1,898 results on '"Raczka A"'
Search Results
2. Holonomic $\mathscr{D}$-modules on rigid analytic varieties
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Rączka, Feliks
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,14F10, 14F40, 14G22, 32C38 - Abstract
We study the category of holonomic $\mathscr{D}_{X}$-modules for a quasi-compact, quasi-separated, smooth rigid analytic variety $X$ over the field $\mathbb{C}(\!(t)\!)$. In particular, we prove finiteness of the de Rham cohomology for such modules., Comment: 22 pages, comments welcome
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- 2024
3. Integrating State Data Assimilation and Innovative Model Parameterization Reduces Simulated Carbon Uptake in the Arctic and Boreal Region
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Huo, Xueli, Fox, Andrew M, Dashti, Hamid, Devine, Charles, Gallery, William, Smith, William K, Raczka, Brett, Anderson, Jeffrey L, Rogers, Alistair, and Moore, David JP
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Earth Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Climate Action ,land data assimilation ,LAI and aboveground biomass ,GPP bias reduction ,Geophysics - Abstract
Model representation of carbon uptake and storage is essential for accurate projection of the response of the arctic-boreal zone to a rapidly changing climate. Land model estimates of LAI and aboveground biomass that can have a marked influence on model projections of carbon uptake and storage vary substantially in the arctic and boreal zone, making it challenging to correctly evaluate model estimates of Gross Primary Productivity (GPP). To understand and correct bias of LAI and aboveground biomass in the Community Land Model (CLM), we assimilated the 8-day Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) LAI observation and a machine learning product of annual aboveground biomass into CLM using an Ensemble Adjustment Kalman Filter (EAKF) in an experimental region including Alaska and Western Canada. Assimilating LAI and aboveground biomass reduced these model estimates by 58% and 72%, respectively. The change of aboveground biomass was consistent with independent estimates of canopy top height at both regional and site levels. The International Land Model Benchmarking system assessment showed that data assimilation significantly improved CLM's performance in simulating the carbon and hydrological cycles, as well as in representing the functional relationships between LAI and other variables. To further reduce the remaining bias in GPP after LAI bias correction, we re-parameterized CLM to account for low temperature suppression of photosynthesis. The LAI bias corrected model that included the new parameterization showed the best agreement with model benchmarks. Combining data assimilation with model parameterization provides a useful framework to assess photosynthetic processes in LSMs.
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- 2024
4. Frobenius pushforwards of of vector bundles on projective spaces
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Rączka, Feliks
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,14J60, 14M25, 13A35 - Abstract
We investigate when the filtration induced by Beilinson's spectral sequence splits non-canonically into a direct sum decomposition. We conclude that for any vector bundle $\mathcal{E}$ on a projective space over an algebraically closed field of characteristic $p>0$ there exists $r_{0}$ such that for $r\geq r_{0}$ the Frobenius pushforward $\mathsf{F}^{r}_{*}\mathcal{E}$ decomposes as a direct sum of line bundles and exterior powers of the cotangent bundle (we also give a variant for the "toric Frobenius map" valid in any characteristic). As an application we give a short proof of Klyachko's theorem for vanishing of the cohomology of toric vector bundles on projective spaces., Comment: 11 pages, comments welcome
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- 2024
5. Modules of minimal dimension over completed Weyl algebras
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Rączka, Feliks
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,14F10, 14G22, 32C38, 14F40 - Abstract
We study the category of modules of minimal dimension over completed Weyl algebras in equal characteristic zero. In particular we prove finiteness of de Rham cohomology of such modules., Comment: 11 pages, comments welcome
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- 2024
6. Quantifying local-scale changes in Amazonian forest cover using phytoliths
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Witteveen, Nina H., Blaus, Ansis, Raczka, Marco F., Herrick, Christina, Palace, Mike, Nascimento, Majoi N., van Loon, Emiel E., Gosing, William D., Bush, Mark B., and McMichael, Crystal N.H.
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Amazon ,beta regression ,forest cover ,landscape reconstruction ,palaeoecology ,phytoliths - Abstract
The ecosystem services and immense biodiversity of Amazon rainforests are threatened by deforestation and forest degradation. A key goal of modern archaeology and paleoecology in Amazonia is to establish the extent and duration of past forest disturbance by humans. Fossil phytoliths are an established proxy to identify the duration of disturbance in lake sedimentary and soil archives. What is not known, is the spatial scale of such forest disturbances when identified by phytoliths. Here we use phytolith assemblages to detect local-scale forest openings, provide an estimate of extent, and consider long-term forest recovery. We use modern phytolith assemblages of 50 Amazonian lakes to i) assess how phytolith assemblages vary across forest cover at 5 spatial scales (100 m, 200 m, 500 m, 1 km, 2 km), ii) model which phytolith morphotypes can accurately predict forest cover at 5 spatial scales, and iii) compare phytoliths with pollen to quantify their relative ability to detect forest cover changes. DCA results show phytolith assemblages could be used to differentiate low, intermediate, and high forest cover values, but not to distinguish between biogeographical gradients across Amazonia. Beta regression models show Poaceae phytoliths can accurately predict forest cover within 200 m of Amazonian lakes. This modern calibration dataset can be used to make quantitative reconstructions of forest cover changes in Amazonia, to generate novel insights into long-term forest recovery. Combining phytoliths and pollen provides a unique opportunity to make qualitative and quantitative reconstructions of past vegetation changes, to better understand how human activities, environmental and climatic changes have shaped modern Amazonian forests.
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- 2024
7. Concept of a test bench for research into automatic resupply to improve the resilience of critical infrastructure.
- Author
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Fynn Liegmann, Katrin Schulte, Felix Annen, Jens Haubrock, Michael Kelker, Svenja Joseph, Sebastian Raczka, and Christian Rehtanz
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- 2024
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8. History of Palynological Sciences in Brazil
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Garcia, Maria Judite, Bernardes-de-Oliveira, Mary Elizabeth Cerruti, de Souza, Paulo Alves, Akabane, Thomas Kenji, de Oliveira, Paulo Eduardo, Bistrichi, Carlos Alberto, Watling, Jennifer, de Medeiros, Vanda Brito, de Almeida Santos, Rudney, Backes Macedo, Renato, Aumond Kuhn, Lidia, Guimarães da Silva, Wagner, Raczka, Marco Felipe, Christiano-de-Souza, Isabel Cortez, Iannuzzi, Roberto, editor, Rößler, Ronny, editor, and Kunzmann, Lutz, editor
