1,821 results on '"Killi A"'
Search Results
2. JWST PRIMER: A lack of outshining in four normal z =4-6 galaxies from the ALMA-CRISTAL Survey
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Lines, N. E. P., Bowler, R. A. A., Adams, N. J., Fisher, R., Varadaraj, R. G., Nakazato, Y., Aravena, M., Assef, R. J., Birkin, J. E., Ceverino, D., da Cunha, E., Cullen, F., De Looze, I., Donnan, C. T., Dunlop, J. S., Ferrara, A., Grogin, N. A., Herrera-Camus, R., Ikeda, R., Koekemoer, A. M., Killi, M., Li, J., McLeod, D. J., McLure, R. J., Mitsuhashi, I., Pérez-González, P. G., Relano, M., Solimano, M., Spilker, J. S., Villanueva, V., and Yoshida, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a spatially resolved analysis of four star-forming galaxies at $z = 4.44-5.64$ using data from the JWST PRIMER and ALMA-CRISTAL surveys to probe the stellar and inter-stellar medium properties on the sub-kpc scale. In the $1-5\,\mu{\rm m}$ JWST NIRCam imaging we find that the galaxies are composed of multiple clumps (between $2$ and $\sim 8$) separated by $\simeq 5\,{\rm kpc}$, with comparable morphologies and sizes in the rest-frame UV and optical. Using BAGPIPES to perform pixel-by-pixel SED fitting to the JWST data we show that the SFR ($\simeq 25\,{\rm M}_{\odot}/{\rm yr}$) and stellar mass (${\rm log}_{10}(M_{\star}/{\rm M}_{\odot}) \simeq 9.5$) derived from the resolved analysis are in close ($ \lesssim 0.3\,{\rm dex}$) agreement with those obtained by fitting the integrated photometry. In contrast to studies of lower-mass sources, we thus find a reduced impact of outshining of the older (more massive) stellar populations in these normal $z \simeq 5$ galaxies. Our JWST analysis recovers bluer rest-frame UV slopes ($\beta \simeq -2.1$) and younger ages ($\simeq 100\,{\rm Myr}$) than archival values. We find that the dust continuum from ALMA-CRISTAL seen in two of these galaxies correlates, as expected, with regions of redder rest-frame UV slopes and the SED-derived $A_{\rm V}$, as well as the peak in the stellar mass map. We compute the resolved IRX-$\beta$ relation, showing that the IRX is consistent with the local starburst attenuation curve and further demonstrating the presence of an inhomogeneous dust distribution within the galaxies. A comparison of the CRISTAL sources to those from the FirstLight zoom-in simulation of galaxies with the same $M_{\star}$ and SFR reveals similar age and colour gradients, suggesting that major mergers may be important in the formation of clumpy galaxies at this epoch., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, plus 4 page appendix. Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
3. The ALMA-CRISTAL Survey: Spatial extent of [CII] line emission in star-forming galaxies at $z=4-6$
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Ikeda, Ryota, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Mitsuhashi, Ikki, Aravena, Manuel, De Looze, Ilse, Schreiber, Natascha M. Förster, González-López, Jorge, Herrera-Camus, Rodrigo, Spilker, Justin, Barcos-Muñoz, Loreto, da Cunha, Elisabete, Davies, Rebecca, Díaz-Santos, Tanio, Ferrara, Andrea, Killi, Meghana, Lee, Lilian L., Li, Juno, Lutz, Dieter, Smit, Renske, Solimano, Manuel, Telikova, Kseniia, Übler, Hannah, Veilleux, Sylvain, and Villanueva, Vicente
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the spatial extent of the [CII] line emission in a sample of 34 galaxies at $z=4-6$ from the ALMA-CRISTAL Survey. By modeling the [CII] line emission in the visibility data directly, we derive the effective radius of [CII] line emission assuming exponential distribution. These measurements comprise not only isolated galaxies but also interacting systems, identified thanks to the high spatial resolution of the data. The [CII] line radius ranges from 0.5 to 3.5 kpc with an average value of 1.9 kpc. We compare the [CII] sizes with the sizes of UV and FIR continua, which were measured from the HST F160W and ALMA Band-7 continuum images, respectively. We confirm that the [CII] line emission is more spatially extended than the continuum emission, with average size ratios of $R_{e,[CII]}/R_{e,UV}=2.90$ and $R_{e,[CII]}/R_{e,FIR}=1.54$, although about half of the FIR-detected sample show comparable spatial extent between [CII] line and FIR continuum emission ($R_{e,[CII]}\approx R_{e, FIR}$). The residual visibility data of the best-fit model do not show evidence of flux excesses either individually or in stacking analysis. This indicates that the [CII] line emission in star-forming galaxies can be characterized by an extended exponential disk profile. Overall, our results suggest that the spatial extent of [CII] line emission can primarily be explained by photodissociation regions associated with star formation activity, while the contribution from diffuse neutral medium (atomic gas) and the effects of mergers may further expand the [CII] line distributions, causing their variations among our sample. We report the correlations between the [CII] line, dust, and Lya line properties, which may be in line with our scenario. Future 3D-analysis of Lya and Ha lines will shed light on the association of the extended [CII] line emission with atomic gas and outflows., Comment: Submitted to A&A, 21 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables
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- 2024
4. The ALMA-CRISTAL survey: Dust temperature and physical conditions of the interstellar medium in a typical galaxy at z=5.66
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Villanueva, V., Herrera-Camus, R., Gonzalez-Lopez, J., Aravena, M., Assef, R. J., Baeza-Garay, Mauricio, Barcos-Muñoz, L., Bovino, S., Bowler, R. A. A., da Cunha, E., De Looze, I., Diaz-Santos, T., Ferrara, A., Foerster-Schreiber, N., Algera, H., Iked, R., Killi, M., Mitsuhashi, I., Naab, T., Relano, M., Spilker, J., Solimano, M., Palla, M., Price, S. H., Posses, A., Tadaki, K., Telikova, K., and Übler, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present new $\lambda_{\rm rest}=77$ $\mu$m dust continuum observations from the ALMA of HZ10 (CRISTAL-22), a dusty main-sequence galaxy at $z$=5.66 as part of the [CII] Resolved Ism in STar-forming Alma Large program, CRISTAL. The high angular resolution of the ALMA Band 7 and new Band 9 data($\sim{0}''.4$) reveals the complex structure of HZ10, which comprises two main components (HZ10-C and HZ10-W) and a bridge-like dusty emission between them (the Bridge). We model the dust spectral energy distribution (SED) to constrain the physical conditions of the interstellar medium (ISM) and its variations among the different components identified in HZ10. We find that HZ10-W (the more UV-obscured component) has an SED dust temperature of $T_{\rm SED}$$\sim$51.2$\pm13.1$ K; this is $\sim$5 K higher (although still consistent) than that of the central component and previous global estimations for HZ10. Our new ALMA data allow us to reduce by a factor of $\sim$2.3 the uncertainties of global $T_{\rm SED}$ measurements compared to previous studies. Interestingly, HZ10-W shows a lower [CII]/FIR ratio compared to the other two components (although still within the uncertainties), suggesting a harder radiation field destroying polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon associated with [CII] emission (e.g., active galactic nuclei or young stellar populations). While HZ10-C appears to follow the tight IRX-$\beta_{\rm UV}$ relation seen in local UV-selected starburst galaxies and high-$z$ star-forming galaxies, we find that both HZ10-W and the Bridge depart from this relation and are well described by dust-screen models with holes in front of a hard UV radiation field. This suggests that the UV emission (likely from young stellar populations) is strongly attenuated in the more dusty components of the HZ10 system.
