstructural evolution taking place over the lifetime of a tribological system therefore is crucial for strategically designing tribological systems with tailored friction and wear properties. Here, we focus on single-crystalline CoCrFeMnNi that is prone to form twins at room temperature. Deformation twins feature a pronounced orientation dependence with a tension-compression anisotropy, a distinct strain release in an extended volume and robust onset stresses. This makes deformation twinning an ideal probe to experimentally investigate the complex stress fields occurring in a tribological contact. Our results clearly show a grain orientation dependence of twinning under tribological load. Unexpectedly, neither the crystal direction parallel to the sliding nor the normal direction are solely decisive for twinning. This experimental approach is ideal to experimentally validate tribological stress field models, as is demonstrates here.
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- 2023
36. Circumgalactic Ly$\alpha$ emission around submillimeter-bright galaxies with different quasar contributions
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Lobos, Vale González, Battaia, Fabrizio Arrigoni, Chang, Seok-Jun, Gronke, Max, Kauffmann, Guinevere, Chen, Chian-Chou, Fu, Hai, Obreja, Aura, and Farina, Emanuele P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present VLT/MUSE observations targeting the extended Lyman-$\alpha$ (Ly$\alpha$) emission of five high-redshift ($z\sim$3-4) submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) with increasing quasar (QSO) radiation: two SMGs, two SMGs hosting a QSO, and one SMG hosting a QSO with a SMG companion (QSO+SMG). These sources should be located in dark matter halos of comparable masses (average mass of $M_{\rm DM}\sim10^{12.2}\,{\rm M}_\odot$). We quantify the luminosity and extent of the Ly$\alpha$ emission, together with its kinematics, and examine four Ly$\alpha$ powering mechanisms: photoionization from QSOs/star formation, shocks by galactic/QSO outflows, gravitational cooling radiation, and Ly$\alpha$ photons resonant scattering. We find a variety of Ly$\alpha$ luminosities and extents, with the QSO+SMG system displaying the most extended and bright nebula, followed by the SMGs hosting a QSO, and finally the undetected circumgalactic medium (CGM) of SMGs. This diversity implies that gravitational cooling is unlikely to be the main powering mechanism. We show that photoionization from the QSO and QSO outflows can contribute to power the emission for average densities $n_{\rm H}>0.5\,$cm$^{-3}$. Moreover, the observed Ly$\alpha$ luminosities scale with the QSO's budget of Ly$\alpha$ photons modulo the dust content in each galaxy, highlighting a possible contribution from resonant scattering of QSO's radiation in powering the nebulae. We find larger Ly$\alpha$ linewidths (FWHM$\gtrsim 1200\,$km$\,$s$^{-1}$) than usually reported around radio-quiet systems, pointing to large-scale outflows. A statistical survey targeting similar high-redshift massive systems with known host properties is needed to confirm our findings., Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
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37. The impact of the near-surface region on the interpretation of x-ray absorption spectroscopy
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Shoham, Lishai, Baskin, Maria, Kauffmann, Yaron, Zakharova, Anna, Yoshida, Teppei, Miyasaka, Shigeki, Piamonteze, Cinthia, and Kornblum, Lior
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Transition metal oxides (TMOs) exhibit a broad spectrum of electronic, magnetic, and optical properties, making them intriguing materials for various technological applications. Soft x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) is widely used to study TMOs, shedding light on their chemical state, electronic structure, orbital polarization, element-specific magnetism, and more. Different XAS acquisition modes feature different information depth regimes in the sample. Here, we employ two XAS acquisition modes, having surface-sensitive versus bulk probing depths, on the prototypical TMO SrVO3. We illustrate and elucidate a strong apparent discrepancy between the different modes, emphasizing the impact of the near-surface region on the interpretation of XAS data. These findings highlight the importance of the acquisition mode selection in XAS analysis. Moreover, the results highlight the role of the near-surface region not only in the characterization of TMOs, but also in the design of future nanoscale oxide electronics.
