395 results on '"Rödiger, P."'
Search Results
2. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE): XVI. The ubiquity of truncated star-forming disks across the Virgo cluster environment
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Morgan, C. R., Balogh, M. L., Boselli, A., Fossati, M., Lawlor-Forsyth, C., Sazonova, E., Amram, P., Boquien, M., Braine, J., Cortese, L., Côté, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Gwyn, S., Hensler, G., Junais, and Roediger, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We examine the prevalence of truncated star-forming disks in the Virgo cluster down to $M_* \simeq 10^7 ~\text{M}_{\odot}$. This work makes use of deep, high-resolution imaging in the H$\alpha$+[NII] narrow-band from the Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE) and optical imaging from the Next Generation Virgo Survey (NGVS). To aid in understanding the effects of the cluster environment on star formation in Virgo galaxies, we take a physically-motivated approach to define the edge of the star-forming disk via a drop-off in the radial specific star formation rate profile. Comparing with the expected sizes of normal galactic disks provides a measure of how truncated star-forming disks are in the cluster. We find that truncated star-forming disks are nearly ubiquitous across all regions of the Virgo cluster, including beyond the virial radius (0.974 Mpc). The majority of truncated disks at large clustercentric radii are of galaxies likely on first infall. As the intra-cluster medium density is low in this region, it is difficult to explain this population with solely ram-pressure stripping. A plausible explanation is that these galaxies are undergoing starvation of their gas supply before ram-pressure stripping becomes the dominant quenching mechanism. A simple model of starvation shows that this mechanism can produce moderate disk truncations within 1-2 Gyr. This model is consistent with `slow-then-rapid' or `delayed-then-rapid' quenching, where the early starvation mode drives disk truncations without significant change to the integrated star formation rate, and the later ram-pressure stripping mode rapidly quenches the galaxy. The origin of starvation may be in the group structures that exist around the main Virgo cluster, which indicates the importance of understanding pre-processing of galaxies beyond the cluster virial radius., Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, accepted in Astronomy&Astrophysics
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- 2024
3. The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). III. A Catalog of Surface Brightness Fluctuation Distances and the Three-Dimensional Distribution of Galaxies in the Virgo Cluster
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Cantiello, Michele, Blakeslee, John P., Côté, Patrick, Raimondo, Gabriella, Cuillandre, Jean-Charles, Durrell, Patrick R., Gwyn, Stephen, Hazra, Nandini, Peng, Eric W., Roediger, Joel C., Sánchez-Janssen, Rúben, and Kurzner, Max
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) method is a robust and efficient way of measuring distances to galaxies containing evolved stellar populations. Although many recent applications of the method have used space-based imaging, SBF remains a powerful technique for ground-based telescopes. Deep, wide-field imaging surveys with subarsecond seeing enable SBF measurements for numerous nearby galaxies. Using a preliminary calibration, Cantiello et al. (2018) presented SBF distances for 89 bright, mainly early-type galaxies observed in the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). Here, we present a refined calibration and SBF distances for 278 galaxies extending several magnitudes fainter than in previous work. The derived distances have uncertainties of 5-12\% depending on the properties of the individual galaxies, and our sample is more than three times larger than any previous SBF study of this region. Virgo has a famously complex structure with numerous subclusters, clouds and groups; we associate individual galaxies with the various substructures and map their three-dimensional spatial distribution. Curiously, subcluster A, centered around M87, appears to have two peaks in distance: the main peak at $\sim$16.5 Mpc and a smaller one at $\sim$19.4 Mpc. Subclusters B and C have distances of $\sim$15.8 Mpc. The W and W' groups form a filament-like structure, extending more than 15~Mpc behind the cluster with a commensurate velocity increase of $\sim$1000 \kms\ along its length. These measurements are a valuable resource for future studies of the relationship between galaxy properties and local environment within a dynamic and evolving region., Comment: 30 pages, 15 figures, Acccepted for publication on the ApJ
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- 2024
4. The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). XXVII.The Size and Structure of Globular Cluster Systems and their Connection to Dark Matter Halos
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Lim, Sungsoon, Peng, Eric W., Côté, Patrick, Ferrarese, Laura, Roediger, Joel C., Liu, Chengze, Spengler, Chelsea, Sola, Elisabeth, Duc, Pierre-Alain, Sales, Laura V., Blakeslee, John P., Cuillandre, Jean-Charles, Durrell, Patrick R., Emsellem, Eric, Gwyn, Stephen D. J., Lançon, Ariane, Marleau, Francine R., Mihos, J. Christopher, Müller, Oliver, Puzia, Thomas H., and Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the size and structure of globular clusters (GC) systems of 118 early-type galaxies from the NGVS, MATLAS, and ACSVCS surveys. Fitting S\'ersic profiles, we investigate the relationship between effective radii of GC systems ($R_{e, \rm gc}$) and galaxy properties. GC systems are 2--4 times more extended than host galaxies across the entire stellar mass range of our sample ($10^{8.3} < M_* < 10^{11.6}~M_{\odot}$). The relationship between $R_{e, \rm gc}$ and galaxy stellar mass exhibits a characteristic "knee" at a stellar mass of $M_p \simeq 10^{10.8}$, similar to galaxy $R_e$--stellar mass relationship. We present a new characterization of the traditional blue and red GC color sub-populations, describing them with respect to host galaxy $(g'-i')$ color ($\Delta_{gi}$): GCs with similar colors to their hosts have a "red" $\Delta_{gi}$, and those significantly bluer GCs have a "blue" $\Delta_{gi}$. The GC populations with red $\Delta_{gi}$, even in dwarf galaxies, are twice as extended as the stars, suggesting that formation or survival mechanisms favor the outer regions. We find a tight correlation between $R_{e, \rm gc}$ and the total number of GCs, with intrinsic scatter $\lesssim 0.1$ dex spanning two and three orders of magnitude in size and number, respectively. This holds for both red and blue subpopulations, albeit with different slopes. Assuming that $N_{GC, Total}$ correlates with $M_{200}$, we find that the red GC systems have effective radii of roughly 1-5\% $R_{\rm 200}$, while the blue GC systems in massive galaxies can have sizes as large as $\sim$10\% $R_{\rm 200}$. Environmental dependence on $R_{e, \rm gc}$ is also found, with lower density environments exhibiting more extended GC systems at fixed mass., Comment: 28 pages, 18 Figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2024
5. STIC2 selectively binds ribosome-nascent chain complexes in the cotranslational sorting of Arabidopsis thylakoid proteins
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Stolle, Dominique S, Osterhoff, Lena, Treimer, Paul, Lambertz, Jan, Karstens, Marie, Keller, Jakob-Maximilian, Gerlach, Ines, Bischoff, Annika, Dünschede, Beatrix, Rödiger, Anja, Herrmann, Christian, Baginsky, Sacha, Hofmann, Eckhard, Zoschke, Reimo, Armbruster, Ute, Nowaczyk, Marc M, and Schünemann, Danja
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- 2024
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6. A toy model for gas sloshing in galaxy clusters
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Roediger, Elke, Vaezzadeh, Iraj, and Nulsen, Paul
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We apply a toy model based on 'pendulum waves' to gas sloshing in galaxy clusters. Starting with a galaxy cluster potential filled with a hydrostatic intra-cluster medium (ICM), we perturb all ICM by an initial small, unidirectional velocity, i.e., an instantaneous kick. Consequently, each parcel of ICM will oscillate due to buoyancy with its local Brunt-V\"ais\"al\"a (BV) period, which we show to be approximately proportional to the cluster radius. The oscillation of gas parcels at different radii with different periods leads to a characteristic, outwards-moving coherent pattern of local compressions and rarefactions; the former form the sloshing cold fronts (SCFs). Our model predicts that SCFs (i) appear in the cluster centre first, (ii) move outwards on several Gyr timescales, (iii) form a staggered pattern on opposite sides of a given cluster, (iv) each move outwards with approximately constant speed; and that (v) inner SCFs form discontinuities more easily than outer ones. These features are well known from idealised (magneto)-hydrodynamic simulations of cluster sloshing. We perform comparison hydrodynamic+N-body simulations where sloshing is triggered either by an instantaneous kick or a minor merger. Sloshing in these simulations qualitatively behaves as predicted by the toy model. However, the toy model somewhat over-predicts the speed of sloshing fronts, and does not predict that inner SCFs emerge with a delay compared to outer ones. In light of this, we identify the outermost cold front, which may be a 'failed' SCF, as the best tracer of the age of the merger that set a cluster sloshing., Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
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7. The dynamical state of bars in cluster dwarf galaxies: The cases of NGC 4483 and NGC 4516