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- 2024
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5. Exploring the biomedical applications of Campsis radicans (woody vine): integrating traditional wisdom and contemporary insights
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Killi, Uday Kumar, Malík, Matěj, Navrátilová, Zdeňka, Patočka, Radoslav, Olekšák, Patrik, Killi, Sireesha Uday, Kuca, Kamil, Tlustoš, Pavel, and Patočka, Jiří
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- 2024
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6. JWST NIRSpec High-resolution Spectroscopy of MACS0647-JD at z=10.167: Resolved [OII] Doublet and Electron Density in an Early Galaxy
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Abdurro'uf, Larson, Rebecca L., Coe, Dan, Hsiao, Tiger Yu-Yang, Álvarez-Márquez, Javier, Gómez, Alejandro Crespo, Adamo, Angela, Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Bik, Arjan, Bradley, Larry D., Conselice, Christopher J., Dayal, Pratika, Diego, Jose M., Fujimoto, Seiji, Furtak, Lukas J., Hutchison, Taylor A., Jung, Intae, Killi, Meghana, Kokorev, Vasily, Mingozzi, Matilde, Norman, Colin, Resseguier, Tom, Ricotti, Massimo, Rigby, Jane R., Vanzella, Eros, Welch, Brian, Windhorst, Rogier A., Xu, Xinfeng, and Zitrin, Adi
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present JWST/NIRSpec high-resolution spectroscopy G395H/F290LP of MACS0647-JD, a gravitationally lensed galaxy merger at $z=10.167$. The new spectroscopy, which is acquired for the two lensed images (JD1 and JD2), detects and resolves emission lines in the rest-frame ultraviolet (UV) and blue optical, including the resolved [OII]3726,3729 doublet, [NeIII]3870, [HeI]3890, H$\delta$, H$\gamma$, and [OIII]4363. This is the first observation of the resolved [OII]3726,3729 doublet for a galaxy at $z>8$. We measure a line flux ratio [OII]3729/3726 $= 0.9 \pm 0.3$, which corresponds to an estimated electron density of $\log(n_{e} / \rm{cm}^{-3}) = 2.9 \pm 0.5$. This is significantly higher than the electron densities of local galaxies reported in the literature. We compile the measurements from the literature and further analyze the redshift evolution of $n_{e}$. We find that the redshift evolution follows the power-law form of $n_{e} = A\times (1+z)^{p}$ with $A=54^{+31}_{-23}$ cm$^{-3}$ and $p=1.2^{+0.4}_{-0.4}$. This power-law form may be explained by a combination of metallicity and morphological evolution of galaxies, which become, on average, more metal-poor and more compact with increasing redshift., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2024
7. The JWST-PRIMAL Legacy Survey. A JWST/NIRSpec reference sample for the physical properties and Lyman-$\alpha$ absorption and emission of $\sim 500$ galaxies at $z=5.5-13.4$
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Heintz, K. E., Brammer, G. B., Watson, D., Oesch, P. A., Keating, L. C., Hayes, M. J., Abdurro'uf, Arellano-Córdova, K. Z., Carnall, A. C., Christiansen, C. R., Cullen, F., Davé, R., Dayal, P., Ferrara, A., Finlator, K., Fynbo, J. P. U., Flury, S. R., Gelli, V., Gillman, S., Gottumukkala, R., Gould, K., Greve, T. R., Hardin, S. E., Hsiao, T. Y. -Y, Hutter, A., Jakobsson, P., Killi, M., Khosravaninezhad, N., Laursen, P., Lee, M. M., Magdis, G. E., Matthee, J., Naidu, R. P., Narayanan, D., Pollock, C., Prescott, M., Rusakov, V., Shuntov, M., Sneppen, A., Smit, R., Tanvir, N. R., Terp, C., Toft, S., Valentino, F., Vijayan, A. P., Weaver, J. R., Wise, J. H., and Witstok, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
One of the surprising early findings with JWST has been the discovery of a strong "roll-over" or a softening of the absorption edge of Ly$\alpha$ in a large number of galaxies at ($z\gtrsim 6$), in addition to systematic offsets from photometric redshift estimates and fundamental galaxy scaling relations. This has been interpreted as damped Ly$\alpha$ absorption (DLA) wings from high column densities of neutral atomic hydrogen (HI), signifying major gas accretion events in the formation of these galaxies. To explore this new phenomenon systematically, we assemble the JWST/NIRSpec PRImordial gas Mass AssembLy (PRIMAL) legacy survey of 494 galaxies at $z=5.5-13.4$. We characterize this benchmark sample in full and spectroscopically derive the galaxy redshifts, metallicities, star-formation rates, and ultraviolet slopes. We define a new diagnostic, the Ly$\alpha$ damping parameter $D_{\rm Ly\alpha}$ to measure and quantify the Ly$\alpha$ emission strength, HI fraction in the IGM, or local HI column density for each source. The JWST-PRIMAL survey is based on the spectroscopic DAWN JWST Archive (DJA-Spec). All the software, reduced spectra, and spectroscopically derived quantities and catalogs are made publicly available in dedicated repositories. The fraction of strong galaxy DLAs are found to be in the range $65-95\%$ at $z>5.5$. The fraction of strong Ly$\alpha$ emitters (LAEs) is found to increase with decreasing redshift, in qualitative agreement with previous observational results, and are predominantly associated with low-metallicity and UV faint galaxies. By contrast, strong DLAs are observed in galaxies with a variety of intrinsic physical properties. Our results indicate that strong DLAs likely reflect a particular early assembly phase of reionization-era galaxies, at which point they are largely dominated by pristine HI gas accretion. [abridged], Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, 3 tables. Submitted to A&A. Comments welcome! All data and catalogs are available through the DAWN JWST Archive (DJA): https://dawn-cph.github.io/dja/ and https://github.com/keheintz/jwst-primal
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- 2024
8. The ALMA-CRISTAL survey: Extended [CII] emission in an interacting galaxy system at z ~ 5.5
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Posses, A., Aravena, M., González-López, J., Schreiber, N. M. Förster, Liu, D., Lee, L., Solimano, M., Díaz-Santos, T., Assef, R. J., Barcos-Muñoz, L., Bovino, S., Bowler, R. A. A., Rivera, G. Calistro, da Cunha, E., Davies, R. L., Killi, M., De Looze, I., Ferrara, A., Fisher, D. B., Herrera-Camus, R., Ikeda, R., Lambert, T., Li, J., Lutz, D., Mitsuhashi, I., Palla, M., Relaño, M., Spilker, J., Naab, T., Tadaki, K., Telikova, K., Übler, H., van der Giessen, S., and Villanueva, V.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The ALMA [CII] Resolved Ism in STar-forming gALaxies (CRISTAL) survey is a Cycle 8 ALMA Large Programme that studies the cold gas component of high-redshift galaxies. Its sub-arcsecond resolution observations are key to disentangling physical mechanisms that shape galaxies during cosmic dawn. In this paper, we explore the morphology and kinematics of the cold gas, star-forming, and stellar components in the star-forming main-sequence galaxy CRISTAL-05/HZ3, at z = 5.54. Our analysis includes 0.3" spatial resolution (~2 kpc) ALMA observations of the [CII] line. While CRISTAL-05 was previously classified as a single source, our observations reveal that the system is a close interacting pair surrounded by an extended component of carbon-enriched gas. This is imprinted in the disturbed elongated [CII] morphology and the separation of the two components in the position-velocity diagram (~100 km/s). The central region is composed of two components, named C05-NW and C05-SE, with the former being the dominant one. A significant fraction of the [CII] arises beyond the close pair up to 10 kpc, while the regions forming new massive stars and the stellar component seem compact (r_[CII] ~ 4 r_UV), as traced by rest-frame UV and optical imaging obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope. Our kinematic model, using the DYSMALpy software, yields a minor contribution of dark matter of C05-NW within a radius of ~2x Reff. Finally, we explore the resolved [CII]/FIR ratios as a proxy for shock-heating produced by this merger. We argue that the extended [CII] emission is mainly caused by the merger, which could not be discerned with lower-resolution observations. Our work emphasizes the need for high-resolution observations to fully characterize the dynamic stages of infant galaxies and the physical mechanisms that drive the metal enrichment of the circumgalactic medium., Comment: Submitted to A&A - comments are welcome! - 19 pages, 13 figures
- Published
- 2024
9. Predictive resource allocation and VNF deployment using ensemble learning
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Dubba, Sudha, Gupta, Shreyansh, and Killi, Balaprakasa Rao
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- 2024
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10. End to end delay aware service function chain scheduling in network function virtualization enabled networks
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Dubba, Sudha and Killi, Balaprakasa Rao
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- 2024