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- 2023
38. A constant N$_2$H$^+$(1-0)-to-HCN(1-0) ratio on kiloparsec scales
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Jiménez-Donaire, M. J., Usero, A., Bešlić, I., Tafalla, M., Chacón-Tanarro, A., Salomé, Q., Eibensteiner, C., García-Rodríguez, A., Hacar, A., Barnes, A. T., Bigiel, F., Chevance, M., Colombo, D., Dale, D. A., Davis, T. A., Glover, S. C. O., Kauffmann, J., Klessen, R. S., Leroy, A. K., Neumann, L., Pan, H., Pety, J., Querejeta, M., Saito, T., Schinnerer, E., Stuber, S., and Williams, T. G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Nitrogen hydrides such as NH$_3$ and N$_2$H$^+$ are widely used by Galactic observers to trace the cold dense regions of the interstellar medium. In external galaxies, because of limited sensitivity, HCN has become the most common tracer of dense gas over large parts of galaxies. We provide the first systematic measurements of N$_2$H$^+$(1-0) across different environments of an external spiral galaxy, NGC6946. We find a strong correlation ($r>0.98,p<0.01$) between the HCN(1-0) and N$_2$H$^+$(1-0) intensities across the inner $\sim8\mathrm{kpc}$ of the galaxy, at kiloparsec scales. This correlation is equally strong between the ratios N$_2$H$^+$(1-0)/CO(1-0) and HCN(1-0)/CO(1-0), tracers of dense gas fractions ($f_\mathrm{dense}$). We measure an average intensity ratio of N$_2$H$^+$(1-0)/HCN(1-0)$=0.15\pm0.02$ over our set of five IRAM-30m pointings. These trends are further supported by existing measurements for Galactic and extragalactic sources. This narrow distribution in the average ratio suggests that the observed systematic trends found in kiloparsec-scale extragalactic studies of $f_\mathrm{dense}$ and the efficiency of dense gas (SFE$_\mathrm{dense}$) would not change if we employed N$_2$H$^+$(1-0) as a more direct tracer of dense gas. At kiloparsec scales our results indicate that the HCN(1-0) emission can be used to predict the expected N$_2$H$^+$(1-0) over those regions. Our results suggest that, even if HCN(1-0) and N$_2$H$^+$(1-0) trace different density regimes within molecular clouds, subcloud differences average out at kiloparsec scales, yielding the two tracers proportional to each other., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2023
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39. Hyaluronsäure in der oralen Regeneration
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Pabst, A., Kauffmann, F., and Kämmerer, P. W.
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- 2024
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40. Textbooks Are All You Need
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Gunasekar, Suriya, Zhang, Yi, Aneja, Jyoti, Mendes, Caio César Teodoro, Del Giorno, Allie, Gopi, Sivakanth, Javaheripi, Mojan, Kauffmann, Piero, de Rosa, Gustavo, Saarikivi, Olli, Salim, Adil, Shah, Shital, Behl, Harkirat Singh, Wang, Xin, Bubeck, Sébastien, Eldan, Ronen, Kalai, Adam Tauman, Lee, Yin Tat, and Li, Yuanzhi
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Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
We introduce phi-1, a new large language model for code, with significantly smaller size than competing models: phi-1 is a Transformer-based model with 1.3B parameters, trained for 4 days on 8 A100s, using a selection of ``textbook quality" data from the web (6B tokens) and synthetically generated textbooks and exercises with GPT-3.5 (1B tokens). Despite this small scale, phi-1 attains pass@1 accuracy 50.6% on HumanEval and 55.5% on MBPP. It also displays surprising emergent properties compared to phi-1-base, our model before our finetuning stage on a dataset of coding exercises, and phi-1-small, a smaller model with 350M parameters trained with the same pipeline as phi-1 that still achieves 45% on HumanEval., Comment: 26 pages; changed color scheme of plot. fixed minor typos and added couple clarifications
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- 2023
41. HSC-CLAUDS survey: The star formation rate functions since z ~ 2 and comparison with hydrodynamical simulations