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Cuomo, V., Morelli, L., Aguerri, J. A. L., Corsini, E. M., Debattista, V. P., Coccato, L., Pizzella, A., Boselli, A., Buttitta, C., de Lorenzo-Cáceres, A., Ferrarese, L., Gasparri, D., Lee, Y. H., Mendez-Abreu, J., Roediger, J., and Zarattini, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Dwarf barred galaxies are the perfect candidates for hosting slowly-rotating bars. They are common in dense environments and they have a relatively shallow potential well, making them prone to heating by interactions. When an interaction induces bar formation, the bar should rotate slowly. They reside in massive and centrally-concentrated dark matter halos, which slow down the bar rotation through dynamical friction. While predictions suggest that slow bars should be common, measurements of bar pattern speed, using the Tremaine-Weinberg method, show that bars are mostly fast in the local Universe. We present a photometric and kinematic characterisation of bars hosted by two dwarf galaxies in the Virgo Cluster, NGC 4483 and NGC 4516. We derive the bar length and strength using the Next Generation Virgo Survey imaging and the circular velocity, bar pattern speed, and rotation rate using spectroscopy from the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer. Including the previously studied galaxy IC 3167, we compare the bar properties of the three dwarf galaxies with those of their massive counterparts from literature. Bars in the dwarf galaxies are shorter and weaker, and rotate slightly slower with respect to those in massive galaxies. This could be due to a different bar formation mechanism and/or to a large dark matter fraction in the centre of dwarf galaxies. We show that it is possible to push the application of the Tremaine-Weinberg method to the galaxy low mass regime., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2023
8. A recipe to generate sustainably maintainable and extensible hydrogeological datasets to prepare large-scale groundwater models for multiple aquifer systems
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Siebert, Christian, Rödiger, Tino, Houben, Timo, diDato, Mariaines, Fischer, Thomas, Attinger, Sabine, and Kalbacher, Thomas
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- 2024
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9. An evolutionary continuum from nucleated dwarf galaxies to star clusters
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Wang, Kaixiang, Peng, Eric W., Liu, Chengze, Mihos, J. Christopher, Côté, Patrick, Ferrarese, Laura, Taylor, Matthew A., Blakeslee, John P., Cuillandre, Jean-Charles, Duc, Pierre-Alain, Guhathakurta, Puragra, Gwyn, Stephen, Ko, Youkyung, Lançon, Ariane, Lim, Sungsoon, MacArthur, Lauren A., Puzia, Thomas, Roediger, Joel, Sales, Laura V., Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén, Spengler, Chelsea, Toloba, Elisa, Zhang, Hongxin, and Zhu, Mingcheng
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Systematic studies have revealed hundreds of ultra-compact dwarf galaxies (UCDs) in the nearby Universe. With half-light radii $r_h$ of approximately 10-100 parsecs and stellar masses $M_*$ $\approx$ $10^6-10^8$ solar masses, UCDs are among the densest known stellar systems. Although similar in appearance to massive globular clusters, the detection of extended stellar envelopes, complex star formation histories, elevated mass-to-light ratio, and supermassive black holes suggest that some UCDs are remnant nuclear star clusters of tidally-stripped dwarf galaxies, or even ancient compact galaxies. However, only a few objects have been found in the transient stage of tidal stripping, and this assumed evolutionary path has never been fully traced by observations. Here we show that 106 galaxies in the Virgo cluster have morphologies that are intermediate between normal, nucleated dwarf galaxies and single-component UCDs, revealing a continuum that fully maps this morphological transition, and fills the `size gap' between star clusters and galaxies. Their spatial distribution and redder color are also consistent with stripped satellite galaxies on their first few pericentric passages around massive galaxies. The `ultra-diffuse' tidal features around several of these galaxies directly show how UCDs are forming through tidal stripping, and that this evolutionary path can include an early phase as a nucleated ultra-diffuse galaxy (UDG). These UCDs represent substantial visible fossil remnants of ancient dwarf galaxies in galaxy clusters, and more low-mass remnants probably remain to be found., Comment: Published in Nature. Accepted on September 15
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- 2023
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10. AMUSE-antlia I: Nuclear X-ray properties of early-type galaxies in a dynamically young galaxy cluster
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Hu, Zhensong, Su, Yuanyuan, Li, Zhiyuan, Hess, Kelley M., Kraft, Ralph P., Forman, William R., Nulsen, Paul E. J., Sridhar, Sarrvesh S., Stroe, Andra, Baek, Junhyun, Chung, Aeree, Grupe, Dirk, Chen, Hao, Irwin, Jimmy A., Jones, Christine, Randall, Scott W., and Roediger, Elke
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
To understand the formation and growth of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) and their co-evolution with host galaxies, it is essential to know the impact of environment on the activity of active galactic nuclei (AGN). We present new Chandra X-ray observations of nuclear emission from member galaxies in the Antlia cluster, the nearest non-cool core and the nearest merging galaxy cluster, residing at D = 35.2 Mpc. Its inner region, centered on two dominant galaxies NGC 3268 and NGC 3258, has been mapped with three deep Chandra ACIS-I pointings. Nuclear X-ray sources are detected in 7/84 (8.3%) early-type galaxies (ETG) and 2/8 (25%) late-type galaxies with a median detection limit of 8x10^38 erg/s. All nuclear X-ray sources but one have a corresponding radio continuum source detected by MeerKAT at the L-band. Nuclear X-ray sources detected in early-type galaxies are considered as the genuine X-ray counterpart of low-luminosity AGN. When restricted to a detection limit of logLx(erg/s) > 38.9 and a stellar mass of 10 < log Ms(Msun) <11.6, 6/11 (54.5%) ETG are found to contain an X-ray AGN in Antlia, exceeding the AGN occupation fraction of 7/39 (18.0%) and 2/12 (16.7%) in the more relaxed, cool core clusters, Virgo and Fornax, respectively, and rivaling that of the AMUSE-Field ETG of 27/49 (55.1%). Furthermore, more than half of the X-ray AGN in Antlia are hosted by its younger subcluster, centered on NGC 3258. We believe that this is because SMBH activity is enhanced in a dynamically young cluster compared to relatively relaxed clusters., Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2023
11. ViCTORIA project: MeerKAT HI observations of the ram pressure stripped galaxy NGC 4523
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Boselli, A., Serra, P., de Gasperin, F., Vollmer, B., Amram, P., Edler, H. W., Fossati, M., Consolandi, G., Cote, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Gwyn, S., Postma, J., Boquien, M., Braine, J., Combes, F., Gavazzi, G., Hensler, G., Miville-Deschenes, M. A., Murgia, M., Roediger, J., Roehlly, Y., Smith, R., Zhang, H. X., and Zabel, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results of a 21 cm HI line pilot observation carried out with MeerKAT in preparation for the ViCTORIA project, an untargeted survey of the Virgo galaxy cluster. The extraordinary quality of the data in terms of sensitivity and angular resolution (rms~0.65 mJy beam^-1 at ~27"x39" and 11 km/s resolution) allowed us to detect an extended (~10 kpc projected length) low column density (N(HI) < 2.5x10^20 cm^-2) HI gas tail associated with the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC4523 at the northern edge of the cluster. The morphology of the tail and of the stellar disc suggest that the galaxy is suffering a hydrodynamic interaction with the surrounding hot intracluster medium (ICM; ram pressure stripping). The orientation of the trailing tail, the gradient in the HI gas column density at the interface between the cold ISM and the hot ICM, the velocity of the galaxy with respect to that of the cluster, and its position indicate that NGC4523 is infalling for the first time into Virgo from the NNW background of the cluster. Using a grid of hydrodynamic simulations we derive the impact parameters with the surrounding ICM, and estimate that the galaxy will be at pericentre (D~500-600 kpc) in ~1 Gyr, where ram pressure stripping will be able to remove most, if not all, of its gas. The galaxy is located on the star formation main sequence when its star formation rate is derived using Halpha images obtained during the VESTIGE survey, suggesting that NGC4523 is only at the beginning of its interaction with the surrounding environment. A few HII regions are detected in the Halpha images within the HI gas tail outside the stellar disc. Their ages, derived by comparing their Halpha, FUV, NUV, and optical colours with the predictions of SED fitting models, are <30 Myr, and suggest that these HII regions have formed within the stripped gas., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
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12. User expectations and experiences of an assistive robotic arm in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a multicenter observational study
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Spittel, Susanne, Meyer, Thomas, Weyen, Ute, Grehl, Torsten, Weydt, Patrick, Steinbach, Robert, Petri, Susanne, Baum, Petra, Metelmann, Moritz, Sperfeld, Anne-Dorte, Kettemann, Dagmar, Norden, Jenny, Rödiger, Annekathrin, Ilse, Benjamin, Grosskreutz, Julian, Hildebrandt, Barbara, Walter, Bertram, Münch, Christoph, and Maier, André
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- 2024
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13. Patients’ and caregivers’ perception of multidimensional and palliative care in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – protocol of a German multicentre study
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Linse, Katharina, Weber, Constanze, Reilich, Peter, Schöberl, Florian, Boentert, Matthias, Petri, Susanne, Rödiger, Annekathrin, Posa, Andreas, Otto, Markus, Wolf, Joachim, Zeller, Daniel, Brunkhorst, Robert, Koch, Jan, Hermann, Andreas, Großkreutz, Julian, Schröter, Carsten, Groß, Martin, Lingor, Paul, Machetanz, Gerrit, Semmler, Luisa, Dorst, Johannes, Lulé, Dorothée, Ludolph, Albert, Meyer, Thomas, Maier, André, Metelmann, Moritz, Regensburger, Martin, Winkler, Jürgen, Schrank, Berthold, Kohl, Zacharias, Hagenacker, Tim, Brakemeier, Svenja, Weyen, Ute, Weiler, Markus, Lorenzl, Stefan, Bublitz, Sarah, Weydt, Patrick, Grehl, Torsten, Kotterba, Sylvia, Lapp, Hanna-Sophie, Freigang, Maren, Vidovic, Maximilian, Aust, Elisa, and Günther, René
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- 2024
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14. Explosives leaking from dumped munition contaminate fish from German coastal waters: a reason for chronic effects?