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11. The ALPINE-ALMA [C II] survey: Characterisation of Spatial Offsets in Main-Sequence Galaxies at $z \sim$ 4-6
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Killi, Meghana, Ginolfi, Michele, Popping, Gergö, Watson, Darach, Zamorani, Giovanni, Lemaux, Brian C., Fujimoto, Seiji, Faisst, Andreas, Bethermin, Matthieu, Romano, Michael, Fudamoto, Yoshinobu, Bardelli, Sandro, Boquien, Médéric, Carniani, Stefano, Dessauges-Zavadsky, Miroslava, Gruppioni, Carlotta, Hathi, Nimish, Ibar, Eduardo, Jones, Gareth C., Koekemoer, Anton M., Langan, Ivanna, Méndez-Hernández, Hugo, Sugahara, Yuma, Vallini, Livia, and Vergani, Daniela
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Galaxy morphology is shaped by stellar activity, feedback, gas and dust properties, and interactions with surroundings, and can therefore provide insight into these processes. In this paper, we study the spatial offsets between stellar and interstellar medium emission in a sample of 54 main-sequence star-forming galaxies at $z\sim4-6$ observed with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) and drawn from the ALMA Large Program to INvestigate C$^+$ at Early times (ALPINE). We find no significant spatial offset for the majority ($\sim$ 70 percent) of galaxies in the sample among any combination of [C II], far-infrared continuum, optical, and ultraviolet emission. However, a fraction of the sample ($\sim$ 30 percent) shows offsets larger than the median by more than 3$\sigma$ significance (compared to the uncertainty on the offsets), especially between [C II] and ultraviolet emission. We find that these significant offsets are of the order of $\sim$0.5-0.7 arcsec, corresponding to $\sim$3.5-4.5 kiloparsecs. The offsets could be caused by a complex dust geometry, strong feedback from stars and active galactic nuclei, large-scale gas inflow and outflow, or a combination of these phenomena. However, our current analysis does not definitively constrain the origin. Future, higher resolution ALMA and JWST observations may help resolve the ambiguity. Regardless, since there exist at least some galaxies that display such large offsets, galaxy models and spectral energy distribution fitting codes cannot assume co-spatial emission in all main-sequence galaxies, and must take into account that the observed emission across wavelengths may be spatially segregated., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Submitted to MNRAS; second revision
- Published
- 2024
12. Deciphering the JWST spectrum of a 'little red dot' at $z \sim 4.53$: An obscured AGN and its star-forming host
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Killi, Meghana, Watson, Darach, Brammer, Gabriel, McPartland, Conor, Antwi-Danso, Jacqueline, Newshore, Rosa, Coe, Dan, Allen, Natalie, Fynbo, Johan P. U., Gould, Katriona, Heintz, Kasper E., Rusakov, Vadim, and Vejlgaard, Simone
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
JWST has revealed a class of numerous, extremely compact sources, with rest-frame red optical/near-infrared (NIR) and blue ultraviolet (UV) colours, nicknamed "little red dots". We present one of the highest signal-to-noise ratio JWST NIRSpec/PRISM spectra of a little red dot, J0647_1045 at $z = 4.5321 \pm 0.0001$, and examine its NIRCam morphology, to differentiate the origin of the UV and optical/NIR emission, and elucidate the nature of the little red dot phenomenon. J0647_1045 is unresolved ($r_e < 0.17$ kpc) in the three NIRCam long-wavelength filters, but significantly extended ($r_e = 0.45 \pm 0.06$ kpc) in the three short-wavelength filters, indicating a red compact source in a blue star-forming galaxy. The spectral continuum shows a clear change in slope, from blue in the optical/UV, to red in the restframe optical/NIR, consistent with two distinct components, fit by power-laws with different attenuation: $A_V = 0.54 \pm 0.01$ (UV) and $A_V = 5.7 \pm 0.2$ (optical/NIR). Fitting the H$\alpha$ line requires both broad (full width at half-maximum $\sim 4300 \pm 300 km s^{-1}$) and narrow components, but none of the other emission lines, including H$\beta$, show evidence of broadness. We calculate $A_V = 1.1 \pm 0.2$ from the Balmer decrement using narrow H$\alpha$ and H$\beta$, and $A_V > 4.1 \pm 0.2$ from broad H$\alpha$ and upper limit on broad H$\beta$, consistent with the blue and red continuum attenuation respectively. Based on single-epoch H$\alpha$ linewidth, the mass of the central black hole is $8 \pm 1 \times 10^8 M_\odot$. Our findings are consistent with a multi-component model, where the optical/NIR and broad lines arise from a highly obscured, spatially unresolved region, likely a relatively massive active galactic nucleus, while the less obscured UV continuum and narrow lines arise, at least partly, from a small but spatially resolved star-forming host galaxy., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to A&A. Comments welcome
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- 2023
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13. Gauging the mass of metals in the gas phase of galaxies from the Local Universe to the Epoch of Reionization
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Heintz, K. E., Shapley, A. E., Sanders, R. L., Killi, M., Watson, D., Magdis, G., Valentino, F., Ginolfi, M., Narayanan, D., Greve, T. R., Fynbo, J. P. U., Vizgan, D., and Wilson, S. N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The chemical enrichment of dust and metals are vital processes in constraining the star formation history of the universe. Previously, the dust masses of high-redshift star-forming galaxies have been determined through their far-infrared continuum, however, equivalent, and potentially simpler, approaches to determining the metal masses have yet to be explored at $z\gtrsim 2$. Here, we present a new method of inferring the metal mass in the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies out to $z\approx 8$, using the far-infrared [CII]$-158\mu$m emission line as a proxy. We calibrated the [CII]-to-$M_{\rm Z,ISM}$ conversion factor based on a benchmark observational sample at $z\approx 0$, in addition to gamma-ray burst sightlines at $z>2$ and cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxies at $z\approx 0$ and $z\approx 6$. We found a universal scaling across redshifts of $\log (M_{\rm Z,ISM}/M_\odot) = \log (L_{\rm [CII]}/L_\odot) - 0.45,$ with a 0.4 dex scatter, which is constant over more than two orders of magnitude in metallicity. We applied this scaling to recent surveys for [CII] in galaxies at $z\gtrsim 2$ and determined the fraction of metals retained in the gas-phase ISM, $M_{\rm Z,ISM} / M_\star$, as a function of redshift showing that an increasing fraction of metals reside in the ISM of galaxies at higher redshifts. We place further constraints on the cosmic metal mass density in the ISM ($\Omega_{\rm Z,ISM}$) at $z\approx 5$ and $\approx 7$, yielding $\Omega_{\rm Z,ISM} = 6.6^{+13}_{-4.3}\times 10^{-7}\,M_\odot\, {\rm Mpc}^{-3}$ ($z\approx 5$) and $\Omega_{\rm Z,ISM} = 2.0^{+3.5}_{-1.3}\times 10^{-7}\,M_\odot\, {\rm Mpc}^{-3}$ ($z\approx 7$). These results are consistent with the expected metal yields from the integrated star formation history at the respective redshifts. This suggests that the majority of metals produced at $z\gtrsim 5$ are confined to the ISM of galaxies., Comment: Accepted in A&A, abstract abridged
- Published
- 2023
14. Extreme damped Lyman-$\alpha$ absorption in young star-forming galaxies at $z=9-11$
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Heintz, Kasper E., Watson, Darach, Brammer, Gabriel, Vejlgaard, Simone, Hutter, Anne, Strait, Victoria B., Matthee, Jorryt, Oesch, Pascal A., Jakobsson, Páll, Tanvir, Nial R., Laursen, Peter, Naidu, Rohan P., Mason, Charlotte A., Killi, Meghana, Jung, Intae, Hsiao, Tiger Yu-Yang, Abdurro'uf, Coe, Dan, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Finkelstein, Steven L., and Toft, Sune
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The onset of galaxy formation is thought to be initiated by the infall of neutral, pristine gas onto the first protogalactic halos. However, direct constraints on the abundance of neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) in galaxies have been difficult to obtain at early cosmic times. Here we present spectroscopic observations with JWST of three galaxies at redshifts $z=8.8 - 11.4$, about $400-600$ Myr after the Big Bang, that show strong damped Lyman-$\alpha$ absorption ($N_{\rm HI} > 10^{22}$ cm$^{-2}$) from HI in their local surroundings, an order of magnitude in excess of the Lyman-$\alpha$ absorption caused by the neutral intergalactic medium at these redshifts. Consequently, these early galaxies cannot be contributing significantly to reionization, at least at their current evolutionary stages. Simulations of galaxy formation show that such massive gas reservoirs surrounding young galaxies so early in the history of the universe is a signature of galaxy formation in progress., Comment: Submitted