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- 2024
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9. Impact of surrogates for insulin resistance on mortality and life expectancy in primary care: a nationwide cross-sectional study with registry linkage (LIPIDOGRAM2015)
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Al-Shaer, B., Andrusewicz, W., Andrzejczuk-Rosa, M., Anusz-Gaszewska, E., Bagińska, A., Balawajder, P., Bańka, G., Barańska-Skubisz, E., Barbara Przyczyna, B., Bartkowiak, S., Bartodziej, J., Bartosiewicz, M., Basałyga, M., Batyra, A., Bąk, A., Bednarz, M., Bejnar, K., Bernacki, W., Betiuk-Kwiatkowska, M., Biegaj, S., Bień, M., Bilski, W., Biłogan, M., Biruta-Pawłowska, G., Biskup, A., Błaszczyk, B., Błaszczyk, H., BłońskaJankowska, T., Bogacka-Gancarczyk, B., Bojanowska, M., Bonda, E., Borowik-Skwarek, J., Borowska, J., Bruckner, J., Brzostek, J., Brzuchacz, M., Budzyńska, M., Bulzacka-Fugiel, I., Bulzak, J., Bunikowski, K., Cebulska, A., Celka, T., Cempel-Nowak, E., Chechliński, W., Chludzińska, A., Chmiel, D., Chmielewska, M., Cichy, M., Ciemięga, A., Ciepluch, A., Cieszyńska, I., Czajka, B., Czapla, B., Czerner, M., Czerwińska, B., Czuryszkiewicz, W., Daleka, E., Dawid, Z., Dąbrowska, M., Dąbrowska, R., Dąbrowski, D., Dąbrowski, M., Demczyszyn, K., Dębowska-Serwińska, A., Dmochowski, J., Dobrzecka-Kiwior, J., Dolanowska, E., Dolanowski, H., Dołek, P., Domagała, M., Domański, H., Doszel, A., Duda, D., Dudkowska, M., Dudziuk, B., Dybciak, P., Dymanowski, M., Dziadzio-Bolek, L., Eicke, M., El-Hassan, H., Eremus, A., Fąferek-Muller, M., Figura-Roguska, E., Fijałkowska-Kaczmarek, I., Flis, M., Florczak, T., Florczuk, M., Foryszewska-Witan, E., Frydrych, W., Fugiel, A., Futyma, E., Gaca-Jaroszewicz, A., Gajdamowicz, I., Ganczarski, K., Gatnar, A., Gers, M., Głowacki, A., Głód, K., Godula, J., Gołąb, J., Gołębiewski, M., Goszczyńska, E., Gościcka, K., GórnaHajduga, A., Górny, E., Grabowska, T., Grabowski, R., Graczyk-Duda, A., Gromow, A., Grudewicz, A., Gruszecka, J., Gruszka, A., Gryboś, J., Grzebyk, J., Grzechowiak, A., Grzesiak, D., Grześkowiak, T., Guźla, A., Hachuła, G., Hawel, B., Hiltawska, H., Honkowicz, E., Ignatowicz, J., Imielski, K., Iwaniura, A., JagiełaSzymala, A., Jalć-Sowała, M., Janczylik, A., Janisz, E., Janiszek, M., Jankiewicz-Ziobro, K., Januszewska, K., Jaremek, A., Jaros-Urbaniak, A., Jarosz, J., Jarosz, P., Jasiński, W., Jezierska-Wasilewska, M., Jędraszewski, T., Jędrzejowska, A., Józefowicz, R., Juźwin, K., Kacprzak, E., Kaczmarek-Szewczyk, J., Kaczmarzyk, M., Kandziora, R., Kaniewski, C., Karolak-Brandt, L., Kasperczyk, S., Kasperek-Dyląg, E., Kedziora, I., Kępa, A., Kiciński, J., Kielak-Al-Hosam, J., Kiełczawa, Ł., Kilimowicz, P., Kitliński, K., Kiwka, T., Klein, U., Klichowicz, L., Klimowicz, A., Klonowski, B., Kmolek, B., Kobyłko-Klepacka, E., Kocoń, A., Kolenda, A., Kollek, E., Kopeć, M., Koper-Kozikowska, B., Koralewska, J., Korczyńska, M., Korzeniewski, M.T., Kosk, A., Kotarski, K., Kowalczyk, E., Kowalczyk, M., Kowalik, I., Kozak-Błażkiewicz, B., Kozik, M., Kozłowska, D., Kozłowska, E., Kozłowska, M., Kozubski, T., Kózka, K., Kraśnik, L., Krężel, T., Krochmal, B., Król, B., Król, G., Król, J., Królikowska, T., Kruszewska, H., Krygier-Potrykus, B., Krystek, W., Krzysztoń, J., Kubicki, T., Kuczmierczyk-El-Hassan, A., Kuczyńska-Witek, W., Kujda, D., Kurowski, A., Kurzelewska-Solarz, I., Kwaczyńska, M., Kwaśniak, M., Kwaśniak, P., Kwietniewska, T., Łebek-Ordon, A., Lebiedowicz, A., Lejkowska-Olszewska, L., Lentas, M., Lesiewicz-Ksycińska, A., Limanowski, M., Łoniewski, S., Łopata, J.A., Łubianka, B., Łukasiuk, I., Łużna, M., Łysiak, M., Łysik, B., Machowski, Z., Maciaczyk-Kubiak, J., Mackiewicz-Zabochnicka, G., Magner-Krężel, Z., Majda, S., Malinowski, P., Mantyka, J., Marchlik, E., Martyna-Ordyniec, G., Marzec, J., Marzec, M., Matejko-Wałkiewicz, R., Mazur, M., Michalczak, M., Michalska-Żyłka, A., Michniewicz, M., Mika-Staniszewska, D., Mikiciuk, E., Mikołajczak, T., Milewski, J., Miller, E., Misiaszek, B., Mizik-Łukowska, M., Młyńczyk-Pokutycka, E., Mocek, M., Moczała, M., Morawska-Hermanowicz, M., Moryc, P., Moskal, A., Moskal, S., Moździerz, A., Moździerz, P., Mrozińska, M., Mrozowicz, K., Mróz, G., Munia, T., Mura, A., Muras-Skudlarska, M., Murawska, E.Z., Murawski, Ł., Murawski, R., Musielak, R., Nadaj, K., Nagarnowicz, W., Napierała, R., Niedźwiecka, M., Niemirski, A., Nikiel, J., Nosal, M., Nowacki, W., Nowak, J., Nyrka, M., Obst, A., Ochowicz, J., Ogonowska, E., Oleszczyk, M., Ołdakowski, A., Ołowniuk-Stefaniak, I., Ordowska-Rejman, J., Orliński, M., Osińska, B., Ostańska-Burian, A., Paciorkowska, A., Paczkowska, U., Paluch, L., Pałka, L., Paszko-Wojtkowska, J., Paszkowska, A., PawlakGanczarska, E., Pawlik, W., Pawłowska, I., Paździora, M., Permiakow, G., Petlic-Marendziak, A., Piasecka, T., Piaścińska, E., Piktel, A., Pilarska-Igielska, A., Piotrkowska, A., Piwowar-Klag, K., Planer, M., Plewa, J., Płatkiewicz, P., Płonczyńska, B., Podgórska, A., Polewska, M., Porębska, B., Porwoł, P., Potakowska, I., Prokop, A., Przybylski, J., Przybyła, M., Psiuk, H., Ptak, K., Puzoń, G., Rabiza, N., Rachwalik, S., Raczyńska, E., Raniszewska, M., Romanek-Kozik, A., Rosa, A., Rosa, K., Rozewicz, A., Rudzka-Kałwak, J., Rusak, J., Rutkowska, D., Rybacki, M., Rybińska, D., Rycyk-Sadowska, A., Rynda, L., Rynkiewicz, B., SadowskaKrawczyk, B., Sadowska-Zarzycka, M., Sarnecka, B., Sawalach-Tomanik, E., Sidor-Drozd, B., SiemieniakDębska, M., Sieroń, A., Siewniak-Zalewska, B., Sikora, A., Sitarska-Pawlina, B., Skorupski, J., SkrzypińskaMansfeld, I., Skubisz, J., Skwarek, R., Słodyczka, M., Smentek, M., Smolińska, K., Solarz, B., Sosnowska, W., Sroka, B., Stachura, H., Stangreciak, D., Staniak, M., Stańczyk, Z., Stańszczak-Ozga, D., Startek, E., Stefańczyk, M., Stelmach, R., Sternadel-Rączka, E., Sternik, M., Stępień, J., Stocka, J., Stokowska-Wojda, M., Studler-Karpińska, M., Suchorukow, W., Sufryd, W., Supłacz, B., Sygacz, J., Szczepański, Ł., Szkandera, J., Szłapa-Zellner, J., Szydlarska, D., Śliwa, T., Śliwka, J., Śmiejkowski, Ł., Targońska, A., Tesarska, E., Tobiasz, M., Tomaka, J., Tomalska-Bywalec, K., Tomiak, E., Topczewski, S., Trawińska, A., Trela-Mucha, L., Trojanowski, D., Trzaskowska, M., Trzcińska-Larska, B., Trznadel-Mozul, A., Ulanicka-Liwoch, K., Urbanowicz, M., Uthke-Kluzek, A., Waczyński, J., Walczak, J., Warsz, L., Wasyńczuk, M., Wąchała-Jędras, U., Wąsowicz, D., Wczysła, J., Wenda, F., Werner-Kubicka, E., Weryszko, E., Węgrzynowska, B., Wiaksa, M., Wiankowski, M., Wicherek, A., Wieczorek, R., Wiencek, R., Wienzek-Tatara, G., Wierzbicka, B., Wierzbicki, M., Wilczyńska, B., Wilmańska, D., Winiarski, P., Wiszniewska-Pabiszczak, A., Witkowska, M.B., Witzling, J., Wlaź, A., Wojtkowiak, I., Woydyłło, J., Woźniak, K., Wójtowicz, A., Wrona, J., Wrońska, M., Wujkowska, H., Wyrąbek, J., Wysokiński, O., Zakrzewski, R., Zaleska-Zatkalik, J., Zaleski, J., Zalewska-Dybciak, M., Zalewska, E., Zalewska-Uchimiak, B., Zawadzka-Krajewska, J., Zawadzki, J., Zieliński, A., Zubrycka, E., Żybort, I., Żymełka, M., Chen, Yang, Zhong, Ziyi, Gue, Ying, Banach, Maciej, McDowell, Garry, Mikhailidis, Dimitri P., Toth, Peter P., Penson, Peter E., Tomasik, Tomasz, Windak, Adam, Gierlotka, Marek, Osadnik, Tadeusz, Kuras, Agnieszka, Miga, Marcin, Jozwiak, Jacek, and Lip, Gregory Y.H.