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Kammann, Ulrike, Töpker, Verena, Schmidt, Nicole, Rödiger, Marcellus, Aust, Marc-Oliver, Gabel, Michael, and Scharsack, Jörn Peter
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- 2024
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15. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE) XV. The Halpha luminosity function of the Virgo cluster
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Boselli, A., Fossati, M., Cote, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Gwyn, S., Amram, P., Ayromlou, M., Balogh, M., Bellusci, G., Boquien, M., Gavazzi, G., Hensler, G., Longobardi, A., Nelson, D., Pillepich, A., Roediger, J., Sanchez-Jansen, R., Sun, M., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use a complete set of deep narrow-band imaging data for 384 galaxies gathered during the VESTIGE survey to derive the first Halpha luminosity function (LF) of the Virgo cluster within R200. The data allow us to cover the whole dynamic range of the Halpha LF (10^36
10^14 Mo. The comparison with the IllustrisTNG cosmological hydrodynamical simulations shows a more pronounced decrease at the faint end of the distribution. If Virgo is representative of typical nearby clusters of similar mass, this difference suggests that the stripping process in simulated galaxies in these environments is more efficient than observed., Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A - Published
- 2023
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16. The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). XXXV. First Kinematical Clues of Overly-Massive Dark Matter Halos in Several Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies in the Virgo Cluster
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Toloba, Elisa, Sales, Laura V., Lim, Sungsoon, Peng, Eric W., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Roediger, Joel, Wang, Kaixiang, Mihos, J. Christopher, Cote, Patrick, Durrell, Patrick R., and Ferrarese, Laura
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy of the first complete sample of ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) in the Virgo cluster. We select all UDGs in Virgo that contain at least 10 globular cluster (GC) candidates and are more than $2.5\sigma$ outliers in scaling relations of size, surface brightness, and luminosity (a total of 10 UDGs). We use the radial velocity of their GC satellites to measure the velocity dispersion of each UDG. We find a mixed bag of galaxies: from one UDG that shows no signs of dark matter, to UDGs that follow the luminosity-dispersion relation of early-type galaxies, to the most extreme examples of heavily dark matter dominated galaxies that break well-known scaling relations such as the luminosity-dispersion or the U-shaped total mass-to-light ratio relations. This is indicative of a number of mechanisms at play forming these peculiar galaxies. Some of them may be the most extended version of dwarf galaxies, while others are so extreme that they seem to populate dark matter halos consistent with that of the Milky-Way or even larger. Even though Milky-Way stars and other GC interlopers contaminating our sample of GCs cannot be fully ruled-out, our assessment of this potential problem and simulations indicate that the probability is low and, if present, unlikely to be enough to explain the extreme dispersions measured. Further confirmation from stellar kinematics studies in these UDGs would be desirable. The lack of such extreme objects in any of the state-of-the-art simulations, opens an exciting avenue of new physics shaping these galaxies., Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
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17. Stars on the edge: Galactic tides and the outskirts of the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal
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Sestito, Federico, Roediger, Joel, Navarro, Julio F., Jensen, Jaclyn, Venn, Kim A., Smith, Simon E. T., Hayes, Christian, and McConnachie, Alan W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The formation of "stellar halos" in dwarf galaxies have been discussed in terms of early mergers or Galactic tides, although fluctuations in the gravitational potential due to stellar feedback is also a possible candidate mechanism. A Bayesian algorithm is used to find new candidate members in the extreme outskirts of the Sculptor dwarf galaxy. Precise metallicities and radial velocities for two distant stars are measured from their spectra taken with the Gemini South GMOS spectrograph. The radial velocity, proper motion and metallicity of these targets are consistent with Sculptor membership. As a result, the known boundary of the Sculptor dwarf extends now out to an elliptical distance of $\sim10$ half-light radii, which corresponds to a projected physical distance of $\sim3$ kpc. As reported in earlier work, the overall distribution of radial velocities and metallicities indicate the presence of a more spatially and kinematically dispersed metal-poor population that surrounds the more concentrated and colder metal-rich stars. Sculptor's density profile shows a "kink" in its logarithmic slope at a projected distance of $\sim25$ arcmin (620 pc), which we interpret as evidence that Galactic tides have helped to populate the distant outskirts of the dwarf. We discuss further ways to test and validate this tidal interpretation for the origin of these distant stars., Comment: Accepted for publication on MNRAS. Figure 1 now displays all the candidate members. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2301.13214
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- 2023
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18. User expectations and experiences of an assistive robotic arm in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a multicenter observational study
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Susanne Spittel, Thomas Meyer, Ute Weyen, Torsten Grehl, Patrick Weydt, Robert Steinbach, Susanne Petri, Petra Baum, Moritz Metelmann, Anne-Dorte Sperfeld, Dagmar Kettemann, Jenny Norden, Annekathrin Rödiger, Benjamin Ilse, Julian Grosskreutz, Barbara Hildebrandt, Bertram Walter, Christoph Münch, and André Maier
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Motor neuron disease ,Assistive technology devices ,Assistive robotic arm ,Platform ,Case management ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Objective Robotic arms are innovative assistive devices for ALS patients with progressive motor deficits of arms and hands. The objective was to explore the patients´ expectations towards a robotic arm system and to assess the actual experiences after the provision of the device. Methods A prospective observational study was conducted at 9 ALS centers in Germany. ALS-related functional deficits were assessed using the ALS-Functional Rating Scale-revised (ALSFRS-R). Motor deficit of the upper limbs was determined using a subscore of three arm-related items of the ALSFRS-R (items 4–6; range 0–12 points). User expectations before provision (expectation group, n = 85) and user experiences after provision (experience group, n = 14) with the device (JACO Assistive Robotic Device, Kinova, Boisbriand, QC, Canada) were assessed. Results In the total cohort, mean ALSFRS-R subscore for arm function was 1.7 (SD: 2.0, 0–9) demonstrating a severe functional deficit of the upper limbs. In the expectation group (n = 85), the following use cases of the robotic arm have been prioritized: handling objects (89%), close-body movements (88%), pressing buttons (87%), serving drinks (86%), and opening cabinets and doors (85%). In the experience group (n = 14), handling objects (79%), serving drinks (79%), near-body movements (71%), pushing buttons (71%), serving food (64%), and opening doors (64%) were the most frequent used cases. Most patients used the device daily (71.4%, n = 10), and 28.6% (n = 4) several times a week. All patients of the experience group found the device helpful, felt safe while using the device, and were satisfied with its reliability. NPS of the assistive robotic arm revealed 64% "promoters" (strong recommendation), 29% "indifferents" (uncertain recommendation) and 7% "detractors" (no recommendation). Total NPS was + 57 demonstrating strong patient satisfaction. Conclusions Initiation of procurement with a robotic assistive arm was confined to patients with severe functional deficit of the upper limbs. User experience underlined the wide spectrum of use cases of assistive robotic arms in ALS. The positive user experience together with high satisfaction underscore that robotic arm systems serve as a valuable treatment option in ALS patients with severe motor deficits of the arms.
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- 2024
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19. Patients’ and caregivers’ perception of multidimensional and palliative care in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – protocol of a German multicentre study
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Katharina Linse, Constanze Weber, Peter Reilich, Florian Schöberl, Matthias Boentert, Susanne Petri, Annekathrin Rödiger, Andreas Posa, Markus Otto, Joachim Wolf, Daniel Zeller, Robert Brunkhorst, Jan Koch, Andreas Hermann, Julian Großkreutz, Carsten Schröter, Martin Groß, Paul Lingor, Gerrit Machetanz, Luisa Semmler, Johannes Dorst, Dorothée Lulé, Albert Ludolph, Thomas Meyer, André Maier, Moritz Metelmann, Martin Regensburger, Jürgen Winkler, Berthold Schrank, Zacharias Kohl, Tim Hagenacker, Svenja Brakemeier, Ute Weyen, Markus Weiler, Stefan Lorenzl, Sarah Bublitz, Patrick Weydt, Torsten Grehl, Sylvia Kotterba, Hanna-Sophie Lapp, Maren Freigang, Maximilian Vidovic, Elisa Aust, and René Günther
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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Caregiver burden ,Palliative care ,Quality of care ,Motor neuron disease ,Psychosocial care ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Introduction Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an inevitably fatal condition that leads to a progressive loss of physical functioning, which results in a high psychosocial burden and organizational challenges related to medical care. Multidimensional and multiprofessional care is advised to meet the complex needs of patients and their families. Many healthcare systems, including Germany, may not be able to meet these needs because non-medical services such as psychological support or social counselling are not regularly included in the care of patients with ALS (pwALS). Specialised neuropalliative care is not routinely implemented nor widely available. Caregivers of pwALS are also highly burdened, but there is still a lack of support services for them. Methods This project aims to assess the perceptions and satisfaction with ALS care in Germany in pwALS and their caregivers. This will be achieved by means of a cross-sectional, multicentre survey. The examination will assess, to which extend the patients’ needs in the six domains of physical, psychological, social, spiritual, practical and informational are being met by current care structures. This assessment will be linked to mental well-being, subjective quality of life, attitudes toward life-sustaining measures and physician-assisted suicide, and caregiver burden. The study aims to recruit 500 participants from nationwide ALS centres in order to draw comprehensive conclusions for Germany. A total of 29 centres, mostly acquired via the clinical and scientific German Network for Motor Neuron Diseases (MND-NET), will take part in the project, 25 of which have already started recruitment. Perspective It is intended to provide data-based starting points on how current practice of care in Germany is perceived pwALS and their caregivers and how it can be improved according to their needs. Planning and initiation of the study has been completed. Trial registration The study is registered at ClinicalTrails.gov; NCT06418646
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- 2024
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20. Explosives leaking from dumped munition contaminate fish from German coastal waters: a reason for chronic effects?
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Ulrike Kammann, Verena Töpker, Nicole Schmidt, Marcellus Rödiger, Marc-Oliver Aust, Michael Gabel, and Jörn Peter Scharsack
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Dumped munition ,Explosives ,TNT ,HMX ,Baltic Sea ,North Sea ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Environmental law ,K3581-3598 - Abstract
Abstract Background Conventional munition dumped into the North Sea and the Baltic Sea close to the German coastline is corroding. A major concern is that biota, including fish, are negatively affected by toxic explosives leaking into marine environments. With the present study, we investigated fish living in close proximity to munition dumping sites for contamination and for signs of health impairments. The flat fish species common dab (Limanda limanda) was used as a model, since it lives in the vicinity of dumping sites and exhibits minor migratory activity. Since explosives are excreted via the bile, the bile fluids from dab were analysed. Further on we inspected the health status of the fish. Results Dab caught in German coastal waters of the Baltic Sea and the North Sea were contaminated with explosives. Probably due to rapid metabolization, concentrations of the explosive 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT) were always below limit of detection, but its metabolites 2-amino-4,6-dinitrotoluene and 4-amino-2,6-dinitrotoluene were detected in bile fluid up to 26.36 ng/ml and 95.91 ng/ml, respectively. Only few fish from the Baltic Sea were positive for the explosive HMX, octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine with a maximum concentration of 0.89 ng/ml. Highest concentrations of TNT metabolites in bile fluid were detected in dab collected near the dumping site “Kolberger Heide” in the bay of Kiel (Baltic Sea). However, also dab from the North Sea were significantly contaminated with TNT metabolites. Conclusions The present study showed for the first time that fish living close to near shore munition dumping sites in the North Sea are contaminated with explosives. Various health indicators (body condition factors, externally visible fish diseases, parasites or liver anomalies) showed differences in health status between fish living in the North Sea and in the Baltic Sea, respectively. However, the health status of fish caught at the most contaminated site in the Baltic Sea was not worse compared to fish living in less contaminated areas. We conclude that fish living in the vicinity of dumping sites in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea can be significantly contaminated with explosives. However, obvious health impairments of the fish were not observed.