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- 2023
15. Plant Physiological Analysis to Overcome Limitations to Plant Phenotyping.
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Haworth, Matthew, Marino, Giovanni, Atzori, Giulia, Fabbri, Andre, Killi, Dilek, Carli, Andrea, Montesano, Vincenzo, Conte, Adriano, Balestrini, Raffaella, Centritto, Mauro, and Daccache, Andre
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LiDAR ,climate resilience ,deep-learning ,hyperspectral ,partial least squares regression ,phenomics ,photosynthesis ,plant ecophysiology ,spectral reflectance - Abstract
Plant physiological status is the interaction between the plant genome and the prevailing growth conditions. Accurate characterization of plant physiology is, therefore, fundamental to effective plant phenotyping studies; particularly those focused on identifying traits associated with improved yield, lower input requirements, and climate resilience. Here, we outline the approaches used to assess plant physiology and how these techniques of direct empirical observations of processes such as photosynthetic CO2 assimilation, stomatal conductance, photosystem II electron transport, or the effectiveness of protective energy dissipation mechanisms are unsuited to high-throughput phenotyping applications. Novel optical sensors, remote/proximal sensing (multi- and hyperspectral reflectance, infrared thermography, sun-induced fluorescence), LiDAR, and automated analyses of below-ground development offer the possibility to infer plant physiological status and growth. However, there are limitations to such indirect approaches to gauging plant physiology. These methodologies that are appropriate for the rapid high temporal screening of a number of crop varieties over a wide spatial scale do still require calibration or validation with direct empirical measurement of plant physiological status. The use of deep-learning and artificial intelligence approaches may enable the effective synthesis of large multivariate datasets to more accurately quantify physiological characters rapidly in high numbers of replicate plants. Advances in automated data collection and subsequent data processing represent an opportunity for plant phenotyping efforts to fully integrate fundamental physiological data into vital efforts to ensure food and agro-economic sustainability.
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- 2023
16. Cancer stem cell and epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT) in canine transmissible venereal tumour- A preliminary study
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Killi, L., Nath, I., Sahoo, A.K., Panda, S.K., Patra, B.K., and Biswal, S.S.
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- 2024
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17. Effects of Heat and Drought Stress on Sustainable Agriculture and Future Food Security in Türkiye
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Serpil Bas and Dilek Killi
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climate change ,food security ,sustainable production ,plant phenotyping ,Agriculture ,Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 - Abstract
This review investigates the effects of heat and drought stress on future food security of Turkish agriculture. Temperature average is expected to rise to 3.2°C at the end of the current century while annual precipitation will decline more than 10% in the west and south and rise by 20% in the north of Türkiye, implying that climate change will affect ecosystem sustainability. It is therefore crucial to develop strategies to mitigate and adapt to climate change such as adjusting the planting schedule, reduced tillage, fertiliser microdosing, pre-sowing seed treatment, and the application of growth promoting bacteria to improve tolerance to stress by comprehending how plants respond physiologically and biochemically under these stress conditions. Long-term heat stress may hinder photosynthetic electron transport, decreasing the plant's ability to make use of energy for photosynthesis. The immediate response of plants under drought stress involves closing stomatal openings to reduce water loss through stomatal conductance. Combined heat and drought stress have a greater adverse effect on plant development and production than their effects in isolation. Plant phenotyping can play a major role in “climate-proofing” Turkish agriculture through the identification and development of crop varities with improved prouctivity, climate resilience and input requirements. Digital agriculture will also improve the efficiency of Turkish agricultural systems as the adapt to a hotter drier climate. To ensure future food security and the viability of the agro-economic system in Türkiye steps must be taken to make Turkish agriculture more robust in preparation for the impacts of climate change.
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- 2024
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18. Accuracy of intraoperative frozen section in surgical staging of endometrial cancer
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Sevki G. Gokulu, Tolgay T. Ilhan, Gorkem Ulger, Ali Yildizbakan, Murside Cevikoglu-Killi, and Ayse Turkmen
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Endometrial cancer ,Frozen sections ,Paraffin sections ,Surgical staging ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Objective: This study evaluates the role of frozen section (FS) in determining the extent of disease during surgery. Materials and methods: This study retrospectively analyzed a cohort of patients diagnosed with endometrioid-type endometrial cancer between 2019 and 2022 who underwent surgical intervention. The frozen section (FS) results were compared with the final pathology reports, focusing on tumor grade, depth of myometrial invasion, cervical involvement, and tumor diameter. Results: The final analysis included 187 patients. The predictive accuracy of FS in determining PS results was 85.6 % for endometrioid histology, 95.7 % for grade 3 tumors, 90.2 % for depth of myometrial invasion, 89.7 % for cervical involvement, and 95.9 % for tumor diameter. Notably, 9.8 % of cases initially classified as grade 1 intraoperatively were upgraded with the final pathology. Similarly, 6.3 % of grade II cases were upgraded, while 60.4 % were downgraded. Conclusion: Our study highlights the effectiveness of FS as a dependable tool for assessing endometrial carcinomas and guiding surgical staging decisions. By utilizing FS, the risk of unnecessary surgeries and associated morbidity in patients can be reduced.