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- 2025
- Full Text
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10. Laser Driven Nuclear physics at ELINP
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Negoita, F., Roth, M., Thirolf, P. G., Tudisco, S., Hannachi, F., Moustaizis, S., Pomerantz, I., Mckenna, P., Fuchs, J., Sphor, K., Acbas, G., Anzalone, A., Audebert, P., Balascuta, S., Cappuzzello, F., Cernaianu, M. O., Chen, S., Dancus, I., Freeman, R., Geissel, H., Ghenuche, P., Gizzi, L., Gobet, F., Gosselin, G., Gugiu, M., Higginson, D., D¶Humiêres, E., Ivan, C., Jaroszynski, D., Kar, S., Lamia, L., Leca, V., Neagu, L., Lanzalone, G., Meot, V., Mirfayzi, S. R., Mitu, I. O., Morel, P., Murphy, C., Petcu, C., Petrascu, H., Petrone, C., Raczka, P., Risca, M., Rotaru, F., Santos, J. J., Schumacher, D., Stutman, D., Tarisien, M., Tataru, M., Tatulea, B., Turcu, I. C. E., Versteegen, M., Ursescu, D., Gales, S., and Zamfir, N. V.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
High power lasers have proven being capable to produce high energy gamma rays, charged particles and neutrons to induce all kinds of nuclear reactions. At ELI, the studies with high power lasers will enter for the first time into new domains of power and intensities.
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- 2022
11. Engaging Trusted Messengers to Increase COVID-19 Pediatric Vaccine Uptake in Philadelphia: Lessons from the VaxUpPhillyFamilies program
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Badlis, Sarah, Yu, Haolong, Klusaritz, Heather, S.L. Tan, Andy, Dooley, Teresa, Heggs, Helaine, Collins, Sophia, Raczka, Gabriela, DeRoche-Brown, Naomi, Feuerstein-Simon, Rachel, Bauermeister, José A., Villarruel, Antonia M., Bonett, Stephen, Glanz, Karen, and Lipman, Terri
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- 2024
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12. Long-term nitrogen fertilization impacts plant-microbial interactions differently in arbuscular and ectomycorrhizal trees
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Carrara, Joseph E., Raczka, Nanette C., and Brzostek, Edward R.
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- 2023
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13. Forest carbon uptake as influenced by snowpack and length of photosynthesis season in seasonally snow-covered forests of North America
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Yang, Julia C., Bowling, David R., Smith, Kenneth R., Kunik, Lewis, Raczka, Brett, Anderegg, William R.L., Bahn, Michael, Blanken, Peter D., Richardson, Andrew D., Burns, Sean P., Bohrer, Gil, Desai, Ankur R., Arain, M. Altaf, Staebler, Ralf M., Ouimette, Andrew P., Munger, J. William, and Litvak, Marcy E.
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- 2024
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14. Influence of magnetic interactions in iron oxide nanoparticle polymer composites on magnetism and induction heating
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Raczka, Theodor, Wolf, Andreas, Reichstein, Jakob, Stauch, Claudia, Schug, Benedikt, Müssig, Stephan, and Mandel, Karl
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- 2024
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15. Divergent responses of belowground carbon investment in Quercus spp. and Acer saccharum to reduced precipitation
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Raczka, Nanette C., Walter, Christopher A., Carrara, Joseph E., and Brzostek, Edward R.
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- 2023
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16. Throughfall exclusion and fertilization effects on tropical dry forest tree plantations, a large-scale experiment
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G. Vargas Gutiérrez, D. Pérez-Aviles, N. Raczka, D. Pereira-Arias, J. Tijerín-Triviño, L. D. Pereira-Arias, D. Medvigy, B. G. Waring, E. Morrisey, E. Brzostek, and J. S. Powers
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Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Life ,QH501-531 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Across tropical ecosystems, global environmental change is causing drier climatic conditions and increased nutrient deposition. Such changes represent large uncertainties due to unknown interactions between drought and nutrient availability in controlling ecosystem net primary productivity (NPP). Using a large-scale manipulative experiment, we studied for 4 years whether nutrient availability affects the individual and integrated responses of aboveground and belowground ecosystem processes to throughfall exclusion in 30-year-old mixed plantations of tropical dry forest tree species in Guanacaste, Costa Rica. We used a factorial design with four treatments: control, fertilization (F), drought (D), and drought + fertilization (D + F). While we found that a 13 %–15 % reduction in soil moisture only led to weak effects in the studied ecosystem processes, NPP increased as a function of F and D + F. The relative contribution of each biomass flux to NPP varied depending on the treatment, with woody biomass being more important for F and root biomass for D + F and D. Moreover, the F treatment showed modest increases in maximum canopy cover. Plant functional type (i.e., N fixation or deciduousness) and not the experimental manipulations was the main source of variation in tree growth. Belowground processes also responded to experimental treatments, as we found a decrease in nodulation for F plots and an increase in microbial carbon use efficiency for F and D plots. Our results emphasize that nutrient availability, more so than modest reductions in soil moisture, limits ecosystem processes in tropical dry forests and that soil fertility interactions with other aspects of drought intensity (e.g., vapor pressure deficit) are yet to be explored.
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- 2023
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17. Amazonian pollen assemblages reflect biogeographic gradients and forest cover
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A. Blaus, C. N. H. McMichael, M. F. Raczka, C. Herrick, M. Palace, N. H. Witteveen, M. N. Nascimento, and M. B. Bush
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- 2023
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18. REPLY TO NIELSEN ET AL. : Social mindfulness is associated with countries’ environmental performance and individual environmental concern
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Van Doesum, Niels J., Murphy, Ryan O., Gallucci, Marcello, Aharonov-Majar, Efrat, Athenstaedt, Ursula, Au, Wing Tung, Bai, Liying, Böhm, Robert, Bovina, Inna, Buchan, Nancy R., Chen, Xiao-Ping, Dumont, Kitty B., Engelmann, Jan B., Eriksson, Kimmo, Euh, Hyun, Fiedler, Susann, Friesen, Justin, Gächter, Simon, Garcia, Camilo, González, Roberto, Graf, Sylvie, Growiec, Katarzyna, Guimond, Serge, Hřebíčková, Martina, Immer-Bernold, Elizabeth, Joireman, Jeff, Karagonlar, Gokhan, Kawakami, Kerry, Kiyonari, Toko, Kou, Yu, Kyrtsis, Alexandros-Andreas, Lay, Siugmin, Leonardelli, Geoffrey J., Li, Norman P., Li, Yang, Maciejovsky, Boris, Manesi, Zoi, Mashuri, Ali, Mok, Aurelia, Moser, Karin S., Moták, Ladislav, Netedu, Adrian, Platow, Michael J., Raczka-Winkler, Karolina, Folmer, Christopher P. Reinders, Reyna, Cecilia, Romano, Angelo, Shalvi, Shaul, Simão, Cláudia, Stivers, Adam W., Strimling, Pontus, Tsirbas, Yannis, Utz, Sonja, van der Meij, Leander, Waldzus, Sven, Wang, Yiwen, Weber, Bernd, Weisel, Ori, Wildschut, Tim, Winter, Fabian, Wu, Junhui, Yong, Jose C., and Van Lange, Paul A. M.