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- 2024
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21. Volition and control in law and in brain science: neurolegal translation of a foundational concept
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Julia F. Christensen, Caroline Rödiger, Lisa Claydon, and Patrick Haggard
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volition ,action control ,human ,law ,action ,loss of control ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
The law assumes that healthy adults are generally responsible for their actions and have the ability to control their behavior based on rational and moral principles. This contrasts with some recent neuroscientific accounts of action control. Nevertheless, both law and neuroscience acknowledge that strong emotions including fear and anger may “trigger” loss of normal voluntary control over action. Thus, “Loss of Control” is a partial defense for murder under English law, paralleling similar defenses in other legal systems. Here we consider the neuroscientific evidence for such legal classifications of responsibility, particularly focussing on how emotional states modulate voluntary motor control and sense of agency. First, we investigate whether neuroscience could contribute an evidence-base for law in this area. Second, we consider the societal impact of some areas where legal thinking regarding responsibility for action diverges from neuroscientific evidence: should we be guided by normative legal traditions, or by modern understanding of brain functions? In addressing these objectives, we propose a translation exercise between neuroscientific and legal terms, which may assist future interdisciplinary research.
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- 2024
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22. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE).XIV. The main sequence relation in a rich environment down to M_star ~ 10^6 Mo
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Boselli, A., Fossati, M., Roediger, J., Boquien, M., Fumagalli, M., Balogh, M., Boissier, S., Braine, J., Ciesla, L., Côté, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Gavazzi, G., Gwyn, S., Junais, Hensler, G., Longobardi, A., and Sun, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Using a compilation of Halpha fluxes for 384 star forming galaxies detected during the VESTIGE survey, we study several important scaling relations for a complete sample of galaxies in a rich environment. The extraordinary sensitivity of the data allows us to sample the whole dynamic range of the Halpha luminosity function, from massive (M*~10^11 Mo) to dwarf systems (M*~10^6 Mo). This extends previous works to a dynamic range in stellar mass and star formation rate (10^-4
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- 2022
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23. Discovery of a new Local Group Dwarf Galaxy Candidate in UNIONS: Bo\'otes V
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Smith, Simon E. T., Jensen, Jaclyn, Roediger, Joel, Sestito, Federico, Hayes, Christian R., McConnachie, Alan W., Cuillandre, Jean-Charles, Gwyn, Stephen, Magnier, Eugene, Chambers, Ken, Hammer, Francois, Hudson, Mike, Martin, Nicolas, Navarro, Julio, and Scott, Douglas
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the discovery of Bo\"otes V, a new ultra-faint dwarf galaxy candidate. This satellite is detected as a resolved overdensity of stars during an ongoing search for new Local Group dwarf galaxy candidates in the UNIONS photometric dataset. It has a physical half-light radius of 26.9$^{+7.5}_{-5.4}$ pc, a $V$-band magnitude of $-$4.5 $\pm$ 0.4 mag, and resides at a heliocentric distance of approximately 100 kpc. We use Gaia DR3 astrometry to identify member stars, characterize the systemic proper motion, and confirm the reality of this faint stellar system. The brightest star in this system was followed up using Gemini GMOS-N long-slit spectroscopy and is measured to have a metallicity of [Fe/H] $=$ $-$2.85 $\pm$ 0.10 dex and a heliocentric radial velocity of $v_r$ = 5.1 $\pm$ 13.4 km s$^{-1}$. Bo\"otes V is larger (in terms of scale radius), more distant, and more metal-poor than the vast majority of globular clusters. It is likely that Bo\"otes V is an ultra-faint dwarf galaxy, though future spectroscopic studies will be necessary to definitively classify this object., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in the AAS Journals. Please note that this paper was submitted in coordination with the work of William Cerny et al. 2022. These authors independently discovered this same satellite so our two research groups have coordinated the submission of these discovery papers
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- 2022
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24. A Multiwavelength view of IC 860: What Is in Action inside Quenching Galaxies
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Luo, Yuanze, Rowlands, Kate, Alatalo, Katherine, Sazonova, Elizaveta, Abdurro'uf, Heckman, Timothy, Medling, Anne M., Deustua, Susana E., Nyland, Kristina, Lanz, Lauranne, Petric, Andreea O., Otter, Justin A., Aalto, Susanne, Dimassimo, Sabrina, French, K. Decker, Gallagher III, John S., Roediger, Joel C., and Stepanoff, Sofia
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a multiwavelength study of IC 860, a nearby post-starburst galaxy at the early stage of transitioning from blue and star-forming to red and quiescent. Optical images reveal a galaxy-wide, dusty outflow originating from a compact core. We find evidence for a multiphase outflow in the molecular and neutral gas phase from the CO position-velocity diagram and NaD absorption features. We constrain the neutral mass outflow rate to be ~0.5 M$_{\odot}/$yr, and the total hydrogen mass outflow rate to be ~12 M$_{\odot}$/yr. Neither outflow component seems able to escape the galaxy. We also find evidence for a recent merger in the optical images, CO spatial distribution, and kinematics, and evidence for a buried AGN in the optical emission line ratios, mid-IR properties, and radio spectral shape. The depletion time of the molecular gas reservoir under the current star formation rate is ~7 Gyr, indicating that the galaxy could stay at the intermediate stage between the blue and red sequence for a long time. Thus the timescales for a significant decline in star formation rate ("quenching") and gas depletion are not necessarily the same. Our analysis supports the quenching picture where outflows help suppress star formation by disturbing rather than expelling the gas and shed light on possible ongoing activities in similar quenching galaxies., Comment: 31 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Online material will be available from the publisher
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- 2022
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25. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE).XIII. The role of ram-pressure stripping in transforming the diffuse and ultra-diffuse galaxies in the Virgo cluster
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Junais, Boissier, S., Boselli, A., Ferrarese, L., Côté, P., Gwyn, S., Roediger, J., Lim, S., Peng, E. W., Cuillandre, J. -C., Longobardi, A., Fossati, M., Hensler, G., Koda, J., Bautista, J., Boquien, M., Małek, K., Amram, P., and Roehlly, Y.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Low-surface-brightness galaxies (LSBs) contribute to a significant fraction of all the galaxies in the Universe. Ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) form a subclass of LSBs that has attracted a lot of attention in recent years (although its definition may vary between studies). Although UDGs are found in large numbers in galaxy clusters, groups, and in the field, their formation and evolution are still very much debated. Using a comprehensive set of multiwavelength data from the NGVS (optical), VESTIGE (H$\alpha$ narrowband), and GUViCS (UV) surveys, we studied a sample of 64 diffuse galaxies and UDGs in the Virgo cluster to investigate their formation history. We analyzed the photometric colors and surface-brightness profiles of these galaxies and then compared them to models of galaxy evolution, including ram-pressure stripping (RPS) events to infer any possible strong interactions with the hot cluster gas in the past. While our sample consists mainly of red LSBs, which is typical in cluster environments, we found evidence of a color variation with the cluster-centric distance. Blue, HI-bearing, star-forming diffuse galaxies are found at larger distances from the cluster center than the rest of the sample. The comparison of our models with multifrequency observations suggests that most of the galaxies of the sample might have undergone a strong RPS event in their lifetime, on average 1.6 Gyr ago (with a large dispersion, and RPS still ongoing for some of them). This process resulted in the transformation of initially gas-rich diffuse blue galaxies into gas-poor and red ones that form the dominant population now, the more extreme UDGs having undergone the process in a more distant past on average. The RPS in dense environments could be one of the major mechanisms for the formation of the large number of quiescent UDGs we observe in galaxy clusters., Comment: 57 pages, 14 Figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2022
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26. Ultrafast quantum key distribution using fully parallelized quantum channels
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Terhaar, Robin, Rödiger, Jasper, Häußler, Matthias, Wahl, Michael, Gehring, Helge, Wolff, Martin A., Beutel, Fabian, Hartmann, Wladick, Walter, Nicolai, Hanke, Jonas, Hanne, Peter, Walenta, Nino, Diedrich, Maximilian, Perlot, Nicolas, Tillmann, Max, Röhlicke, Tino, Ahangarianabhari, Mahdi, Schuck, Carsten, and Pernice, Wolfram H. P.