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- 2024
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19. Seismostratigraphic Characterization of the Rharb Basin’s Post-nappe Series (N-W Morocco)
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Sbihi, Fatima Zahra, Mridekh, Abdelaziz, Hafid, Mohamad, Ait Salem, Abdallah, Killi, Malika, El Bouhaddioui, Mohammed, Pisello, Anna Laura, Editorial Board Member, Hawkes, Dean, Editorial Board Member, Bougdah, Hocine, Editorial Board Member, Rosso, Federica, Editorial Board Member, Abdalla, Hassan, Editorial Board Member, Boemi, Sofia-Natalia, Editorial Board Member, Mohareb, Nabil, Editorial Board Member, Mesbah Elkaffas, Saleh, Editorial Board Member, Bozonnet, Emmanuel, Editorial Board Member, Pignatta, Gloria, Editorial Board Member, Mahgoub, Yasser, Editorial Board Member, De Bonis, Luciano, Editorial Board Member, Kostopoulou, Stella, Editorial Board Member, Pradhan, Biswajeet, Editorial Board Member, Abdul Mannan, Md., Editorial Board Member, Alalouch, Chaham, Editorial Board Member, Gawad, Iman O., Editorial Board Member, Nayyar, Anand, Editorial Board Member, Amer, Mourad, Series Editor, Çiner, Attila, editor, Ergüler, Zeynal Abiddin, editor, Bezzeghoud, Mourad, editor, Ustuner, Mustafa, editor, Eshagh, Mehdi, editor, El-Askary, Hesham, editor, Biswas, Arkoprovo, editor, Gasperini, Luca, editor, Hinzen, Klaus-Günter, editor, Karakus, Murat, editor, Comina, Cesare, editor, Karrech, Ali, editor, Polonia, Alina, editor, and Chaminé, Helder I., editor
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- 2024
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20. A solar metallicity galaxy at $z >$ 7? Possible detection of the [N II] 122 $\mu$m and [O III] 52 $\mu$m lines
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Killi, Meghana, Watson, Darach, Fujimoto, Seiji, Akins, Hollis, Knudsen, Kirsten, Richard, Johan, Harikane, Yuichi, Rigopoulou, Dimitra, Rizzo, Francesca, Ginolfi, Michele, Popping, Gergö, and Kokorev, Vasily
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first detection of the [N II] 122 $\mu$m and [O III] 52 $\mu$m lines for a reionisation-epoch galaxy. Based on these lines and previous [C II] 158 $\mu$m and [O III] 88 $\mu$m measurements, using two different radiative transfer models of the interstellar medium, we estimate an upper limit on electron density of $\lesssim$ 500 cm$^{-3}$ and a gas-phase metallicity $Z/Z_\odot \sim 1.1 \pm 0.2$ for A1689-zD1, a gravitationally-lensed, dusty galaxy at $z$ = 7.133. Other measurements or indicators of metallicity so far in galaxy interstellar media at $z \gtrsim$ 6 are typically an order of magnitude lower than this. The unusually high metallicity makes A1689-zD1 inconsistent with the fundamental metallicity relation, although there is likely significant dust obscuration of the stellar mass, which may partly resolve the inconsistency. Given a solar metallicity, the dust-to-metals ratio is a factor of several lower than expected, hinting that galaxies beyond $z \sim$ 7 may have lower dust formation efficiency. Finally, the inferred nitrogen enrichment compared to oxygen, on which the metallicity measurement depends, indicates that star-formation in the system is older than about 250 Myr, pushing the beginnings of this galaxy to $z >$ 10., Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; Published MNRAS: 06 March 2023
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- 2022
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21. To see or not to see a $z\sim13$ galaxy, that is the question
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Kaasinen, Melanie, van Marrewijk, Joshiwa, Popping, Gergö, Ginolfi, Michele, Di Mascolo, Luca, Mroczkowski, Tony, Concas, Alice, Di Cesare, Claudia, Killi, Meghana, and Langan, Ivanna
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Determining when the first galaxies formed remains an outstanding goal of modern observational astronomy. Theory and current stellar population models imply that the first galaxies formed at least at $z = 14-15$. But to date, only one galaxy at $z > 13$ (GS-z13-0) has been spectroscopically confirmed.. The galaxy `HD1' was recently proposed to be a z=13.27 galaxy based on its potential Lyman break and tentative [O III] 88 {\mu}m detection with ALMA. We hereby aim to test this scenario with new ALMA Band 4, DDT observations of what would be the [C II] 158 {\mu}m emission, if HD1 is at z$\sim$13.27. We carefully analyse the new ALMA Band 4 observations and re-analyse the existing ALMA Band 6 data on the source to determine the proposed redshift. We find a tentative $4\sigma$ feature in the Band 4 data that is spatially offset by 1.7" and spectrally offset by 190 km s-1 from the previously-reported $3.8\sigma$ `[O III] 88 {\mu}m' feature. Through various statistical tests, we demonstrate that these tentative features are fully consistent with both being random noise features. We conclude that we are more likely to be recovering noise features than both [O III] and [C II] emission from a source at $z\sim 13.27$. Although we find no credible evidence of a $z\sim 13.27$ galaxy, we cannot entirely rule out this scenario. Non-detections are also possible for a $z\sim 13$ source with a low interstellar gas-phase metallicity or ionisation parameter and/or high gas density. Determining where and exactly what type of galaxy HD1 is, will now likely require JWST/NIRSpec spectroscopy., Comment: Accepted by A&A on 16/01/2023, 13 pages, 9 figures
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- 2022
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22. Cannabis sativa genotypes with larger leaf areas have higher potential to adjust stomatal size and density in response to water deficit: The effect on stomatal conductance and physiological stomatal behaviour
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Matthew Haworth, Andrea Carli, Vincenzo Montesano, Dilek Killi, André Fabbri, Raffaella Balestrini, Giovanni Marino, and Mauro Centritto
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Phenotyping ,Hemp ,Drought ,Allometry ,Stomatal spacing ,Stomatal kinetic ,Plant ecology ,QK900-989 - Abstract
Effective stomatal control is fundamental to successful plant responses to water deficit stress. Control of stomatal conductance (Gs) can be exerted through modification of stomatal morphology (size and density) in newly developing leaves, or physiological adjustment of stomatal pore aperture. We investigated the potential coordination of stomatal morphological and physiological responses to water deficit in three varieties of hemp (Cannabis sativa L.) grown under field conditions. The three hemp varieties had contrasting leaf areas under well-watered irrigation (control): Earlina 8FC < Fedora 17 < Fibror 79. Stomatal size, density and the speed of physiological adjustment of Gs were not significantly different under full irrigation. Under water deficit conditions the leaf areas of the two varieties with the largest leaves decreased to match those of Earlina 8FC. This reduction in leaf area, alongside an increase in stomatal initiation, resulted in higher densities of smaller stomata. This effect was most evident in Fibror 79 that showed the largest reduction in leaf area, increase in stomatal density and decrease in stomatal size. This corresponded to the most rapid physiological adjustment of Gs to fluctuations in photosynthetic photon flux density of the hemp varieties occurring in Fibror 79 when subject to water deficit. The coincidence of the fastest velocity of Gs adjustment with the highest densities of small stomata may support interpretations of a functional advantage of high densities of small stomata in the physiological regulation of Gs to fluctuating conditions. The larger leaf area of Fibror 79 appeared to be associated with higher capacity to respond to water deficit through modification of stomatal morphology and physiological behaviour. This result indicates that phenotyping of crop species and genotypes to identify traits conducive to water deficit tolerance through effective stomatal control should consider the foliar plasticity of genotypes to water deficit, and the potential implications for stomatal morphological and physiological control of transpirative water loss and photosynthetic CO2-uptake.