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- 2022
19. REPLY TO KOMATSU ET AL. : From local social mindfulness to global sustainability efforts?
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Van Doesum, Niels J., Murphy, Ryan O., Galluccie, Marcello, Aharonov-Majar, Efrat, Athenstaedt, Ursula, Au, Wing Tung, Baii, Liying, Böhm, Robert, Bovina, Inna, Buchan, Nancy R., Chen, Xiao-Ping, Dumont, Kitty B., Engelmann, Jan B., Eriksson, Kimmo, Euh, Hyun, Fiedler, Susann, Friesen, Justin, Gächter, Simon, Garcia, Camilo, González, Roberto, Graf, Sylvie, Growieca, Katarzyna, Guimond, Serge, Hřebíčková, Martina, Immer-Bernold, Elizabeth, Joireman, Jeff, Karagonlar, Gokhan, Kawakami, Kerry, Kiyonari, Toko, Kou, Yu, Kyrtsis, Alexandros-Andreas, Lay, Siugmin, Leonardelli, Geoffrey J., Li, Norman P., Lin, Yang, Maciejovsky, Boris, Manesi, Zoi, Mashuri, Ali, Mok, Aurelia, Moser, Karin S., Moták, Ladislav, Netedu, Adrian, Platow, Michael J., Raczka-Winkler, Karolina, Folmer, Christopher P. Reinders, Reynab, Cecilia, Romano, Angelo, Shalvi, Shaul, Simão, Cláudia, Stivers, Adam W., Strimling, Pontus, Tsirbas, Yannis, Utz, Sonja, van der Meijh, Leander, Waldzus, Sven, Wang, Yiwen, Weber, Bernd, Weisel, Ori, Wildschut, Tim, Winter, Fabian, Wu, Junhui, Yong, Jose C., and Van Lange, Paul A. M.
- Published
- 2022
20. 1108 Novel regulators of ImmTAC-mediated killing of melanoma cancer cells revealed by genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 screens
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Koustubh Ranade, Laura Collins, Adel Benlahrech, Aleksandra Raczka, Sophie Khakoo, Shankar Varadarajan, and James Clubley
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Published
- 2023
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21. Greater soil carbon losses from secondary than old-growth tropical forests
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Nanette C. Raczka, Qian Yi Ho, Vupasana Srinivasan, Ming Yang Lee, Chung-Wing Ko, Madeleine Königer, Terence Chua, Delia Binny, Kang Min Ngo, and Kelly M. Andersen
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belowground carbon dynamics ,fine root biomass ,soil moisture ,soil C efflux ,Southeast Asia ,Forestry ,SD1-669.5 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Tropical forests play a crucial role in mediating the global carbon cycle and climate. Southeast Asian tropical forests are experiencing ongoing threats of deforestation and degradation. There is an urgent need to determine how the conversion from primary forest to secondary forest coverage may impact C stocks and cycling. While old-growth forests typically contain larger stores of C aboveground than secondary forests, past research has found varied results for belowground soil C storage and fluxes between tropical forest types. We examined differences in annual soil C efflux in a 2-ha old-growth and an adjacent 2-ha 70-year-old secondary ForestGEO plots in Bukit Timah Nature Reserve in Singapore. We hypothesized that the secondary forest would have greater soil C efflux rates than the old-growth forest and explored several potential drivers of soil C efflux including abiotic and biotic factors such as soil moisture, fine root biomass, and ectomycorrhizal association. We found that the hypothesis was supported, suggesting that belowground carbon dynamics fundamentally differ with forest age. Additionally, we found that fine root biomass was the best predictor of soil C efflux in the secondary forest and soil moisture in the old-growth forest. The difference in soil C efflux between forest types indicates that with continued degradation of old-growth forests in Southeast Asia, conversion of old-growth forests into secondary forests may drive greater C loss from soils even after 70 years of regrowth.
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- 2023
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22. Self-Awareness, Assessment, and Organization with Personal Agility
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Sivaraman, Raji, Raczka, Michal, López-Paredes, Adolfo, Series Editor, Ding, Ronggui, editor, Wagner, Reinhard, editor, and Bodea, Constanta-Nicoleta, editor
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- 2022
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23. Women, Beware the Devil
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Lulu Raczka
- Published
- 2023
24. Women, Beware the Devil
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Raczka, Lulu, primary
- Published
- 2023
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25. Mechanistic evidence for tracking the seasonality of photosynthesis with solar-induced fluorescence
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Magney, Troy S, Bowling, David R, Logan, Barry A, Grossmann, Katja, Stutz, Jochen, Blanken, Peter D, Burns, Sean P, Cheng, Rui, Garcia, Maria A, Kӧhler, Philipp, Lopez, Sophia, Parazoo, Nicholas C, Raczka, Brett, Schimel, David, and Frankenberg, Christian
- Subjects
Carbon Cycle ,Chlorophyll ,Climate ,Ecosystem ,Environmental Monitoring ,Fluorescence ,Forests ,Photosynthesis ,Photosystem II Protein Complex ,Seasons ,Sunlight ,solar-induced fluorescence ,remote sensing ,gross primary production ,photosynthesis ,evergreen forest - Abstract
Northern hemisphere evergreen forests assimilate a significant fraction of global atmospheric CO2 but monitoring large-scale changes in gross primary production (GPP) in these systems is challenging. Recent advances in remote sensing allow the detection of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) emission from vegetation, which has been empirically linked to GPP at large spatial scales. This is particularly important in evergreen forests, where traditional remote-sensing techniques and terrestrial biosphere models fail to reproduce the seasonality of GPP. Here, we examined the mechanistic relationship between SIF retrieved from a canopy spectrometer system and GPP at a winter-dormant conifer forest, which has little seasonal variation in canopy structure, needle chlorophyll content, and absorbed light. Both SIF and GPP track each other in a consistent, dynamic fashion in response to environmental conditions. SIF and GPP are well correlated (R 2 = 0.62-0.92) with an invariant slope over hourly to weekly timescales. Large seasonal variations in SIF yield capture changes in photoprotective pigments and photosystem II operating efficiency associated with winter acclimation, highlighting its unique ability to precisely track the seasonality of photosynthesis. Our results underscore the potential of new satellite-based SIF products (TROPOMI, OCO-2) as proxies for the timing and magnitude of GPP in evergreen forests at an unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution.
- Published
- 2019
26. Sap flow velocities of Acer saccharum and Quercus velutina during drought: Insights and implications from a throughfall exclusion experiment in West Virginia, USA
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Guillén, Luis Andrés, Brzostek, Edward, McNeil, Brenden, Raczka, Nanette, Casey, Brittany, and Zegre, Nicolas
- Published
- 2022
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27. Impact of nonlinear electron transport model on character of light propagation in photorefractive semiconductors
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Ziółkowski, Andrzej and Weinert-Rączka, Ewa
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- 2022
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28. Social mindfulness and prosociality vary across the globe
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Van Doesum, Niels J., Murphy, Ryan O., Gallucci, Marcello, Aharonov-Majar, Efrat, Athenstaedt, Ursula, Au, Wing Tung, Bai, Liying, Böhm, Robert, Bovina, Inna, Buchan, Nancy R., Chen, Xiao-Ping, Dumont, Kitty B., Engelmann, Jan B., Eriksson, Kimmo, Euh, Hyun, Fiedler, Susann, Friesen, Justin, Gächter, Simon, Garcia, Camilo, González, Roberto, Graf, Sylvie, Growiec, Katarzyna, Guimond, Serge, Hřebíčková, Martina, Immer-Bernold, Elizabeth, Joireman, Jeff, Karagonlar, Gokhan, Kawakami, Kerry, Kiyonari, Toko, Kou, Yu, Kuhlman, D. Michael, Kyrtsis, Alexandros-Andreas, Lay, Siugmin, Leonardelli, Geoffrey J., Li, Norman P., Li, Yang, Maciejovsky, Boris, Manesi, Zoi, Mashuri, Ali, Mok, Aurelia, Moser, Karin S., Moták, Ladislav, Netedu, Adrian, Pammi, Chandrasekhar, Platow, Michael J., Raczka-Winkler, Karolina, Folmer, Christopher P. Reinders, Reyna, Cecilia, Romano, Angelo, Shalvi, Shaul, Simão, Cláudia, Stivers, Adam W., Strimling, Pontus, Tsirbas, Yannis, Utz, Sonja, van der Meij, Leander, Waldzus, Sven, Wang, Yiwen, Weber, Bernd, Weisel, Ori, Wildschut, Tim, Winter, Fabian, Wu, Junhui, Yong, Jose C., and Van Lange, Paul A. M.