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Picouet, V., Arnouts, S., Floch, E. Le, Moutard, T., Kraljic, K., Ilbert, O., Sawicki, M., Desprez, G., Laigle, C., Schiminovich, D., de la Torre, S., Gwyn, S., McCracken, H. J., Dubois, Y., Davé, R., Toft, S., Weaver, J. R., Shuntov, M., and Kauffmann, O. B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Star formation rate functions (SFRFs) give an instantaneous view of the distribution of star formation rates (SFRs) in galaxies at different epochs. They are a complementary and more stringent test for models than the galaxy stellar mass function, which gives an integrated view of the past star formation activity. However, the exploration of SFRFs has been limited thus far due to difficulties in assessing the SFR from observed quantities and probing the SFRF over a wide range of SFRs. We overcome these limitations thanks to an original method that predicts the infrared luminosity from the rest-frame UV/optical color of a galaxy and then its SFR over a wide range of stellar masses and redshifts. We applied this technique to the deep imaging survey HSC-CLAUDS combined with near-infrared and UV photometry. We provide the first SFR functions with reliable measurements in the high- and low-SFR regimes up to $z=2$ and compare our results with previous observations and four state-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations., Comment: 29 pages, 19 figures
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- 2023
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42. Reconstructive surgical therapy of peri-implant defects with ribose cross-linked collagen matrix and crosslinked hyaluronic acid – a prospective case series
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Friedmann, Anton, Jung, Rico, Bilhan, Hakan, Ghawi-Begovic, Hanan Al, Kauffmann, Frederic, and Diehl, Daniel
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- 2024
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43. Tumor board simulation improves interdisciplinary decision-making in medical students
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Fink, Kevin, Forster, Marie, Oettle, Matthias, Büttner, Marcel, Eze, Chukwuka, Käsmann, Lukas, Tufman, Amanda, Kauffmann-Guerrero, Diego, Bolt, Toki A., Kovacs, Julia, Neumann, Jens, Mücke, Johannes, Heuser, Sonja, Corradini, Stefanie, Walter, Franziska, Niyazi, Maximilian, Belka, Claus, Dreyling, Martin, Fischer, Martin R., and Fleischmann, Daniel F.
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- 2024
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44. Effect of facial and nasolabial asymmetry on perceived facial esthetics in children with non-syndromic cleft lip and palate
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Kauffmann, Philipp, Kolle, Johanna, Quast, Anja, Wolfer, Susanne, Schminke, Boris, Meyer-Marcotty, Philipp, and Schliephake, Henning
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- 2024
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45. Effects of non-linear periodisation training on the explosive force and plasma testosterone
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Souza Sandro, Vale Rodrigo, Kauffmann Adriana, Pacobahyba Nelson, Miranda Humberto, Lima Rover, and Dantas Estélio
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resistance training ,muscle strength ,testosterone ,Sports medicine ,RC1200-1245 ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Published
- 2010
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46. Combining the CLAUDS & HSC-SSP surveys: U+grizy(+YJHKs) photometry and photometric redshifts for 18M galaxies in the 20 deg2 of the HSC-SSP Deep and ultraDeep fields
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Desprez, G., Picouet, V., Moutard, T., Arnouts, S., Sawicki, M., Coupon, J., Gwyn, S., Chen, L., Huang, J., Golob, A., Furusawa, H., Ikeda, H., Paltani, S., Cheng, C., Hartley, W., Hsieh, B. C., Ilbert, O., Kauffmann, O. B., McCracken, H. J., Shuntov, M., Tanaka, M., Toft, S., Tresse, L., and Weaver, J. R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the combination of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CHFT) Large Area $U$-bands Deep Survey (CLAUDS) and the Hyper-Suprime-Cam (HSC) Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP) data over their four deep fields. We provide photometric catalogs for $u$, $u^*$ (CFHT--MegaCam), $g$, $r$, $i$, $z$, and $y$ (Subaru--HSC) bands over $\sim 20~{\rm deg}^2$, complemented in two fields by data from the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy (VISTA) Deep Extragalactic Observations (VIDEO) survey and the UltraVISTA survey, thus extending the wavelength coverage toward near-infrared with VIRCAM $Y$, $J$, $H$, and $K_s$ observations over $5.5~{\rm deg}^2$. The extraction of the photometry was performed with two different softwares: the HSC pipeline hscPipe and the standard and robust SExtractor software. Photometric redshifts were computed with template-fitting methods using the new Phosphoros code for the hscPipe photometry and the well-known Le Phare code for the SExtractor photometry. The products of these methods were compared with each other in detail. We assessed their quality using the large spectroscopic sample available in those regions, together with photometry and photometric redshifts from COSMOS2020, the latest version of the Cosmic Evolution Survey catalogs. We find that both photometric data sets are in good agreement in $Ugrizy$ down to magnitude$\sim26$, and to magnitude$\sim24.5$ in the $YJHK_s$ bands. We achieve good performance for the photometric redshifts, reaching precisions of $\sigma_{NMAD} \lesssim 0.04$ down to ${m}_i\sim25$, even using only the CLAUDS and HSC bands. At the same magnitude limit, we measured an outlier fraction of $\eta \lesssim 10\%$ when using the $Ugrizy$ bands, and down to $\eta \lesssim 6\%$ when considering near-infrared data. [abridged], Comment: 25 pages (20+5 Appendices), 17 figures (+4 in appendices), 4 Tables (+2 in appendices), Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