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Quantum Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
The field of quantum information processing offers secure communication protected by the laws of quantum mechanics and is on the verge of finding wider application for information transfer of sensitive data. To overcome the obstacle of inadequate cost-efficiency, extensive research is being done on the many components required for high data throughput using quantum key distribution (QKD). Aiming for an application-oriented solution, we report on the realization of a multichannel QKD system for plug-and-play high-bandwidth secure communication at telecom wavelength. For this purpose, a rack-sized multichannel superconducting nanowire single photon detector (SNSPD) system, as well as a highly parallelized time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC) unit have been developed and linked to an FPGA-controlled QKD evaluation setup allowing for continuous operation and achieving high secret key rates using a coherent-one-way protocol., Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures
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- 2022
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27. The Spectroscopy and H-band Imaging of Virgo cluster galaxies (SHIVir) Survey: Data Catalogue and Kinematic Profiles
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Ouellette, Nathalie N. -Q., Courteau, Stéphane, Holtzman, Jon A., McDonald, Michael, Cappellari, Michele, Roediger, Joel C., Côté, Patrick, Dalcanton, Julianne J., Bontà, Elena Dalla, Ferrarese, Laura, Tully, R. Brent, Stone, Connor, and Peng, Eric W.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The ``Spectroscopy and H-band Imaging of Virgo cluster galaxies'' (SHIVir) survey is an optical and near-infrared survey which combines SDSS photometry, deep H-band photometry, and long-slit optical spectroscopy for 190 Virgo cluster galaxies (VCGs) covering all morphological types over the stellar mass range log (M_*/M_Sun) = 7.8-11.5$. We present the spectroscopic sample selection, data reduction, and analysis for this SHIVir sample. We have used and optimised the \texttt{pPXF} routine to extract stellar kinematics from our data. Ultimately, resolved kinematic profiles (rotation curves and velocity dispersion profiles) are available for 133 SHIVir galaxies. A comprehensive database of photometric and kinematic parameters for the SHIVir sample is presented with: grizH magnitudes, effective surface brightnesses, effective and isophotal radii, rotational velocities, velocity dispersions, and stellar and dynamical masses. Parameter distributions highlight some bimodal distributions and possible sample biases. A qualitative study of resolved extended velocity dispersion profiles suggests a link between the so-called ``sigma-drop'' kinematic profile and the presence of rings in lenticular S0 galaxies. Rising dispersion profiles are linked to early-type spirals or dwarf ellipticals for which a rotational component is significant, whereas peaked profiles are tied to featureless giant ellipticals., Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS (doi: 10.1093/mnras/stac1347). Supplemental material available at https://www.queensu.ca/academia/courteau/links
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- 2022
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28. Fully automated viability and toxicity screening—A reliable all‐in‐one attempt
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Victoria Liedtke, Romano Weiss, Anastasia Skifov, Stefan Rödiger, and Lysann Schenk
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automated system ,bioimage informatics ,CRISPR/Cas9 ,cytotoxicity ,viability ,Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background The CRISPR/Cas9 technology is nowadays a common tool for genome editing to achieve new insights into, for example, diagnostics and therapeutics in cancer and genetic disorders. Cell proliferation and anticancer drug response studies are widely used to evaluate the impact of editing. However, these assays are often time‐consuming, expensive, and reproducibility is an issue. To overcome this, we developed a fast and cheap assay that combines a fully automated multispectral fluorescence microscopy platform with a nuclei staining and open‐source software analysis. Methods Here, we generated different LEDGF/p75 model cell lines to validate the effect on proliferation and chemosensitivity. Therefore, a fast protocol for an optimized all‐in‐one attempt for cytotoxicity screenings and proliferation analysis of adherent cells in a 96‐well plate format was established using differential staining with two fluorescent dyes (Hoechst 33342 and propidium iodide) for live/dead cell discrimination. Subsequently, an automated cell nuclei count and analysis were performed using bioimage informatics. Results With the new established assay technology, up to 50,000 cells/well can be detected and analyzed in a 96‐well plate, resulting in a fast and accurate verification of viability and proliferation with consistency of 98% compared to manual counting. Our screening revealed that LEDGF depletion using CRISPR/Cas9 showed a diminished proliferation and chemosensitivity independent of cell line origin. Moreover, LEDGF depletion caused a significant increase in 𝛾H2AX foci, indicating a substantial increase in DNA double strand breaks. LEDGF/p75 overexpression enhanced proliferation and chemoresistance underlining the role of LEDGF in DNA damage response. Conclusion Independent of cancer cell type, LEDGF/p75 is a central player in DNA damage repair and is implicated in chemoresistance. Moreover, our automated fluorescence biosensor technology allowed fast and reliable data acquisition without any fixation or additional washing steps. Additionally, data analysis was implemented using the modular open‐source software that can be adapted as needed.
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- 2024
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29. A multiplex microchamber diffusion assay for the antibody-based detection of microRNAs on randomly ordered microbeads
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Christiane Geithe, Bo Zeng, Carsten Schmidt, Franziska Dinter, Dirk Roggenbuck, Werner Lehmann, Gregory Dame, Peter Schierack, Katja Hanack, and Stefan Rödiger
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MicroRNA ,Microbeads ,multiplex ,Isothermal ,Label-free ,Diffusion ,Biotechnology ,TP248.13-248.65 - Abstract
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNA regulators linked to various human diseases incl. heart disease, a leading cause of death in Western countries. Their alterations signify the need for early detection methods. We devised a diffusion microbead assay, combining it with antibody-based miRNA detection. Diffusion involves co-diffusion of miRNAs and antibodies in a microchamber. Randomly ordered size and dye encoded microbeads loaded with specific capture probes target heart disease-associated miRNAs. MiRNA detection is time- and dose-dependent using an anti-DNA:RNA hybrid antibody. The miRNAs are successively exposed to randomly ordered microbeads, which leads to microbeads that become saturated with the target molecules first in front rows. Unbound miRNAs diffuse further and bind to microbeads with free binding sites. Our assay provides real-time multiplex detection of multiple miRNA within 2 h in an isothermal amplification-free environment, with low detection limits (miR-21-5p: 0.21 nM; miR-30a-3p: 0.03 nM; miR-93-5p: 0.43 nM). This study presents a miRNA detection principle that differs from other microbead assays where all microbeads are simultaneously mixed with the sample solution, so that all target molecules bind to microbeads equally, ultimately resulting in an averaged signal intensity.
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- 2024
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30. KiDS+VIKING+GAMA: Halo occupation distributions and correlations of satellite numbers with a new halo model of the galaxy-matter bispectrum for galaxy-galaxy-galaxy lensing
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Linke, Laila, Simon, Patrick, Schneider, Peter, Farrow, Daniel J., Rödiger, Jens, and Wright, Angus H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Halo models and halo occupation distributions (HODs) are important tools to model the galaxy and matter distribution. We present and assess a new method for constraining the parameters of HODs using the gravitational lensing shear around galaxy pairs, galaxy-galaxy-galaxy-lensing (G3L). In contrast to galaxy-galaxy-lensing, G3L is sensitive to correlations between the per-halo numbers of galaxies from different populations. We use G3L to probe these correlations and test the default hypothesis that they are negligible. We derive a halo model for G3L and validate it with realistic mock data from the Millennium Simulation and a semi-analytic galaxy model. Then, we analyse public data from the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS), the VISTA Infrared Kilo-Degree Galaxy Survey (VIKING) and data from the Galaxy And Mass Assembly Survey (GAMA) to infer the HODs of galaxies at $z<0.5$ in five different stellar mass bins between $10^{8.5}h^{-2} M_\odot$ and $10^{11.5}h^{-2} M_\odot$ and two colours (red and blue), as well as correlations between satellite numbers. The analysis recovers the true HODs in the simulated data within the $68\%$ credibility range. The inferred HODs vary significantly with colour and stellar mass. There is also strong evidence ($>3\sigma$) for correlations, increasing with halo mass, between the numbers of red and blue satellites and galaxies with stellar masses below $10^{10} \Msun. Possible causes of these correlations are the selection of similar galaxies in different samples, the survey flux limit, or physical mechanisms like a fixed ratio between the satellite numbers of distinct populations. The decorrelation for halos with smaller masses is probably an effect of shot noise by low-occupancy halos. The inferred HODs can be used to complement galaxy-galaxy-lensing or galaxy clustering HOD studies or as input to cosmological analyses and improved mock galaxy catalogues., Comment: 20 pages + Appendix, 14 Figures. Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics. Abstract is abridged
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- 2022
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31. Resilience of Sloshing Cold Fronts against Subsequent Minor Mergers
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Vaezzadeh, Iraj, Roediger, Elke, Cashmore, Claire, Hunt, Matthew, ZuHone, John, Forman, William, Jones, Christine, Kraft, Ralph, Nulsen, Paul, Su, Yuanyuan, and Churazov, Eugene
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Minor mergers are common in galaxy clusters. They have the potential to create sloshing cold fronts (SCFs) in the intracluster medium (ICM) of the cluster. However, the resilience of SCFs to subsequent minor mergers is unknown. Here we investigate the extent to which SCFs established by an off-axis minor merger are disrupted by a subsequent minor merger. We perform a suite of 13 hydrodynamic + N-body simulations of idealised triple cluster mergers in which we vary the approach direction and impact parameter of the tertiary cluster. Except for ~1 Gyr after the first core passage of the tertiary cluster, clear SCFs are present in all merger configurations. Subsequent head-on minor mergers reduce the number of SCFs significantly, while subsequent off-axis minor mergers only moderately reduce the number of SCFs. In particular, outer (>~500 kpc) SCFs are resilient. The results of this work indicate that SCFs are easily formed in the course of a minor merger and are long-lived even if a further minor merger takes place. SCFs thus should be ubiquitous, but deriving the merger history of a given cluster based on its observed SCFs might be more complex than previously thought., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 24 pages, 18 figures. For animated figures, see http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3kemZFmnTGR6Zkmt1NCNeKUbPIrDoxmy
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- 2022
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32. Time-frequency Quantum Key Distribution over a Free-Space Optical Link
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Rödiger, Jasper, Perlot, Nicolas, Benson, Oliver, and Freund, Ronald
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
We present an implementation of the time-frequency (TF) quantum key distribution (QKD) protocol realized mainly with standard telecommunication components at 1550 nm. TF-QKD is implemented with modulations in time and frequency, namely pulse position modulation (PPM) and frequency shift keying (FSK). The time-frequency uncertainty relation ensures the security of the protocol. We further demonstrate free-space optical QKD transmission over a 388-m distance. Since the QKD setup is single-mode fiber (SMF) -based, precise coupling in and out of the SMFs is crucial. Thus, we implemented an optical tracking system. The QKD signal is wavelength-multiplexed with a strong beacon for optical tracking. Strong spectral filtering is necessary to separate beacon and QKD signal. Together with spatial filtering caused by the SMF most background light is filtered, enabling daylight QKD transmission.
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- 2021
33. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE).XII. Ionised gas emission in the inner regions of lenticular galaxies
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Boselli, A., Fossati, M., Longobardi, A., Kianfar, K., Dametto, N. Z., Amram, P., Anderson, J. P., Andreani, P., Boissier, S., Boquien, M., Buat, V., Consolandi, G., Cortese, L., Côté, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Galbany, L., Gavazzi, G., Gwyn, S., Hensler, G., Hutchings, J., Peng, E. W., Postma, J., Roediger, J., Roehlly, Y., Serra, P., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
As part of the VESTIGE survey, a blind narrow-band Ha+[NII] imaging survey of the Virgo cluster carried out with MegaCam at the CFHT, we discovered 8 massive lenticular galaxies with prominent ionised gas emission features in their inner (few kpc) regions. These features are either ionised gas filaments similar to those observed in cooling flows (2 gal), or thin discs with sizes 0.7
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- 2021
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34. Utilization of innovative medical technologies in German inpatient care: does evidence matter?