- Published
- 2021
29. Strong electromagnetic pulses generated in high-intensity laser-matter interactions
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Rączka, P., Dubois, J. -L., Hulin, S., Rosiński, M., Zaraś-Szydłowska, A, and Badziak, J
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Results are reported of an experiment performed at the Eclipse laser facility in CELIA, Bordeaux, on the generation of strong electromagnetic pulses. Measurements were performed of the target neutralization current, the total target charge and the tangential component of the magnetic field for the laser energies ranging from 45 mJ to 92 mJ with the pulse duration approximately 40 fs, and for the pulse durations ranging from 39 fs to 1000 fs, with the laser energy approximately 90 mJ. It was found that the values obtained for thick (mm scale) Cu targets are visibly higher than values reported in previous experiments, which is argued to be a manifestation of a strong dependence of the target electric polarization process on the laser contrast and hence on the amount of preplasma. It was also found that values obtained for thin (micrometer scale) Al foils were visibly higher than values for thick Cu targets, especially for pulse durations longer than 100 fs. The correlations between the total target charge versus the maximum value of the target neutralization current, and the maximum value of the tangential component of the magnetic field versus the total target charge were analysed. They were found to be in very good agreement with correlations seen in data from previous experiments, which provides a good consistency check on our experimental procedures., Comment: Presented at the International Conference on Research and Application of Plasmas Plasma 2017, Warsaw, Poland, September 18-22, 2017
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- 2017
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30. Strong electromagnetic pulses generated in high-intensity short-pulse laser interactions with thin foil targets
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Rączka, P., Dubois, J. -L., Hulin, S., Tikhonchuk, V., Rosiński, M., Zaraś-Szydłowska, A., and Badziak, J.
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Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
Measurements are reported of the target neutralization current, the target charge, and the tangential component of the magnetic field generated as a result of laser-target interaction by pulses with the energy in the range of 45 mJ to 92 mJ on target and the pulse duration from 39 fs to 1000 fs. The experiment was performed at the Eclipse facility in CELIA, Bordeaux. The aim of the experiment was to extend investigations performed for the thick (mm scale) targets to the case of thin (micrometer thickness) targets in a way that would allow for a straightforward comparison of the results. We found that thin foil targets tend to generate 20 to 50 percent higher neutralization current and the target charge than the thick targets. The measurement of the tangential component of the magnetic field had shown that the initial spike is dominated by the 1 ns pulse consistent with the 1 ns pulse of the neutralization current, but there are some differences between targets of different type on sub-ns scale, which is an effect going beyond a simple picture of the target acting as an antenna. The sub-ns structure appears to be reproducible to surprising degree. We found that there is in general a linear correlation between the maximum value of the magnetic field and the maximum neutralization current, which supports the target-antenna picture, except for pulses hundreds of fs long., Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in Laser and Particle Beams
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- 2017
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31. Characterizing and communicating uncertainty: lessons from NASA’s Carbon Monitoring System
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Robert E Kennedy, Shawn P Serbin, Michael C Dietze, Hans-Erik Andersen, Chad Babcock, David F Baker, Molly E Brown, Kenneth J Davis, Laura Duncanson, Sha Feng, Andrew T Hudak, Junjie Liu, Paul L Patterson, Brett Raczka, Mark A Cochrane, Edil A Sepúlveda Carlo, and Rodrigo Vargas
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uncertainty ,Carbon Monitoring System ,carbon monitoring ,Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Science ,Physics ,QC1-999 - Abstract
Navigating uncertainty is a critical challenge in all fields of science, especially when translating knowledge into real-world policies or management decisions. However, the wide variance in concepts and definitions of uncertainty across scientific fields hinders effective communication. As a microcosm of diverse fields within Earth Science, NASA’s Carbon Monitoring System (CMS) provides a useful crucible in which to identify cross-cutting concepts of uncertainty. The CMS convened the Uncertainty Working Group (UWG), a group of specialists across disciplines, to evaluate and synthesize efforts to characterize uncertainty in CMS projects. This paper represents efforts by the UWG to build a heuristic framework designed to evaluate data products and communicate uncertainty to both scientific and non-scientific end users. We consider four pillars of uncertainty: origins, severity, stochasticity versus incomplete knowledge, and spatial and temporal autocorrelation. Using a common vocabulary and a generalized workflow, the framework introduces a graphical heuristic accompanied by a narrative, exemplified through contrasting case studies. Envisioned as a versatile tool, this framework provides clarity in reporting uncertainty, guiding users and tempering expectations. Beyond CMS, it stands as a simple yet powerful means to communicate uncertainty across diverse scientific communities.
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- 2024
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32. An Initial Validation of a New Quality of Life Measure for Adults with Intellectual Disability: The Mini-MANS-LD
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Raczka, Roman, Theodore, Kate, and Williams, Janice
- Abstract
There is an appropriate increasing focus on the need to ensure the voices of people with intellectual disability are captured as part of assessing individuals' quality of life; however, there remains a lack of a consensus on ways to achieve this. This article describes the development of a self-report measure of quality of life for people with intellectual disability, the 'Mini-MANS-LD', based on the concepts of Maslow's hierarchy of needs. Following use with 33 individuals with intellectual disability, the Mini-MANS-LD was found to have acceptable psychometric properties, including moderate congruent validity and acceptable internal consistency. Administrators' feedback suggested good acceptability and feasibility, and the measure was relatively quick to administer, easy to use and acceptable to service users. Despite a small sample size, this initial study suggests that the Mini-MANS-LD may present a conceptually relevant, feasible and acceptable self-report measure of quality of life for people with intellectual disability.
- Published
- 2020
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33. Evidence confirms an anthropic origin of Amazonian Dark Earths
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Umberto Lombardo, Manuel Arroyo-Kalin, Morgan Schmidt, Hans Huisman, Helena P. Lima, Claide de Paula Moraes, Eduardo G. Neves, Charles R. Clement, João Aires da Fonseca, Fernando Ozorio de Almeida, Carlos Francisco Brazão Vieira Alho, Christopher Bronk Ramsey, George G. Brown, Marta S. Cavallini, Marcondes Lima da Costa, Luís Cunha, Lúcia Helena C. dos Anjos, William M. Denevan, Carlos Fausto, Caroline Fernandes Caromano, Ademir Fontana, Bruna Franchetto, Bruno Glaser, Michael J. Heckenberger, Susanna Hecht, Vinicius Honorato, Klaus A. Jarosch, André Braga Junqueira, Thiago Kater, Eduardo K. Tamanaha, Thomas W. Kuyper, Johannes Lehmann, Marco Madella, S. Yoshi Maezumi, Leandro Matthews Cascon, Francis E. Mayle, Doyle McKey, Bruno Moraes, Gaspar Morcote-Ríos, Carlos A. Palheta Barbosa, Marcos Pereira Magalhães, Gabriela Prestes-Carneiro, Francisco Pugliese, Fabiano N. Pupim, Marco F. Raczka, Anne Rapp Py-Daniel, Philip Riris, Bruna Cigaran da Rocha, Leonor Rodrigues, Stéphen Rostain, Rodrigo Santana Macedo, Myrtle P. Shock, Tobias Sprafke, Filippo Stampanoni Bassi, Raoni Valle, Pablo Vidal-Torrado, Ximena S. Villagrán, Jennifer Watling, Sadie L. Weber, and Wenceslau Geraldes Teixeira
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Science - Published
- 2022
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34. How can biosphere models simulate enough vegetation biomass in the mountains of the western United States? Implications of meteorological forcing
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Duarte, Henrique F., Raczka, Brett M., Bowling, David R., Wang, Aihui, Buotte, Polly C., and Lin, John C.