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47. CMZoom III: Spectral Line Data Release
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Callanan, Daniel, Longmore, Steven N., Battersby, Cara, Hatchfield, H. Perry, Walker, Daniel L., Henshaw, Jonathan, Keto, Eric, Barnes, Ashley, Ginsburg, Adam, Kauffmann, Jens, Kruijssen, Diederik, Lu, Xing, Mills, Elisabeth A. C., Pillai, Thushara, Zhang, Qizhou, Bally, John, Butterfield, Natalie, Contreras, Yanett A., Ho, Luis C., Immer, Katharina, Johnston, Katharine G., Ott, Juergen, Patel, Nimesh, and Tolls, Volker
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an overview and data release of the spectral line component of the SMA Large Program, \textit{CMZoom}. \textit{CMZoom} observed $^{12}$CO(2-1), $^{13}$CO(2-1) and C$^{18}$O(2-1), three transitions of H$_{2}$CO, several transitions of CH$_{3}$OH, two transitions of OCS and single transitions of SiO and SO, within gas above a column density of N(H$_2$)$\ge 10^{23}$\,cm$^{-2}$ in the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ; inner few hundred pc of the Galaxy). We extract spectra from all compact 1.3\,mm \emph{CMZoom} continuum sources and fit line profiles to the spectra. We use the fit results from the H$_{2}$CO 3(0,3)-2(0,2) transition to determine the source kinematic properties. We find $\sim 90$\% of the total mass of \emph{CMZoom} sources have reliable kinematics. Only four compact continuum sources are formally self-gravitating. The remainder are consistent with being in hydrostatic equilibrium assuming that they are confined by the high external pressure in the CMZ. Based on the mass and density of virially bound sources, and assuming star formation occurs within one free-fall time with a star formation efficiency of $10\% - 75\%$, we place a lower limit on the future embedded star-formation rate of $0.008 - 0.06$\,M$_{\odot}$\,yr$^{-1}$. We find only two convincing proto-stellar outflows, ruling out a previously undetected population of very massive, actively accreting YSOs with strong outflows. Finally, despite having sufficient sensitivity and resolution to detect high-velocity compact clouds (HVCCs), which have been claimed as evidence for intermediate mass black holes interacting with molecular gas clouds, we find no such objects across the large survey area., Comment: 44 pages, 41 figures
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- 2023
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48. The Haystack Telescope as an Astronomical Instrument
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Kauffmann, Jens, Rajagopalan, Ganesh, Akiyama, Kazunori, Fish, Vincent, Lonsdale, Colin, Matthews, Lynn D., and Pillai, Thushara G. S.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Haystack Telescope is an antenna with a diameter of 37~m and an elevation-dependent surface accuracy of $\le{}100~\mu{}\rm{}m$ that is capable of millimeter-wave observations. The radome-enclosed instrument serves as a radar sensor for space situational awareness, with about one-third of the time available for research by MIT Haystack Observatory. Ongoing testing with the K-band (18-26~GHz) and W-band receivers (currently 85-93~GHz) is preparing the inclusion of the telescope into the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) array and the use as a single-dish research telescope. Given its geographic location, the addition of the Haystack Telescope to current and future versions of the EHT array would substantially improve the image quality., Comment: accepted to the ngEHT Special Issue of "Galaxies"
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- 2023
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49. Millimeter/submillimeter VLBI with a Next Generation Large Radio Telescope in the Atacama Desert
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Akiyama, Kazunori, Kauffmann, Jens, Matthews, Lynn D., Moriyama, Kotaro, Koyama, Shoko, and Hada, Kazuhiro