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- 2024
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23. Seismostratigraphic Characterization of the Rharb Basin’s Post-nappe Series (N-W Morocco)
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Sbihi, Fatima Zahra, primary, Mridekh, Abdelaziz, additional, Hafid, Mohamad, additional, Ait Salem, Abdallah, additional, Killi, Malika, additional, and El Bouhaddioui, Mohammed, additional
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- 2024
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24. Postharvest quality and ripening behaviour of un-explored genotypes of Himalayan plain mango diversity
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Killi Prasad, Neetu Saroj, Sanjay Kumar Singh, Jyostnarani Pradhan, Shiv Shankar Prasad, Sunil Kumar, Shubham Maurya, Alok Kumar, Rajeev Kumar Srivastava, Rahul Kumar Tiwari, Milan Kumar Lal, Bhagya Vijayan, Ankit Kumar, Ipsita Samal, Upagya Shah, and Ravinder Kumar
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Unexplored mango genotypes ,Himalayan plain ,Postharvest quality ,Diversity ,Ripening behaviour ,Nutritional ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
India is renowned for its mango diversity, with more than 1000 genotypes reported. However, the Himalayan plains bear some elite genotypes which supposed to bear high postharvest value, the systemic postharvest study of which is yet to be attempted. The aim of present study is to evaluate the postharvest quality and ripening behviour of these important genotypes. Thus, 15 un-explored mango genotypes of this region were selected and evaluated for ripening behaviour and detailed postharvest profiling via internal (total phenolic and total flavonoid content), nutritional attributes (Brix: acid ratio, total carotenoid concentration, ascorbic acid content and antioxidant activity), sensory evaluation, fruit softening enzymes (polygalactouronase, pectin methylesterase and lipoxygenase), shelf life attributes (respiration rate, physiological loss in weight and storage life in days) external attributes (fruit weight, fruit firmness, peel thickness, fruit shape and dry seed weight) and mineral contents (Calcium, potassium and phosphorous) under ambient storage (25 ± 4 °C and 65 ± 5 % RH). The results revealed that the highest total flavonoid content (682.40 μg g−1), ascorbic acid (46.88 mg 100 g−1) and antioxidant activity (4.84 μmol TE g−1) exhibited by ‘Sukul’. The total phenolic content was recorded as the highest in ‘Safed Malda’ (510.42 μg GAE g-1 FW), and total carotenoid concentration was recorded as the highest in ‘Sipiya’ (7.30 mg 100 g-1) ‘Zardalu’ (7.04 mg 100 g-1) and ‘Mithua’ (6.98 mg 100 g-1). Interestingly, genotypes such as ‘Sukul’, Sipiya’ and ‘Krishna Bhog ‘exhibited a 4–5 days higher storage life than other selected genotypes. Screened genotypes exhibited a high diversity of nutritional and biochemical contents. The results of this study bear practical utility for research (quality improvement programme) and the processing industry.
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- 2024
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25. Accuracy of intraoperative frozen section in surgical staging of endometrial cancer
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Gokulu, Sevki G., Ilhan, Tolgay T., Ulger, Gorkem, Yildizbakan, Ali, Cevikoglu-Killi, Murside, and Turkmen, Ayse
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- 2024
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26. Preservation potential of essential oils on the postharvest quality and shelf-life attributes of mango fruit
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Prasad, Killi, Asrey, Ram, Sethi, Shruti, Srivastav, Manish, Singh, Dinesh, Arora, Ajay, Joshi, Alka, Reddy, Vijay Rakesh, Meena, Nirmal Kumar, Thakur, Anamika, and Ramakrishna, Karri
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- 2024
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27. Colourful staples on your table: Unus ex genere suo
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Sharma, Eshita, Lal, Priyanka, Kumar, Awadhesh, Prasad, Killi, Tiwari, Rahul Kumar, Lal, Milan Kumar, and Kumar, Ravinder
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- 2024
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28. Cannabis sativa genotypes with larger leaf areas have higher potential to adjust stomatal size and density in response to water deficit: The effect on stomatal conductance and physiological stomatal behaviour
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Haworth, Matthew, Carli, Andrea, Montesano, Vincenzo, Killi, Dilek, Fabbri, André, Balestrini, Raffaella, Marino, Giovanni, and Centritto, Mauro
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- 2024
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29. Transforming industrial byproduct to eco-friendly functional material: Ground-granulated blast furnace slag reinforced paper for renewable energy storage
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Gencel, Osman, Musatat, Ahmad Badreddin, Demir, Ahmet, Tozluoğlu, Ayhan, Tutuş, Ahmet, Kıllı, Ufuk, Fidan, Hakan, and Kosovalı Cavuş, Fatma
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- 2024
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30. Postharvest quality and ripening behaviour of un-explored genotypes of Himalayan plain mango diversity
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Prasad, Killi, Saroj, Neetu, Singh, Sanjay Kumar, Pradhan, Jyostnarani, Prasad, Shiv Shankar, Kumar, Sunil, Maurya, Shubham, Kumar, Alok, Srivastava, Rajeev Kumar, Tiwari, Rahul Kumar, Lal, Milan Kumar, Vijayan, Bhagya, Kumar, Ankit, Samal, Ipsita, Shah, Upagya, and Kumar, Ravinder
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- 2024
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31. Mitigating postharvest quantitative and qualitative losses in mango fruits through the application of biocontrol agents: An in-vivo and in-vitro assessment
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Killi Prasad, Ram Roshan Sharma, Ram Asrey, Dinesh Singh, Milan Kumar Lal, Jyoti Nishad, Rahul Kumar Tiwari, Shruti Sethi, Manish Srivastav, Ajay Arora, and Ravinder Kumar
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Mango ,Postharvest loss ,Biocontrol agents ,Postharvest pathogen ,Science (General) ,Q1-390 ,Social sciences (General) ,H1-99 - Abstract
Mango is a commercial fruit crop of India that suffers huge postharvest losses every year. The application of biocontrol agents (BCAs) bears a vast potential for managing the same, which is yet to be exploited to its fullest extent. Hence, studies were conducted for BCAs application of Debaryomyces hansenii, Bacillus subtilis and Pseudomonas fluorescens strains on mango fruit under in-vitro, in-vivo conditions to know the efficacy of these BCAs on the postharvest pathogen, shelf life and quality retention of mango fruit. The ‘poisoned food technique’ was attempted for in-vitro studies. For the in-vivo studies, fruit of the commercial cultivar ‘Amrapali’ were un-inoculated and pre-inoculated with major postharvest pathogens (anthracnose: Colletotrichum gloeosporioides and stem-end rot: Botryodiplodia theobromae) were treated with BCA, followed by ambient storage at (24 ± 4 °C, 75 ± 5 % RH). From the results, it has been observed that under in vitro studies, BCA Debaryomyces hansenii (Strain: KP006) and Bacillus subtilis (Strain: BJ0011) at the treatment level 108 CFU mL−1 while, the Pseudomonas fluorescens at 109 CFU mL−1 (Strain: BE0001) were significantly effective for pathogen inhibition. However, under the in vivo studies, the BCA Debaryomyces hansenii (Strain: KP006) at 108 CFU mL−1 treatment level was found to significantly reduce the pathogen's decay incidence while positively influencing the shelf life and biochemical (quality) attributes. This treatment increased the storage life of mango fruit by more than three days over control fruit. Therefore, BCA Debaryomyces hansenii (Strain: KP006) at 108 CFU mL−1 can be used to control the postharvest pathological loss of mango fruit without affecting its internal quality.
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- 2024
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32. Economic costs of non-native species in Türkiye: A first national synthesis
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Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Bayçelebi, Esra, Giannetto, Daniela, Özden, Emine Demir, Yazlık, Ayşe, Emiroğlu, Özgür, Aksu, Sadi, Uludağ, Ahmet, Aksoy, Necmi, Baytaşoğlu, Hazel, Kaya, Cüneyt, Mutlu, Tanju, Kırankaya, Şerife Gülsün, Ergüden, Deniz, Per, Esra, Üremiş, İlhan, Candan, Onur, Kekillioğlu, Aysel, Yoğurtçuoğlu, Baran, Ekmekçi, F. Güler, Başak, Esra, Özkan, Hatice, Kurtul, Irmak, Innal, Deniz, Killi, Nurçin, Yapıcı, Sercan, Ayaz, Dinçer, Çiçek, Kerim, Mol, Oğuzcan, Çınar, Emre, Yeğen, Vedat, Angulo, Elena, Cuthbert, Ross N., Soto, Ismael, Courchamp, Franck, and Haubrock, Phillip J.