- Published
- 2022
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35. Resolving temperature limitation on spring productivity in an evergreen conifer forest using a model–data fusion framework
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S. G. Stettz, N. C. Parazoo, A. A. Bloom, P. D. Blanken, D. R. Bowling, S. P. Burns, C. Bacour, F. Maignan, B. Raczka, A. J. Norton, I. Baker, M. Williams, M. Shi, Y. Zhang, and B. Qiu
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Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Life ,QH501-531 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
The flow of carbon through terrestrial ecosystems and the response to climate are critical but highly uncertain processes in the global carbon cycle. However, with a rapidly expanding array of in situ and satellite data, there is an opportunity to improve our mechanistic understanding of the carbon (C) cycle's response to land use and climate change. Uncertainty in temperature limitation on productivity poses a significant challenge to predicting the response of ecosystem carbon fluxes to a changing climate. Here we diagnose and quantitatively resolve environmental limitations on the growing-season onset of gross primary production (GPP) using nearly 2 decades of meteorological and C flux data (2000–2018) at a subalpine evergreen forest in Colorado, USA. We implement the CARbon DAta-MOdel fraMework (CARDAMOM) model–data fusion network to resolve the temperature sensitivity of spring GPP. To capture a GPP temperature limitation – a critical component of the integrated sensitivity of GPP to temperature – we introduced a cold-temperature scaling function in CARDAMOM to regulate photosynthetic productivity. We found that GPP was gradually inhibited at temperatures below 6.0 ∘C (±2.6 ∘C) and completely inhibited below −7.1 ∘C (±1.1 ∘C). The addition of this scaling factor improved the model's ability to replicate spring GPP at interannual and decadal timescales (r=0.88), relative to the nominal CARDAMOM configuration (r=0.47), and improved spring GPP model predictability outside of the data assimilation training period (r=0.88). While cold-temperature limitation has an important influence on spring GPP, it does not have a significant impact on integrated growing-season GPP, revealing that other environmental controls, such as precipitation, play a more important role in annual productivity. This study highlights growing-season onset temperature as a key limiting factor for spring growth in winter-dormant evergreen forests, which is critical in understanding future responses to climate change.
- Published
- 2022
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36. Fatigue after COVID‐19 in non‐hospitalized patients according to sex
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Iwona Mazurkiewicz, Zaneta Chatys‐Bogacka, Joanna Slowik, Alicja Klich‐Raczka, Malgorzata Fedyk‐Lukasik, Agnieszka Slowik, Marcin Wnuk, and Leszek Drabik
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COVID‐19 ,fatigue ,long covid ,sex ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Abstract Background Limited evidence exists on sex differences in post‐COVID fatigue among non‐hospitalized patients. Therefore, aim of the study was to evaluate the course of chronic fatigue symptoms in non‐hospitalized subjects with the SARS‐CoV‐2 infection, according to sex. Methods Patients and staff from the University Hospital in Krakow anonymously and retrospectively completed neuropsychological questionnaire that included eight symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome. The presence of these symptoms was assessed before COVID‐19 and 0–4, 4–12, and >12 weeks postinfection. The inclusion criteria were as follows: age 18 or more years, >12 weeks since the onset of the SARS‐CoV‐2 infection, and diagnosis confirmed by the RT‐PCR from anasopharyngeal swab. Results We included 303 patients (79.53% women, 47.52% medical personnel) assessed retrospectively after a median of 30 (interquartile range: 23–35) weeks since the onset of symptoms. A higher prevalence of at least one chronic fatigue symptom was found in females in all time intervals after the onset of COVID‐19 compared to males (p 12 weeks, OR = 1.95, 95% CI: 1.03–3.71), and sore throat (for
- Published
- 2023
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37. Prevalence of Babesia canis DNA in Ixodes ricinus ticks collected in forest and urban ecosystems in west-central Poland
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Liberska, Justyna, Michalik, Jerzy, Pers-Kamczyc, Emilia, Wierzbicka, Anna, Lane, Robert S., Rączka, Grzegorz, Opalińska, Patrycja, Skorupski, Maciej, and Dabert, Miroslawa
- Published
- 2021
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38. Playing our proper part.
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Reicher, Stephen, McManus, Jim, Drury, John, Michie, Susan, Day, Fiona, and Raczka, Roman
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SENIOR leadership teams ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL personnel ,PANDEMIC preparedness ,BEHAVIORAL sciences ,CONSPIRACY theories - Abstract
The article discusses the role of psychology in the response to the Covid-19 pandemic, emphasizing the importance of behavior and community in shaping policy and outcomes. It highlights the need for inclusive, engaged, and supportive approaches to enable collective resilience and effective responses to crises. The text also addresses the impact of psychology on vaccination uptake, misinformation, and public health policies, advocating for a multidisciplinary and proactive approach to future pandemics. The article calls for collaboration, data-driven decision-making, and a focus on building trust and community resilience to address the challenges posed by global health emergencies. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2025
39. Evaluating the Community Land Model (CLM4.5) at a coniferous forest site in northwestern United States using flux and carbon-isotope measurements
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Duarte, HF, Raczka, BM, Ricciuto, DM, Lin, JC, Koven, CD, Thornton, PE, Bowling, DR, Lai, CT, Bible, KJ, and Ehleringer, JR
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Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Earth Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences - Abstract
Droughts in the western United States are expected to intensify with climate change. Thus, an adequate representation of ecosystem response to water stress in land models is critical for predicting carbon dynamics. The goal of this study was to evaluate the performance of the Community Land Model (CLM) version 4.5 against observations at an old-growth coniferous forest site in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States (Wind River AmeriFlux site), characterized by a Mediterranean climate that subjects trees to water stress each summer. CLM was driven by site-observed meteorology and calibrated primarily using parameter values observed at the site or at similar stands in the region. Key model adjustments included parameters controlling specific leaf area and stomatal conductance. Default values of these parameters led to significant underestimation of gross primary production, overestimation of evapotranspiration, and consequently overestimation of photosynthetic 13C discrimination, reflected in reduced 13°C 12°C ratios of carbon fluxes and pools. Adjustments in soil hydraulic parameters within CLM were also critical, preventing significant underestimation of soil water content and unrealistic soil moisture stress during summer. After calibration, CLM was able to simulate energy and carbon fluxes, leaf area index, biomass stocks, and carbon isotope ratios of carbon fluxes and pools in reasonable agreement with site observations. Overall, the calibrated CLM was able to simulate the observed response of canopy conductance to atmospheric vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and soil water content, reasonably capturing the impact of water stress on ecosystem functioning. Both simulations and observations indicate that stomatal response from water stress at Wind River was primarily driven by VPD and not soil moisture. The calibration of the Ball-Berry stomatal conductance slope (mbb) at Wind River aligned with findings from recent CLM experiments at sites characterized by the same plant functional type (needleleaf evergreen temperate forest), despite significant differences in stand composition and age and climatology, suggesting that CLM could benefit from a revised mbb value of 6, rather than the default value of 9, for this plant functional type. Conversely, Wind River required a unique calibration of the hydrology submodel to simulate soil moisture, suggesting that the default hydrology has a more limited applicability. This study demonstrates that carbon isotope data can be used to constrain stomatal conductance and intrinsic water use efficiency in CLM, as an alternative to eddy covariance flux measurements. It also demonstrates that carbon isotopes can expose structural weaknesses in the model and provide a key constraint that may guide future model development.
- Published
- 2017
40. Does vapor pressure deficit drive the seasonality of δ13C of the net land‐atmosphere CO2 exchange across the United States?