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Eckhardt, Helene, Felgner, Susanne, Dreger, Marie, Fuchs, Sabine, Ermann, Hanna, Rödiger, Hendrikje, Rombey, Tanja, Busse, Reinhard, Henschke, Cornelia, and Panteli, Dimitra
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- 2023
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35. MicroRNA biomarkers as next-generation diagnostic tools for neurodegenerative diseases: a comprehensive review
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Hafiz Muhammad Husnain Azam, Rosa Ilse Rößling, Christiane Geithe, Muhammad Moman Khan, Franziska Dinter, Katja Hanack, Harald Prüß, Britta Husse, Dirk Roggenbuck, Peter Schierack, and Stefan Rödiger
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neurodegenerative diseases ,microRNA ,biomarkers ,nervous system ,diagnostic tools ,therapeutic tools ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Neurodegenerative diseases (NDs) are characterized by abnormalities within neurons of the brain or spinal cord that gradually lose function, eventually leading to cell death. Upon examination of affected tissue, pathological changes reveal a loss of synapses, misfolded proteins, and activation of immune cells—all indicative of disease progression—before severe clinical symptoms become apparent. Early detection of NDs is crucial for potentially administering targeted medications that may delay disease advancement. Given their complex pathophysiological features and diverse clinical symptoms, there is a pressing need for sensitive and effective diagnostic methods for NDs. Biomarkers such as microRNAs (miRNAs) have been identified as potential tools for detecting these diseases. We explore the pivotal role of miRNAs in the context of NDs, focusing on Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, Multiple sclerosis, Huntington’s disease, and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. The review delves into the intricate relationship between aging and NDs, highlighting structural and functional alterations in the aging brain and their implications for disease development. It elucidates how miRNAs and RNA-binding proteins are implicated in the pathogenesis of NDs and underscores the importance of investigating their expression and function in aging. Significantly, miRNAs exert substantial influence on post-translational modifications (PTMs), impacting not just the nervous system but a wide array of tissues and cell types as well. Specific miRNAs have been found to target proteins involved in ubiquitination or de-ubiquitination processes, which play a significant role in regulating protein function and stability. We discuss the link between miRNA, PTM, and NDs. Additionally, the review discusses the significance of miRNAs as biomarkers for early disease detection, offering insights into diagnostic strategies.
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- 2024
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36. Long-term efficacy and safety of nusinersen in adults with 5q spinal muscular atrophy: a prospective European multinational observational studyResearch in context
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René Günther, Claudia Diana Wurster, Svenja Brakemeier, Alma Osmanovic, Olivia Schreiber-Katz, Susanne Petri, Zeljko Uzelac, Miriam Hiebeler, Simone Thiele, Maggie C. Walter, Markus Weiler, Tobias Kessler, Maren Freigang, Hanna Sophie Lapp, Isabell Cordts, Paul Lingor, Marcus Deschauer, Andreas Hahn, Kyriakos Martakis, Robert Steinbach, Benjamin Ilse, Annekathrin Rödiger, Julia Bellut, Julia Nentwich, Daniel Zeller, Mohamad Tareq Muhandes, Tobias Baum, Jan Christoph Koch, Bertold Schrank, Sophie Fischer, Andreas Hermann, Christoph Kamm, Steffen Naegel, Alexander Mensch, Markus Weber, Christoph Neuwirth, Helmar C. Lehmann, Gilbert Wunderlich, Christian Stadler, Maike Tomforde, Annette George, Martin Groß, Astrid Pechmann, Janbernd Kirschner, Matthias Türk, Mareike Schimmel, Günther Bernert, Pascal Martin, Christian Rauscher, Gerd Meyer zu Hörste, Petra Baum, Wolfgang Löscher, Marina Flotats-Bastardas, Cornelia Köhler, Kristina Probst-Schendzielorz, Susanne Goldbach, Ulrike Schara-Schmidt, Wolfgang Müller-Felber, Hanns Lochmüller, Otgonzul von Velsen, Christoph Kleinschnitz, Albert C. Ludolph, and Tim Hagenacker
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Antisense oligonucleotide ,Intrathecal therapy ,Motor neuron disease ,Nusinersen ,Spinal muscular atrophy ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Evidence for the efficacy of nusinersen in adults with 5q-associated spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has been demonstrated up to a period of 16 months in relatively large cohorts but whereas patients reach a plateau over time is still to be demonstrated. We investigated the efficacy and safety of nusinersen in adults with SMA over 38 months, the longest time period to date in a large cohort of patients from multiple clinical sites. Methods: Our prospective, observational study included adult patients with SMA from Germany, Switzerland, and Austria (July 2017 to May 2022). All participants had genetically-confirmed, 5q-associated SMA and were treated with nusinersen according to the label. The total Hammersmith Functional Motor Scale Expanded (HFMSE) and Revised Upper Limb Module (RULM) scores, and 6-min walk test (6 MWT; metres), were recorded at baseline and 14, 26, and 38 months after treatment initiation, and pre and post values were compared. Adverse events were also recorded. Findings: Overall, 389 patients were screened for eligibility and 237 were included. There were significant increases in all outcome measures compared with baseline, including mean HFMSE scores at 14 months (mean difference 1.72 [95% CI 1.19–2.25]), 26 months (1.20 [95% CI 0.48–1.91]), and 38 months (1.52 [95% CI 0.74–2.30]); mean RULM scores at 14 months (mean difference 0.75 [95% CI 0.43–1.07]), 26 months (mean difference 0.65 [95% CI 0.27–1.03]), and 38 months (mean difference 0.72 [95% CI 0.25–1.18]), and 6 MWT at 14 months (mean difference 30.86 m [95% CI 18.34–43.38]), 26 months (mean difference 29.26 m [95% CI 14.87–43.65]), and 38 months (mean difference 32.20 m [95% CI 10.32–54.09]). No new safety signals were identified. Interpretation: Our prospective, observational, long-term (38 months) data provides further real-world evidence for the continuous efficacy and safety of nusinersen in a large proportion of adult patients with SMA. Funding: Financial support for the registry from Biogen, Novartis and Roche.
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- 2024
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37. Utilization of innovative medical technologies in German inpatient care: does evidence matter?
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Helene Eckhardt, Susanne Felgner, Marie Dreger, Sabine Fuchs, Hanna Ermann, Hendrikje Rödiger, Tanja Rombey, Reinhard Busse, Cornelia Henschke, and Dimitra Panteli
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Medical devices ,Evidence-based medicine ,Value based health care ,Evidence gaps ,Implementation science ,Diffusion of innovation ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background The reimbursement of new technologies in inpatient care is not always linked to a requirement for evidence-based evaluation of patient benefit. In Germany, every new technology approved for market was until recently eligible for reimbursement in inpatient care unless explicitly excluded. The aim of this work was (1) to investigate the type of evidence that was available at the time of introduction of 25 innovative technologies and how this evidence evolved over time, and (2) to explore the relationship between clinical evidence and utilization for these technologies in German inpatient care. Methods This study combined different methods. A systematic search for evidence published between 2003 and 2017 was conducted in four bibliographic databases, clinical trial registries, resources for clinical guidelines, and health technology assessment—databases. Information was also collected on funding mechanisms and safety notices. Utilization was measured by hospital procedures captured in claims data. The body of evidence, funding and safety notices per technology were analyzed descriptively. The relationship between utilization and evidence was explored empirically using a multilevel regression analysis. Results The number of included publications per technology ranges from two to 498. For all technologies, non-comparative studies form the bulk of the evidence. The number of randomized controlled clinical trials per technology ranges from zero to 19. Some technologies were utilized for several years without an adequate evidence base. A relationship between evidence and utilization could be shown for several but not all technologies. Conclusions This study reveals a mixed picture regarding the evidence available for new technologies, and the relationship between the development of evidence and the use of technologies over time. Although the influence of funding and safety notices requires further investigation, these results re-emphasize the need for strengthening market approval standards and HTA pathways as well as approaches such as coverage with evidence development.