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- 2024
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33. Mitigating postharvest quantitative and qualitative losses in mango fruits through the application of biocontrol agents: An in-vivo and in-vitro assessment
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Prasad, Killi, Sharma, Ram Roshan, Asrey, Ram, Singh, Dinesh, Lal, Milan Kumar, Nishad, Jyoti, Tiwari, Rahul Kumar, Sethi, Shruti, Srivastav, Manish, Arora, Ajay, and Kumar, Ravinder
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- 2024
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34. Indoor localization using device sensors: A threat to privacy
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Verma, Hitesh, Naval, Smita, Killi, Balaprakasa Rao, and P., Vinod
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- 2024
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35. Mobility impairment and life satisfaction in the Northern Region of Malawi
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Alswang, Jared M, Belshe, William B, Killi, Dexter, Bandawe, Weston, Silliman, Erin S, Bastian, Aaron C, Upchurch, Brooke K, Bastian, Megan F, Pinal, Sierra M, Klein, Mark B, Ndhlozi, Bertha, Silva, Mauricio, Chipolombwe, John, and Thompson, Rachel M
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Bioengineering ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Assistive Technology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,mobility impairment ,life satisfaction ,physical activity ,mobility assistive devices ,physical disability ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundThere exist many psychosocial sequelae associated with mobility impairment, especially in low-resource settings where access to mobility assistive devices is limited.ObjectivesThis study aims to (1) define the burden and presenting aetiologies of mobility impairment in the rural Northern Region of Malawi and (2) assess the relationship between physical disability, life satisfaction and access to mobility aids.MethodsAt mobility device donation clinics throughout the Northern Region of Malawi, adults living with mobility impairment were surveyed with a demographic questionnaire and a series of validated surveys to assess their physical activity levels (Global Physical Activity Questionnaire [GPAQ]), degree of mobility impairment (Washington Group Extended Set Questions on Disability) and life satisfaction (patient-reported outcomes measurement information systems satisfaction with participation in social roles and general life satisfaction).ResultsThere were 251 participants who qualified for inclusion, of which 193 completed all surveys. Higher physical activity scores were positively correlated with increased life satisfaction: (1) satisfaction with participation in social roles (0.481, p < 0.0001) and (2) general life satisfaction (0.230, p < 0.001). Respondents who had previously used a formal mobility device reported 235.5% higher physical activity levels ([139.0%, 333.0%], p = 0.006), significantly higher satisfaction with participation in social roles ([0.21, 6.67], p = 0.037) and equivocally higher general life satisfaction ([-1.77, 3.84], p = 0.470).ConclusionDisability and mental health do not exist in isolation from one another. Given the positive correlations between formal mobility device usage and both physical activity and life satisfaction, interventions that increase access to mobility-assistive devices in undertreated populations are imperative.ContributionThis study contributes to the understanding of the complex relationship between physical disability, access to mobility aids, and life satisfaction. Results from this study suggest the potential benefit that increasing access to mobility aids may have in improving the quality of life of mobility impaired persons in resource-limited settings, such as the Northern Region of Malawi.
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- 2022
36. Dynamic focus shaping with mixed-aperture coherent beam combining
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Prossotowicz, Maike, Flamm, Daniel, Heimes, Andreas, Jansen, Florian, Otto, Hans-Jürgen, Budnicki, Aleksander, Killi, Alexander, and Morgner, Uwe
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
A novel concept for dynamic focus shaping based on highly efficient coherent beam combining with microlens arrays (MLA) as combining element is presented. This concept allows to control the power weights of diffraction orders by varying the absolute phases of an array of input beams. A proof-of-principle experiment is supported by simulations. For this, an input beam matrix of 5 x 5 beams is combined proving both the ability for further power scaling and dynamic focus shaping., Comment: Accepted manuscript, 4 pages, 8 figures, 1 supplementary material and 4 visualizations
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- 2021
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37. Energy Efficient Virtual Network Function Placement in NFV Enabled Networks.
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Sudha Dubba and Balaprakasa Rao Killi
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- 2023
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38. Deep Learning Based Traffic Prediction for Resource Allocation in Multi-Tenant Virtualized 5G Networks.
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Preety Rebari and Balaprakasa Rao Killi
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- 2023
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39. Size Matters, Designing for Larger AM Products!
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Killi, Steinar, Mathisen, Magne Solvaag, de Amorim Almeida, Henrique, Series Editor, Al-Tamimi, Abdulsalam Abdulaziz, Editorial Board Member, Bernard, Alain, Editorial Board Member, Boydston, Andrew, Editorial Board Member, Koc, Bahattin, Editorial Board Member, Stucker, Brent, Editorial Board Member, Rosen, David W., Editorial Board Member, de Beer, Deon, Editorial Board Member, Pei, Eujin, Editorial Board Member, Gibson, Ian, Editorial Board Member, Drstvensek, Igor, Editorial Board Member, de Ciurana, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Lopes da Silva, Jorge Vicente, Editorial Board Member, da Silva Bártolo, Paulo Jorge, Editorial Board Member, Bibb, Richard, Editorial Board Member, Alvarenga Rezende, Rodrigo, Editorial Board Member, Wicker, Ryan, Editorial Board Member, Correia Vasco, Joel Oliveira, editor, Gonçalves Rodrigues Marto, Anabela, editor, Bento Capela, Carlos Alexandre, editor, da Silva Craveiro, Flávio Gabriel, editor, Coelho da Rocha Terreiro Galha Bártolo, Helena Maria, editor, de Jesus Coelho, Luis Manuel, editor, Simões Correia, Mário António, editor, Nogueira Vieira, Milena Maria, editor, and Barreiros Ruben, Rui Miguel, editor
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- 2023
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40. Energy Efficient Virtual Network Function Placement in NFV Enabled Networks
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Dubba, Sudha, Killi, Balaprakasa Rao, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, and Barolli, Leonard, editor
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- 2023
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41. Association between Lip Prints and Skeletal Malocclusion using Digital Photography: A Cross-sectional Study
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Jyotsna Slesha Sudharshan Killi, Chirla Anil, Meher Vineesha Cheepurapalli, Geetika Simhadri, and Neeraja Pitta
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cephalometric analysis ,lip print patterns ,sagittal jaw relationship ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Lip prints are the lines and furrows observed on the vermilion border of human lips. Several studies have found a connection between lip prints, skeletal malocclusion and gender. Establishing a direct relationship between lip prints and sagittal jaw relationships in different genders can aid clinicians in early prediction of malocclusion types. Aim: To identify the association between lip prints, skeletal class I and class II malocclusions in different genders using digital photographs. Materials and Methods: An analytical cross-sectional study was conducted in the Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopaedics at Anil Neerukonda Institute of Dental Sciences, Vishakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India. The duration of the study was two months, from June 2022 to July 2022. A total of 120, out of which 60 (30 males and 30 females) participants with Angles's class I malocclusion and 60 (30 males and 30 females) with Angle's class II malocclusion were included, based on angle formed by point A, nasion (N) and point B (ANB angle) aged between 18 to 30 years. Digital photographs were captured using an SLR digital camera. The lip print pattern in a 10 mm wide area in the middle of the lower lip was determined using Suzuki and Tsuchihashi’s method. Statistical analysis was performed using the Chi-square test. Results: The most prevalent lip pattern in skeletal class I malocclusion was the branched lip pattern (type-II) in 43.33% of 60 participants, while the intersected pattern (type-III) was most prevalent in skeletal class II malocclusion with 38.33% of 60 participants. Among males, the most prevalent lip pattern was the branched lip pattern (type-II) in 46.67% of 60 participants, while in females, the vertical groove across the lip pattern (type-I) was most prevalent in 46.67% of 60 participants. Statistical significance was observed between lip pattern, skeletal malocclusion and gender (p=0.0416 in males and p=0.01397 in females). When gender is not considered, statistically significant differences were observed between the two malocclusions in (type-II) branched lip pattern (typeII) (p=0.023) and the intersected lip pattern (type-III) (p=0.001). When skeletal malocclusion is not considered, statistically significant differences were observed between the two genders in the vertical lip pattern (type-I) (p=0.001) and the branched pattern (type-II) (p=0.04). When comparing the association of lip print pattern between skeletal class I and class II malocclusions in males and females significant differences were found between skeletal malocclusion and gender (males: p=0.008, females: p=0.004) only in (Type III) intersected lip pattern. Conclusion: In conclusion, lip prints can serve as a useful tool in identifying skeletal malocclusion. The (type-III) intersected lip pattern shows a higher likelihood of predicting class II malocclusion compared to the type-II branched lip pattern, which is more indicative of class I malocclusion.