- Author
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Raczka, B, Biraud, SC, Ehleringer, JR, Lai, C‐T, Miller, JB, Pataki, DE, Saleska, SR, Torn, MS, Vaughn, BH, Wehr, R, and Bowling, DR
- Subjects
Earth Sciences ,Geophysics ,Life on Land - Abstract
The seasonal pattern of the carbon isotope content (δ13C) of atmospheric CO2 depends on local and nonlocal land-atmosphere exchange and atmospheric transport. Previous studies suggested that the δ13C of the net land-atmosphere CO2 flux (δsource) varies seasonally as stomatal conductance of plants responds to vapor pressure deficit of air (VPD). We studied the variation of δsource at seven sites across the United States representing forests, grasslands, and an urban center. Using a two-part mixing model, we calculated the seasonal δsource for each site after removing background influence and, when possible, removing δ13C variation of nonlocal sources. Compared to previous analyses, we found a reduced seasonal (March–September) variation in δsource at the forest sites (0.5‰ variation). We did not find a consistent seasonal relationship between VPD and δsource across forest (or other) sites, providing evidence that stomatal response to VPD was not the cause of the global, coherent seasonal pattern in δsource. In contrast to the forest sites, grassland and urban sites had a larger seasonal variation in δsource (5‰) dominated by seasonal transitions in C3/C4 grass productivity and in fossil fuel emissions, respectively. Our findings were sensitive to the location used to account for atmospheric background variation within the mixing model method that determined δsource. Special consideration should be given to background location depending on whether the intent is to understand site level dynamics or regional scale impacts of land-atmosphere exchange. The seasonal amplitude in δ13C of land-atmosphere CO2 exchange (δsource) varied across land cover types and was not driven by seasonal changes in vapor pressure deficit. The largest seasonal amplitudes of δsource were at grassland and urban sites, driven by changes in C3/C4 grass productivity and fossil fuel emissions, respectively. Mixing model approaches may incorrectly calculate δsource when background atmospheric observations are remote and/or prone to anthropogenic influence.
- Published
- 2017
41. Interactions between microbial diversity and substrate chemistry determine the fate of carbon in soil
- Author
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Nanette C. Raczka, Juan Piñeiro, Malak M. Tfaily, Rosalie K. Chu, Mary S. Lipton, Ljiljana Pasa-Tolic, Ember Morrissey, and Edward Brzostek
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Microbial decomposition drives the transformation of plant-derived substrates into microbial products that form stable soil organic matter (SOM). Recent theories have posited that decomposition depends on an interaction between SOM chemistry with microbial diversity and resulting function (e.g., enzymatic capabilities, growth rates). Here, we explicitly test these theories by coupling quantitative stable isotope probing and metabolomics to track the fate of 13C enriched substrates that vary in chemical composition as they are assimilated by microbes and transformed into new metabolic products in soil. We found that differences in forest nutrient economies (e.g., nutrient cycling, microbial competition) led to arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) soils harboring greater diversity of fungi and bacteria than ectomycorrhizal (ECM) soils. When incubated with 13C enriched substrates, substrate type drove shifts in which species were active decomposers and the abundance of metabolic products that were reduced or saturated in the highly diverse AM soils. The decomposition pathways were more static in the less diverse, ECM soil. Importantly, the majority of these shifts were driven by taxa only present in the AM soil suggesting a strong link between microbial identity and their ability to decompose and assimilate substrates. Collectively, these results highlight an important interaction between ecosystem-level processes and microbial diversity; whereby the identity and function of active decomposers impacts the composition of decomposition products that can form stable SOM.
- Published
- 2021
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42. The influence of saturation of electron drift velocity on photorefractive effect in GaAs/AlGaAs quantum wells structures
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Jabłoński, Błażej and Weinert-Rączka, Ewa
- Published
- 2021
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43. A Model Predictive Control Algorithm for large-scale Integration of Electromobility.
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Sebastian Raczka, Dominik Hilbrich, Annika Brüggemann, and Christian Rehtanz
- Published
- 2020
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44. Multifunctional Polymer Composites for Automatable Induction Heating with Subsequent Temperature Verification.
- Author
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Reichstein, Jakob, Raczka, Theodor, Stauch, Claudia, Schug, Benedikt, Müssig, Stephan, and Mandel, Karl
- Subjects
TEMPERATURE measuring instruments ,ALTERNATING currents ,MODULAR design ,ELECTROMAGNETIC induction ,SPATIAL resolution - Abstract
Manipulating ferromagnetic particles using an alternating current (AC) magnetic field is a versatile method for quick, local, and on‐demand heat generation. These particles can be incorporated into various matrices as heating elements. Their heat release can be controlled by adjusting process or material parameters. Herein, a proof‐of‐concept for a flexible polymer composite with customizable magnetically triggered heat release due to prior object identification via fluorescence readout is presented. The maximum temperature resulting from this process can be determined through a second fluorescence readout ex post. This novel combination of functionalities results from the synergistic interaction of inductively heatable magnetic supraparticles (SPs) and luminescent communicating SPs in one polydimethylsiloxane composite. The surface of the composite can be heated to the maximum temperatures of choice in a range between 125 and 200 °C within 2 s. Heat release and temperature verification provide spatial resolution of millimeters. The identification signature and the working range of the temperature indication functionality of the composite are customizable by exploiting its modular material design. The temperature indication functionality of the composite offers spatial resolution and ex‐post readout at any point of interest, making it a versatile alternative to established optical thermometry methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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45. Lipid levels, atrial fibrillation and the impact of age: Results from the LIPIDOGRAM2015 study
- Author