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- 2023
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38. Fresh Insights on the Kinematics of M49's Globular Cluster System with MMT/Hectospec Spectroscopy
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Taylor, Matthew A., Ko, Youkyung, Côté, Patrick, Ferrarese, Laura, Peng, Eric W., Zabludoff, Ann, Roediger, Joel, Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén, Hendel, David, Chilingarian, Igor, Liu, Chengze, Spengler, Chelsea, and Zhang, Hongxin
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results of an MMT/Hectospec campaign to measure the kinematics of globular clusters (GCs) around M49 -- the brightest galaxy in the Virgo galaxy cluster, which dominates the Virgo B subcluster. The data include kinematic tracers beyond 95 kpc (~5.2 effective radii) for M49 for the first time, enabling us to achieve three key insights reported here. First, beyond ~20'-30' (~100-150 kpc), the GC kinematics sampled along the minor photometric axis of M49 become increasingly hotter, indicating a transition from GCs related to M49 to those representing the Virgo B intra-cluster medium. Second, there is an anomaly in the line-of-sight radial velocity dispersion ($\sigma_{r,los}$) profile in an annulus ~10-15' (~50-90 kpc) from M49 in which the kinematics cool by $\Delta \sigma_{r,los}~150$ km s$^{-1}$ relative to those in- or outward. The kinematic fingerprint of a previous accretion event is hinted at in projected phase-space, and we isolate GCs that both give rise to this feature, and are spatially co-located with two prominent stellar shells in the halo of M49. Third, we find a subsample of GCs with velocities representative of the dwarf galaxy VCC1249 that is currently interacting with M49. The spatial distribution of these GCs closely resembles the morphology of VCC1249's isophotes, indicating that several of these GCs are likely in the act of being stripped from the dwarf during its passage through M49's halo. Taken together, these results point toward the opportunity of witnessing on-going giant halo assembly in the depths of a cluster environment., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2021
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39. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE).X. Formation of a red ultra-diffuse galaxy and an almost dark galaxy during a ram-pressure stripping event
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Junais, Boissier, S., Boselli, A., Boquien, M., Longobardi, A., Roehlly, Y., Amram, P., Fossati, M., Cuillandre, J. -C., Gwyn, S., Ferrarese, L., Côté, P., Roediger, J., Lim, S., Peng, E. W., Hensler, G., Trinchieri, G., Koda, J., and Prantzos, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The evolution of galaxies depends on their interaction with the surrounding environment. Ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) have been found in large numbers in clusters. We detected a few star-forming blobs in the VESTIGE survey, located at $\sim$5 kpc from a UDG, namely NGVS 3543, in association with an HI gas cloud AGC 226178, suggesting a recent interaction between this low-surface-brightness system and the surrounding cluster environment. We use a complete set of multi-frequency data including deep optical, UV, and narrow-band H${\alpha}$ imaging and HI data to understand the formation process that gave birth to this peculiar system. For this purpose, we measured (i) the multi-wavelength radial surface brightness profiles of NGVS 3543 and compared them to the predictions of spectro-photometric models of galaxy evolution in rich clusters; and (ii) the aperture photometry of the blue regions in the vicinity of NGVS 3543 in order to determine their age and stellar mass. Comparisons of the observations with evolutionary models indicate that NGVS 3543 has undergone a ram-pressure stripping (RPS) that peaked $\sim$100 Myr ago, transforming a blue gas-rich UDG into a red gas-poor UDG. Star formation has taken place in the ram pressure stripped gas, the mass of which is $\sim$10$^8$ M$_{\odot}$, forming star complexes with a typical age of $\sim$20 Myr and a stellar mass of $\sim$10$^4$ M$_{\odot}$. These results suggest that we are observing for the first time the ongoing transformation of a gas-rich UDG into a red and quiescent UDG under the effect of a ram pressure stripping event. The same process could explain the lack of star-forming UDGs in rich environments observed in several nearby clusters., Comment: 20 pages, 11 Figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2021
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40. VLA resolves unexpected radio structures in the Perseus cluster of galaxies
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Gendron-Marsolais, Marie-Lou, Hull, Charles L. H., Perley, Rick, Rudnick, Lawrence, Kraft, Ralph, Hlavacek-Larrondo, Julie, Fabian, Andrew C., Roediger, Elke, van Weeren, Reinout J., Richard-Laferrière, Annabelle, Golden-Marx, Emmet, Arakawa, Naoki, and McBride, James D.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present new deep, high-resolution, 1.5 GHz observations of the prototypical nearby Perseus galaxy cluster from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array. We isolate for the first time the complete tail of radio emission of the bent-jet radio galaxy NGC 1272, which had been previously mistaken to be part of the radio mini-halo. The possibility that diffuse radio galaxy emission contributes to mini-halo emission may be a general phenomenon in relaxed cool-core clusters, and should be explored. The collimated jets of NGC 1272 initially bend to the west, and then transition eastward into faint, 60 kpc-long extensions with eddy-like structures and filaments. We suggest interpretations for these structures that involve bulk motions of intracluster gas, the galaxy's orbit in the cluster including projection effects, and the passage of the galaxy through a sloshing cold front. Instabilities and turbulence created at the surface of this cold front and in the turbulent wake of the infalling host galaxy most likely play a role in the formation of the observed structures. We also discover a series of faint rings, south-east of NGC 1272, which are a type of structure that has never been seen before in galaxy clusters., Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, Submitted to ApJ
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- 2021
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41. A Virgo Environmental Survey Tracing Ionised Gas Emission (VESTIGE).IX. The effects of ram pressure stripping down to the scale of individual HII regions in the dwarf galaxy IC 3476
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Boselli, A., Lupi, A., Epinat, B., Amram, P., Fossati, M., Anderson, J. P., Boissier, S., Boquien, M., Consolandi, G., Cote, P., Cuillandre, J. C., Ferrarese, L., Galbany, L., Gavazzi, G., Gomez-Lopez, J. A., Gwyn, S., Hensler, G., Hutchings, J., Kuncarayakti, H., Longobardi, A., Peng, E. W., Plana, H., Postma, J., Roediger, J., Roehlly, Y., Schimd, C., Trinchieri, G., and Vollmer, B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the IB(s)m galaxy IC 3476 observed in the context of VESTIGE, a blind narrow-band Halpha+[NII] imaging survey of the Virgo cluster. The deep narrow-band (NB) image reveals a very pertubed ionised gas distribution, characterised by a prominent banana-shaped structure in the front of the galaxy formed of giant HII regions crossing the stellar disc, with star forming structures at ~8 kpc from the edges of the stellar disc, detected also in a deep FUV ASTROSAT/UVIT image. This particular morphology indicates that the galaxy is undergoing an almost edge-on ram pressure stripping event. The NB image also shows that the star formation activity is totally quenched in the leading edge of the disc, where the gas has been removed during the interaction. The SED fitting analysis indicates that this quenching episode is very recent (~50 Myr), and roughly corresponds to an increase of the star formation activity in the inner regions with respect to what expected for secular evolution. The analysis of these data, whose angular resolution allows the study of the induced effects of the perturbation down to the scale of individual HII regions, also suggests that the increase of the star formation activity is due to the compression of the gas along the stellar disc of the galaxy, which is able to increase its mean electron density and boost the star formation process producing bright HII regions. The hydrodynamic interaction has deeply perturbed the velocity field of the ionised gas component while leaving unaffected that of the stellar disc. The comparison of the data with hydrodynamic simulations accounting for the different gas phases (atomic, molecular, ionised) consistently indicates that the perturbing event is very recent, once again confirming that ram pressure stripping is a violent phenomenon able to perturb on short timescales the evolution of galaxies in rich environments., Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2020
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42. Gonogo: An R Implementation of Test Methods to Perform, Analyze and Simulate Sensitivity Experiments
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Roediger, Paul A.
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Statistics - Computation ,Statistics - Applications ,Statistics - Methodology ,Statistics - Machine Learning ,Statistics - Other Statistics - Abstract
This work provides documentation for a suite of R functions contained in gonogo.R. The functions provide sensitivity testing practitioners and researchers with an ability to conduct, analyze and simulate various sensitivity experiments involving binary responses and a single stimulus level (e.g., drug dosage, drop height, velocity, etc.). Included are the modern Neyer and 3pod adaptive procedures, as well as the Bruceton and Langlie. The latter two benchmark procedures are capable of being performed according to generalized up-down transformed-response rules. Each procedure is designated phase-one of a three-phase experiment. The goal of phase-one is to achieve overlapping data. The two additional (and optional) refinement phases utilize the D-optimal criteria and the Robbins-Monro-Joseph procedure. The goals of the two refinement phases are to situate testing in the vicinity of the median and tails of the latent response distribution, respectively., Comment: This documentation is 58 pages in length and contains 31 figures, 40 tables and 2 flow diagrams. The subject of much of the paper, the gonogo.R file, contains 118 functions plus 2 constants and is available online
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- 2020
43. Establishing Earth's Minimoon Population through Characterization of Asteroid 2020 CD$_3$
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Fedorets, Grigori, Micheli, Marco, Jedicke, Robert, Naidu, Shantanu P., Farnocchia, Davide, Granvik, Mikael, Moskovitz, Nicholas, Schwamb, Megan E., Weryk, Robert, Wierzchoś, Kacper, Christensen, Eric, Pruyne, Theodore, Bottke, William F., Ye, Quanzhi, Wainscoat, Richard, Devogèle, Maxime, Buchanan, Laura E., Djupvik, Anlaug Amanda, Faes, Daniel M., Föhring, Dora, Roediger, Joel, Seccull, Tom, and Smith, Adam B.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on our detailed characterization of Earth's second known temporary natural satellite, or minimoon, asteroid 2020 CD3. An artificial origin can be ruled out based on its area-to-mass ratio and broadband photometry, which suggest that it is a silicate asteroid belonging to the S or V complex in asteroid taxonomy. The discovery of 2020 CD3 allows for the first time a comparison between known minimoons and theoretical models of their expected physical and dynamical properties. The estimated diameter of 1.2+0.4-0.2 m and geocentric capture approximately a decade after the first known minimoon, 2006 RH120, are in agreement with theoretical predictions. The capture duration of 2020 CD3 of at least 2.7 yr is unexpectedly long compared to the simulation average, but it is in agreement with simulated minimoons that have close lunar encounters, providing additional support for the orbital models. 2020 CD3's atypical rotation period, significantly longer than theoretical predictions, suggests that our understanding of meter-scale asteroids needs revision. More discoveries and a detailed characterization of the population can be expected with the forthcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time., Comment: 22 pages, 6 Figures, 5 Tables, to appear in the Astronomical Journal
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- 2020
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44. A Picture's Worth a Thousand Words: Visualizing n-dimensional Overlap in Logistic Regression Models with Empirical Likelihood
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Roediger, Paul A.