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The proposed next generation Event Horizon Telescope (ngEHT) concept envisions the imaging of various astronomical sources on scales of microarcseconds in unprecedented detail with at least two orders of magnitude improvement in the image dynamic ranges by extending the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT). A key technical component of ngEHT is the utilization of large aperture telescopes to anchor the entire array, allowing the connection of less sensitive stations through highly sensitive fringe detections to form a dense network across the planet. Here, we introduce two projects for planned next generation large radio telescopes in the 2030s on the Chajnantor Plateau in the Atacama desert in northern Chile, the Large Submillimeter Telescope (LST) and the Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST). Both are designed to have a 50-meter diameter and operate at the planned ngEHT frequency bands of 86, 230 and 345\,GHz. A large aperture of 50\,m that is co-located with two existing EHT stations, the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) Telescope in the excellent observing site of the Chajnantor Plateau, will offer excellent capabilities for highly sensitive, multi-frequency, and time-agile millimeter very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations with accurate data calibration relevant to key science cases of ngEHT. In addition to ngEHT, its unique location in Chile will substantially improve angular resolutions of the planned Next Generation Very Large Array in North America or any future global millimeter VLBI arrays if combined. LST and AtLAST will be a key element enabling transformative science cases with next-generation millimeter/submillimeter VLBI arrays., Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, a ngEHT white paper, accepted for publication in the Galaxies Special Issue "From Vision to Instrument: Creating a Next-Generation Event Horizon Telescope for a New Era of Black Hole Science"
- Published
- 2022
50. COSMOS2020: The Galaxy Stellar Mass Function: the assembly and star formation cessation of galaxies at $0.2\lt z \leq 7.5$
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Weaver, J. R., Davidzon, I., Toft, S., Ilbert, O., McCracken, H. J., Gould, K. M. L., Jespersen, C. K., Steinhardt, C., Lagos, C. D. P., Capak, P. L., Casey, C. M., Chartab, N., Faisst, A. L., Hayward, C. C., Kartaltepe, J. S., Kauffmann, O. B., Koekemoer, A. M., Kokorev, V., Laigle, C., Liu, D., Long, A., Magdis, G. E., McPartland, C. J. R., Milvang-Jensen, B., Mobasher, B., Moneti, A., Peng, Y., Sanders, D. B., Shuntov, M., Sneppen, A., Valentino, F., Zalesky, L., and Zamorani, G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
How galaxies form, assemble, and cease their star-formation is a central question within the modern landscape of galaxy evolution studies. These processes are indelibly imprinted on the galaxy stellar mass function (SMF). We present constraints on the shape and evolution of the SMF, the quiescent galaxy fraction, and the cosmic stellar mass density across 90% of the history of the Universe from $z=7.5\rightarrow0.2$ via the COSMOS survey. Now with deeper and more homogeneous near-infrared coverage exploited by the COSMOS2020 catalog, we leverage the large 1.27 deg$^{2}$ effective area to improve sample statistics and understand cosmic variance particularly for rare, massive galaxies and push to higher redshifts with greater confidence and mass completeness than previous studies. We divide the total stellar mass function into star-forming and quiescent sub-samples through $NUVrJ$ color-color selection. Measurements are then fitted with Schechter functions to infer the intrinsic SMF, the evolution of its key parameters, and the cosmic stellar mass density out to $z=7.5$. We find a smooth, monotonic evolution in the galaxy SMF since $z=7.5$, in agreement with previous studies. The number density of star-forming systems seems to have undergone remarkably consistent growth spanning four decades in stellar mass from $z=7.5\rightarrow2$ whereupon high-mass systems become predominantly quiescent (i.e. downsizing). An excess of massive systems at $z\sim2.5-5.5$ with strikingly red colors, some newly identified, increase the observed number densities to the point where the SMF cannot be reconciled with a Schechter function. Systematics including cosmic variance and/or AGN contamination are unlikely to fully explain this excess, and so we speculate that there may be contributions from dust-obscured objects similar to those found in FIR surveys. (abridged), Comment: 39 pages, 24 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Data files containing key measurements are available for download: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7808832
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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