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- 2023
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42. Children’s, parents’, and teachers’ experiences of the feasibility of a telerehabilitation intervention for children with acquired brain injury in the chronic phase – a qualitative study of acceptability and participation in the Child In Context Intervention (CICI)
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Edel Jannecke Svendsen, Eli Marie Killi, Nina Rohrer-Baumgartner, Ingvil Laberg Holthe, Maria Sandhaug, Ida M. H. Borgen, Shari L. Wade, Solveig Laegreid Hauger, Marianne Løvstad, and Line Kildal Bragstad
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Feasibility ,Children ,Rehabilitation ,Acquired brain injury ,Qualitative research ,School intervention ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background This is a qualitative feasibility study of the Child in Context Intervention (CICI). The CICI is an individualized, goal-oriented and home-based tele-rehabilitation intervention which targets everyday functioning of children (6–16 years) with acquired brain injury in the chronic stage, and their families, one year or more after insult, who have ongoing challenges (physical, cognitive, behavioral, social and/or psychological). The aim of this study is to better understand how children, parents and teachers experienced participation and acceptability; to develop knowledge about the mechanisms of change, and to explore how the CICI was tailored to the context. Methods Six families and schools participated in the intervention, which comprised seven tele-rehabilitation sessions in which the child and parent participated, one in-person parent seminar and four digital school meetings. A multidisciplinary team delivered the intervention to 23 participants over a 4- to 5-month period. The intervention involved psychoeducation about targeted acquired brain injury-related problems, such as fatigue, pain, or social challenges. All but one consented to participate in the current digital interview study. The data were analyzed using content analysis. Results The experience of participation and acceptability varied among the children. Attendance was consistently high; the child participants felt mostly listened to and could influence goal setting and strategies. However, engaging and motivating the child participants proved somewhat challenging. The parents found the CICI rewarding, useful and relevant. However, they had different experiences regarding which intervention component they perceived as most helpful. Some argued in favor of the ‘whole intervention’, while others highlighted new knowledge, SMART goals or the school collaboration. The teachers found the intervention acceptable and useful but wanted a better meeting plan. They had difficulties in finding time for meetings, emphasized the involvement of school leaders, and appreciated the digital format. Conclusions Overall, the intervention was perceived as acceptable, and the participants felt that the various intervention components contributed to improvements. The CICI’s flexibility facilitated tailoring to different contexts based on the children’s functional level. The digital format saved time and provided flexibility regarding the amount of attendance but limited full participation from children with more severe cognitive impairments. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04186182.
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- 2023
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43. Coherent beam combining with micro-lens arrays
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Prossotowicz, Maike, Heimes, Andreas, Flamm, Daniel, Jansen, Florian, Otto, Hans-Jürgen, Budnicki, Aleksander, Killi, Alexander, and Morgner, Uwe
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
A novel concept for coherent beam combining is presented based on a simple setup with microlens arrays. These standard components are used in a proof-of-principle experiment for both coherent beam splitting and combination of 5 x 5 beams. Here a combination efficiency above 90% is achieved. We call this novel concept mixed aperture., Comment: Revised and accepted manuscript by Optics Letters, 5 pages, 7 figures, 1 visualization, see DOI
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- 2020
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44. Sequential game theory based multi criterion network partitioning for controller placement in software defined wide area networks
- Author
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Killi, Balaprakasa Rao, Tripathi, Rakesh, and Chintapalli, Venkatarami Reddy
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- 2023
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45. Energy Efficient Virtual Network Function Placement in NFV Enabled Networks
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Dubba, Sudha, primary and Killi, Balaprakasa Rao, additional
- Published
- 2023
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46. Digital futures/Hybrid reality
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Verlinden, Jouke, primary, Timmerman, Kristof, additional, Killi, Steinar, additional, Maffei, Stefano, additional, Bianchini, Massimo, additional, Van Campenhout, Lukas, additional, Hacigüzeller, Piraye, additional, and Doubrovski, Zjenja, additional
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Melatonin Discovery and Divergent Biosynthetic Pathways in Plants
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Suresh, Thakur Roshan, primary, Pradhan, Jyostnarani, additional, Kumar, Shailesh, additional, Singh, Hemlata, additional, Prasad, Killi, additional, Jaiswal, Aman, additional, and Kumari, Geeta, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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48. Industrial Design: Shaped by Technology and Users. Past, Present, AM, and the Future
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Killi, Steinar W., Davim, J. Paulo, Series Editor, Kyratsis, Panagiotis, editor, and Efkolidis, Nikolaos, editor
- Published
- 2022
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49. Detection and isolation of faulty line in an active distribution network using intelligent numerical relay
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Killi, Venkateswrarao, P, Raja, and MP, Selvan
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- 2023
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50. Development and application of a multilingual electronic decision-support tool for risk screening non-native terrestrial animals under current and future climate conditions
- Author
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Lorenzo Vilizzi, Marina Piria, Dariusz Pietraszewski, Oldřich Kopecký, Ivan Špelić, Tena Radočaj, Nikica Šprem, Kieu Anh T. Ta, Ali Serhan Tarkan, András Weiperth, Baran Yoğurtçuoğlu, Onur Candan, Gábor Herczeg, Nurçin Killi, Darija Lemić, Bettina Szajbert, David Almeida, Zainab Al-Wazzan, Usman Atique, Rigers Bakiu, Ratcha Chaichana, Dimitriy Dashinov, Árpad Ferincz, Guillaume Flieller, Allan S. Gilles Jr, Philippe Goulletquer, Elena Interesova, Sonia Iqbal, Akihiko Koyama, Petra Kristan, Shan Li, Juliane Lukas, Seyed Daryoush Moghaddas, João G. Monteiro, Levan Mumladze, Karin H. Olsson, Daniele Paganelli, Costas Perdikaris, Renanel Pickholtz, Cristina Preda, Milica Ristovska, Kristína Slovák Švolíková, Barbora Števove, Eliza Uzunova, Leonidas Vardakas, Hugo Verreycken, Hui Wei, and Grzegorz Zięba
- Subjects
Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Electronic decision-support tools are becoming an essential component of government strategies to tackle non-native species invasions. This study describes the development and application of a multilingual electronic decision-support tool for screening terrestrial animals under current and future climate conditions: the Terrestrial Animal Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (TAS-ISK). As an adaptation of the widely employed Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK), the TAS-ISK question template inherits from the original Weed Risk Assessment (WRA) and related WRA-type toolkits and complies with the ‘minimum requirements’ for use with the recent European Regulation on invasive alien species of concern. The TAS-ISK consists of 49 basic questions on the species’ biogeographical/historical traits and its biological/ecological interactions, and of 6 additional questions to predict how climate change is likely to influence the risks of introduction, establishment, dispersal and impact of the screened species. Following a description of the main features of this decision-support tool as a turnkey software application and of its graphical user interface with support for 32 languages, sample screenings are provided in different risk assessment areas for one representative species of each of the main taxonomic groups of terrestrial animals supported by the toolkit: mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, annelids, insects, molluscs, nematodes, and platyhelminths. The highest-scoring species were the red earthworm Lumbricus rubellus for the Aegean region of Turkey and the New Zealand flatworm Arthurdendyus triangulatus for Croatia. It is anticipated that adoption of this toolkit will mirror that of the worldwide employed AS-ISK, hence allowing to share information and inform decisions for the prevention of entry and/or dispersal of (high-risk) non-native terrestrial animal species – a crucial step to implement early-stage control and eradication measures as part of rapid-response strategies to counteract biological invasions.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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