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Statistics - Computation ,Statistics - Applications ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
In this note, conditions for the existence and uniqueness of the maximum likelihood estimate for multidimensional predictor, binary response models are introduced from a sensitivity testing point of view. The well known condition of Silvapulle is translated to be an empirical likelihood maximization which, with existing R code, mechanizes the process of assessing overlap status. The translation shifts the meaning of overlap, defined by geometrical properties of the two-predictor groups, from the intersection of their convex cones is non-empty to the more understandable requirement that the convex hull of their differences contains zero. The code is applied to reveal the character of overlap by examining minimal overlapping structures and cataloging them in dimensions fewer than four. Rules to generate minimal higher dimensional structures which account for overlap are provided. Supplementary materials are available online., Comment: Contains 1 pdf file consisting of 22 pages, 12 tables, 10 figures, and 1 appendix
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- 2020
45. GASP XXIX -- Unwinding the arms of spiral galaxies via ram-pressure stripping
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Bellhouse, Callum, McGee, Sean L., Smith, Rory, Poggianti, Bianca M., Jaffé, Yara L., Kraljic, Katarina, Franchetto, Andrea, Fritz, Jacopo, Vulcani, Benedetta, Tonnesen, Stephanie, Roediger, Elke, Moretti, Alessia, Gullieuszik, Marco, and Shin, Jihye
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first study of the effect of ram-pressure "unwinding" the spiral arms of cluster galaxies. We study 11 ram-pressure stripped galaxies from GASP (GAs Stripping Phenomena in galaxies) in which, in addition to more commonly observed "jellyfish" features, dislodged material also appears to retain the original structure of the spiral arms. Gravitational influence from neighbours is ruled out and we compare the sample with a control group of undisturbed spiral galaxies and simulated stripped galaxies. We first confirm the unwinding nature, finding the spiral arm pitch angle increases radially in 10 stripped galaxies and also simulated face-on and edge-on stripped galaxies. We find only younger stars in the unwound component, while older stars in the disc remain undisturbed. We compare the morphology and kinematics with simulated ram-pressure stripping galaxies, taking into account the estimated inclination with respect to the intracluster medium and find that in edge-on stripping, unwinding can occur due to differential ram-pressure caused by the disc rotation, causing stripped material to slow and "pile-up". In face-on cases, gas removed from the outer edges falls to higher orbits, appearing to "unwind". The pattern is fairly short-lived (<0.5Gyr) in the stripping process, occurring during first infall and eventually washed out by the ICM wind into the tail of the jellyfish galaxy. By comparing simulations with the observed sample, we find a combination of face-on and edge-on "unwinding" effects are likely to be occurring in our galaxies as they experience stripping with different inclinations with respect to the ICM., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 30 pages, 17 figures
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- 2020
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46. The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey. XXXIV. Ultra-Compact Dwarf (UCD) Galaxies in the Virgo Cluster
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Liu, Chengze, Côté, Patrick, Peng, Eric W., Roediger, Joel, Zhang, Hongxin, Ferrarese, Laura, Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén, Guhathakurta, Puragra, Yang, Xiaohu, Jing, Yipeng, Alamo-Martinez, Karla, Blakeslee, John P., Boselli, Alessandro, Cuilandre, Jean-Charles, Duc, Pierre-Alain, Durrell, Patrick, Gwyn, Stephen, Jordán, Andres, Ko, Youkyung, Lançon, Ariane, Lim, Sungsoon, Longobardi, Alessia, Mei, Simona, Mihos, J. Christopher, Munoz, Roberto, Powalka, Mathieu, Puzia, Thomas, Spengler, Chelsea, and Toloba, Elisa
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a study of ultra compact dwarf (UCD) galaxies in the Virgo cluster based mainly on imaging from the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). Using $\sim$100 deg$^{2}$ of $u^*giz$ imaging, we have identified more than 600 candidate UCDs, from the core of Virgo out to its virial radius. Candidates have been selected through a combination of magnitudes, ellipticities, colors, surface brightnesses, half-light radii and, when available, radial velocities. Candidates were also visually validated from deep NGVS images. Subsamples of varying completeness and purity have been defined to explore the properties of UCDs and compare to those of globular clusters and the nuclei of dwarf galaxies with the aim of delineating the nature and origins of UCDs. From a surface density map, we find the UCDs to be mostly concentrated within Virgo's main subclusters, around its brightest galaxies. We identify several subsamples of UCDs -- i.e., the brightest, largest, and those with the most pronounced and/or asymmetric envelopes -- that could hold clues to the origin of UCDs and possible evolutionary links with dwarf nuclei. We find some evidence for such a connection from the existence of diffuse envelopes around some UCDs, and comparisons of radial distributions of UCDs and nucleated galaxies within the cluster., Comment: 70 pages, 24 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in ApJS
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- 2020
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47. The Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). XXX. Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies and their Globular Cluster Systems
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Lim, Sungsoon, Côté, Patrick, Peng, Eric W., Ferrarese, Laura, Roediger, Joel C., Durrell, Patrick R., Mihos, J. Christopher, Wang, Kaixiang, Gwyn, S. D. J., Cuillandre, Jean-Charles, Liu, Chengze, Sánchez-Janssen, Rubén, Toloba, Elisa, Sales, Laura V., Guhathakurta, Puragra, Lançon, Ariane, and Puzia, Thomas H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a study of ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) in the Virgo Cluster based on deep imaging from the Next Generation Virgo Cluster Survey (NGVS). Applying a new definition for the UDG class based on galaxy scaling relations, we define samples of 44 and 26 UDGs using expansive and restrictive selection criteria, respectively. Our UDG sample includes objects that are significantly fainter than previously known UDGs: i.e., more than half are fainter than $\langle\mu\rangle_e \sim27.5$ mag arcsec$^{-2}$. The UDGs in Virgo's core region show some evidence for being structurally distinct from "normal" dwarf galaxies, but this separation disappears when considering the full sample of galaxies throughout the cluster. UDGs are more centrally concentrated in their spatial distribution than other Virgo galaxies of similar luminosity, while their morphologies demonstrate that at least some UDGs owe their diffuse nature to physical processes---such as tidal interactions or low-mass mergers---that are at play within the cluster environment. The globular cluster (GC) systems of Virgo UDGs have a wide range in specific frequency ($S_N$), with a higher mean $S_N$ than "normal" Virgo dwarfs, but a lower mean $S_N$ than Coma UDGs at fixed luminosity. Their GCs are predominantly blue, with a small contribution from red clusters in the more massive UDGs. The combined GC luminosity function is consistent with those observed in dwarf galaxies, showing no evidence of being anomalously luminous. The diversity in their morphologies and their GC properties suggests no single process has given rise to all objects within the UDG class. Based on the available evidence, we conclude that UDGs are simply those systems that occupy the extended tails of the galaxy size and surface brightness distributions., Comment: 31 pages, 16 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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48. GASP XXI. Star formation rates in the tails of galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping
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Gullieuszik, Marco, Poggianti, Bianca M., McGee, Sean L., Moretti, Alessia, Vulcani, Benedetta, Tonnesen, Stephanie, Roediger, Elke, Jaffé, Yara L., Fritz, Jacopo, Franchetto, Andrea, Omizzolo, Alessandro, Bettoni, Daniela, Radovich, Mario, and Wolter, Anna
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Using MUSE observations from the GASP survey, we study 54 galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping (RPS) spanning a wide range in galaxy mass and host cluster mass. We use this rich sample to study how the star formation rate (SFR) in the tails of stripped gas depends on the properties of the galaxy and its host cluster. We show that the interplay between all the parameters involved is complex and that there is not a single, dominant one in shaping the observed amount of SFR. Hence, we develop a simple analytical approach to describe the mass fraction of stripped gas and the SFR in the tail, as a function of the cluster velocity dispersion, galaxy stellar mass, clustercentric distance and speed in the intracluster medium. Our model provides a good description of the observed gas truncation radius and of the fraction of star-formation rate (SFR) observed in the stripped tails, once we take into account the fact that the star formation efficiency in the tails is a factor $\sim 5$ lower than in the galaxy disc, in agreement with GASP ongoing HI and CO observations. We finally estimate the contribution of RPS to the intracluster light (ICL) and find that the average SFR in the tails of ram-pressure stripped gas is $\sim 0.22 M_{\odot}\,\mathrm{yr}^{-1} $ per cluster. By extrapolating this result to evaluate the contribution to the ICL at different epochs, we compute an integrated average value per cluster of $\sim 4 \times 10^9 M_\odot$ of stars formed in the tails of RPS galaxies since $z\sim 1$., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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49. The ram pressure stripped radio tails of galaxies in the Coma cluster
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Chen, Hao, Sun, Ming, Yagi, Masafumi, Bravo-Alfaro, Hector, Brinks, Elias, Kenney, Jeffrey, Combes, Francoise, Sivanandam, Suresh, Jachym, Pavel, Fossati, Matteo, Gavazzi, Giuseppe, Boselli, Alessandro, Nulsen, Paul, Sarazin, Craig, Ge, Chong, Yoshida, Michitoshi, and Roediger, Elke
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Previous studies have revealed a population of galaxies in galaxy clusters with ram pressure stripped (RPS) tails of gas and embedded young stars. We observed 1.4 GHz continuum and HI emission with the Very Large Array in its B-configuration in two fields of the Coma cluster to study the radio properties of RPS galaxies. The best continuum sensitivities in the two fields are 6 and 8 $\mu$Jy per 4'' beam respectively, which are 4 and 3 times deeper than those previously published. Radio continuum tails are found in 10 (8 are new) out of 20 RPS galaxies, unambiguously revealing the presence of relativistic electrons and magnetic fields in the stripped tails. Our results also hint that the tail has a steeper spectrum than the galaxy. The 1.4 GHz continuum in the tails is enhanced relative to their H$\alpha$ emission by a factor of $\sim$7 compared to the main bodies of the RPS galaxies. The 1.4 GHz continuum of the RPS galaxies is also enhanced relative to their IR emission by a factor of $\sim$2 compared to star-forming galaxies. The enhancement is likely related to ram pressure and turbulence in the tail. We furthermore present HI detections in three RPS galaxies and upper limits for the other RPS galaxies. The cold gas in D100's stripped tail is dominated by molecular gas, which is likely a consequence of the high ambient pressure. No evidence of radio emission associated with ultra-diffuse galaxies is found in our data., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRAS, matched with the accepted version
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- 2020
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50. A way to determine groundwater contributions to large river systems: The Elbe River during drought conditions
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Julia Zill, Christian Siebert, Tino Rödiger, Axel Schmidt, Benjamin S. Gilfedder, Sven Frei, Michael Schubert, Markus Weitere, and Ulf Mallast
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Groundwater-surface water interactions ,Losing and gaining stream ,First order river ,Multi-method approach ,Elbe River ,Water chemistry ,Physical geography ,GB3-5030 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Study region: Our study region extends over 450 stream km of the German part of the Elbe River, an ecologically and economically important first order river, between Schöna and Wittenberge. Study focus: Diffuse groundwater born nutrients are major contributors to increased algae growth in rivers, leading to eutrophication with serious consequences for water quality and ecosystem health. Therefore, knowledge of the spatial and temporal dynamics of diffuse groundwater discharge are required since groundwater often remains as a ‘black box’ for the identification of nutrient sources by managers. The multi-method approach, based on the inverse geochemical and tritium modelling, a flux balance, a darcy approach and hydraulic gradients, showed complex spatiotemporal dynamics along the studied reach of the Elbe River. Groundwater inflow was variable but occurred along the entire river. Areas of high groundwater fluxes were located in the upstream mountainous catchment areas and decreasing downstream. New hydrological insights for the region: The multi-method approach provides a blueprint for the assessment of other large river systems. No single method was able to create conclusive results and most other approaches are only applicable in smaller stream systems. First time an estimation of groundwater flux rates, that can be used to quantify matter inputs, was made. In addition, we showed a way to detect and assess the impact of drainage channels in a heterogenous river system.
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- 2023
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