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Al-Shaer, B., Andrusewicz, W., Andrzejczuk-Rosa, M., Anusz-Gaszewska, E., Bagińska, A., Balawajder, P., Bańka, G., Barańska-Skubisz, E., Barbara Przyczyna, B., Bartkowiak, S., Bartodziej, J., Bartosiewicz, M., Basałyga, M., Batyra, A., Bąk, A., Bednarz, M., Bejnar, K., Bernacki, W., Betiuk-Kwiatkowska, M., Biegaj, S., Bień, M., Bilski, W., Biłogan, M., Biruta-Pawłowska, G., Biskup, A., Błaszczyk, B., Błaszczyk, H., Błońska-Jankowska, T., Bogacka-Gancarczyk, B., Bojanowska, M., Bonda, E., Borowik-Skwarek, J., Borowska, J., Bruckner, J., Brzostek, J., Brzuchacz, M., Budzyńska, M., Bulzacka-Fugiel, I., Bulzak, J., Bunikowski, K., Cebulska, A., Celka, T., Cempel-Nowak, E., Chechliński, W., Chludzińska, A., Chmiel, D., Chmielewska, M., Cichy, M., Ciemięga, A., Ciepluch, A., Cieszyńska, I., Czajka, B., Czapla, B., Czerner, M., Czerwińska, B., Czuryszkiewicz, W., Daleka, E., Dawid, Z., Dąbrowska, M., Dąbrowska, R., Dąbrowski, D., Dąbrowski, M., Demczyszyn, K., Dębowska-Serwińska, A., Dmochowski, J., Dobrzecka-Kiwior, J., Dolanowska, E., Dolanowski, H., Dołek, P., Domagała, M., Domański, H., Doszel, A., Duda, D., Dudkowska, M., Dudziuk, B., Dybciak, P., Dymanowski, M., Dziadzio-Bolek, L., Eicke, M., El-Hassan, H., Eremus, A., Fąferek-Muller, M., Figura-Roguska, E., Fijałkowska-Kaczmarek, I., Flis, M., Florczak, T., Florczuk, M., Foryszewska-Witan, E., Frydrych, W., Fugiel, A., Futyma, E., Gaca-Jaroszewicz, A., Gajdamowicz, I., Ganczarski, K., Gatnar, A., Gers, M., Głowacki, A., Głód, K., Godula, J., Gołąb, J., Gołębiewski, M., Goszczyńska, E., Gościcka, K., Górna-Hajduga, A., Górny, E., Grabowska, T., Grabowski, R., Graczyk-Duda, A., Gromow, A., Grudewicz, A., Gruszecka, J., Gruszka, A., Gryboś, J., Grzebyk, J., Grzechowiak, A., Grzesiak, D., Grześkowiak, T., Guźla, A., Hachuła, G., Hawel, B., Hiltawska, H., Honkowicz, E., Ignatowicz, J., Imielski, K., Iwaniura, A., Jagieła-Szymala, A., Jalć-Sowała, M., Janczylik, A., Janisz, E., Janiszek, M., Jankiewicz-Ziobro, K., Januszewska, K., Jaremek, A., Jaros-Urbaniak, A., Jarosz, J., Jarosz, P., Jasiński, W., Jezierska-Wasilewska, M., Jędraszewski, T., Jędrzejowska, A., Józefowicz, R., Jóźwiak, J.J., Juźwin, K., Kacprzak, E., Kaczmarek-Szewczyk, J., Kaczmarzyk, M., Kandziora, R., Kaniewski, C., Karolak-Brandt, L., Kasperczyk, S., Kasperek-Dyląg, E., Kedziora, I., Kępa, A., Kiciński, J., Kielak-Al-Hosam, J., Kiełczawa, Ł., Kilimowicz, P., Kitliński, K., Kiwka, T., Klein, U., Klichowicz, L., Klimowicz, A., Klonowski, B., Kmolek, B., Kobyłko-Klepacka, E., Kocoń, A., Kolenda, A., Kollek, E., Kopeć, M., Koper-Kozikowska, B., Koralewska, J., Korczyńska, M., Korzeniewski, M.T., Kosk, A., Kotarski, K., Kowalczyk, E., Kowalczyk, M., Kowalik, I., Kozak-Błażkiewicz, B., Kozik, M., Kozłowska, D., Kozłowska, E., Kozłowska, M., Kozubski, T., Kózka, K., Kraśnik, L., Krężel, T., Krochmal, B., Król, B., Król, G., Król, J., Królikowska, T., Kruszewska, H., Krygier-Potrykus, B., Krystek, W., Krzysztoń, J., Kubicki, T., Kuczmierczyk-El-Hassan, A., Kuczyńska-Witek, W., Kujda, D., Kurowski, A., Kurzelewska-Solarz, I., Kwaczyńska, M., Kwaśniak, M., Kwaśniak, P., Kwietniewska, T., Łebek-Ordon, A., Lebiedowicz, A., Lejkowska-Olszewska, L., Lentas, M., Lesiewicz-Ksycińska, A., Limanowski, M., Łoniewski, S., Łopata, J.A., Łubianka, B., Łukasiuk, I., Łużna, M., Łysiak, M., Łysik, B., Machowski, Z., Maciaczyk-Kubiak, J., Mackiewicz-Zabochnicka, G., Magner-Krężel, Z., Majda, S., Malinowski, P., Mantyka, J., Marchlik, E., Martyna-Ordyniec, G., Marzec, J., Marzec, M., Matejko-Wałkiewicz, R., Mazur, M., Michalczak, M., Michalska-Żyłka, A., Michniewicz, M., Mika-Staniszewska, D., Mikiciuk, E., Mikołajczak, T., Milewski, J., Miller, E., Misiaszek, B., Mizik-Łukowska, M., Młyńczyk-Pokutycka, E., Mocek, M., Moczała, M., Morawska-Hermanowicz, M., Moryc, P., Moskal, A., Moskal, S., Moździerz, A., Moździerz, P., Mrozińska, M., Mrozowicz, K., Mróz, G., Munia, T., Mura, A., Muras-Skudlarska, M., Murawska, E.Z., Murawski, Ł., Murawski, R., Musielak, R., Nadaj, K., Nagarnowicz, W., Napierała, R., Niedźwiecka, M., Niemirski, A., Nikiel, J., Nosal, M., Nowacki, W., Nowak, J., Nyrka, M., Obst, A., Ochowicz, J., Ogonowska, E., Oleszczyk, M., Ołdakowski, A., Ołowniuk-Stefaniak, I., Ordowska-Rejman, J., Orliński, M., Osińska, B., Ostańska-Burian, A., Paciorkowska, A., Paczkowska, U., Paluch, L., Pałka, L., Paszko-Wojtkowska, J., Paszkowska, A., Pawlak-Ganczarska, E., Pawlik, W., Pawłowska, I., Paździora, M., Permiakow, G., Petlic-Marendziak, A., Piasecka, T., Piaścińska, E., Piktel, A., Pilarska-Igielska, A., Piotrkowska, A., Piwowar-Klag, K., Planer, M., Plewa, J., Płatkiewicz, P., Płonczyńska, B., Podgórska, A., Polewska, M., Porębska, B., Porwoł, P., Potakowska, I., Prokop, A., Przybylski, J., Przybyła, M., Psiuk, H., Ptak, K., Puzoń, G., Rabiza, N., Rachwalik, S., Raczyńska, E., Raniszewska, M., Romanek-Kozik, A., Rosa, A., Rosa, K., Rozewicz, A., Rudzka-Kałwak, J., Rusak, J., Rutkowska, D., Rybacki, M., Rybińska, D., Rycyk-Sadowska, A., Rynda, L., Rynkiewicz, B., Sadowska-Krawczyk, B., Sadowska-Zarzycka, M., Sarnecka, B., Sawalach-Tomanik, E., Sidor-Drozd, B., Siemieniak-Dębska, M., Sieroń, A., Siewniak-Zalewska, B., Sikora, A., Sitarska-Pawlina, B., Skorupski, J., Skrzypińska-Mansfeld, I., Skubisz, J., Skwarek, R., Słodyczka, M., Smentek, M., Smolińska, K., Solarz, B., Sosnowska, W., Sroka, B., Stachura, H., Stangreciak, D., Staniak, M., Stańczyk, Z., Stańszczak-Ozga, D., Startek, E., Stefańczyk, M., Stelmach, R., Sternadel-Rączka, E., Sternik, M., Stępień, J., Stocka, J., Stokowska-Wojda, M., Studler-Karpińska, M., Suchorukow, W., Sufryd, W., Supłacz, B., Sygacz, J., Szczepański, Ł., Szkandera, J., Szłapa-Zellner, J., Szydlarska, D., Śliwa, T., Śliwka, J., Śmiejkowski, Ł., Targońska, A., Tesarska, E., Tobiasz, M., Tomaka, J., Tomalska-Bywalec, K., Tomiak, E., Topczewski, S., Trawińska, A., Trela-Mucha, L., Trojanowski, D., Trzaskowska, M., Trzcińska-Larska, B., Trznadel-Mozul, A., Ulanicka-Liwoch, K., Urbanowicz, M., Uthke-Kluzek, A., Waczyński, J., Walczak, J., Warsz, L., Wasyńczuk, M., Wąchała-Jędras, U., Wąsowicz, D., Wczysła, J., Wenda, F., Werner-Kubicka, E., Weryszko, E., Węgrzynowska, B., Wiaksa, M., Wiankowski, M., Wicherek, A., Wieczorek, R., Wiencek, R., Wienzek-Tatara, G., Wierzbicka, B., Wierzbicki, M., Wilczyńska, B., Wilmańska, D., Winiarski, P., Wiszniewska-Pabiszczak, A., Witkowska, M.B., Witzling, J., Wlaź, A., Wojtkowiak, I., Woydyłło, J., Woźniak, K., Wójtowicz, A., Wrona, J., Wrońska, M., Wujkowska, H., Wyrąbek, J., Wysokiński, O., Zakrzewski, R., Zaleska-Zatkalik, J., Zaleski, J., Zalewska- Dybciak, M., Zalewska, E., Zalewska-Uchimiak, B., Zawadzka-Krajewska, J., Zawadzki, J., Zieliński, A., Zubrycka, E., Żybort, I., Żymełka, M., Harrison, Stephanie L., Lane, Deirdre A., Banach, Maciej, Mastej, Mirosław, Kasperczyk, Sławomir, Jóźwiak, Jacek J., and Lip, Gregory Y.H.
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- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The adoption of agropastoralism and increased ENSO frequency in the Andes
- Author
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Nascimento, M.N., Mosblech, N.A.S., Raczka, M.F., Baskin, S., Manrique, K.E., Wilger, J., Giosan, L., Benito, X., and Bush, M.B.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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47. An observational constraint on stomatal function in forests: Evaluating coupled carbon and water vapor exchange with carbon isotopes in the Community Land Model (CLM4.5)
- Author
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Raczka, B, Duarte, HF, Koven, CD, Ricciuto, D, Thornton, PE, Lin, JC, and Bowling, DR
- Subjects
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Earth Sciences ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological Sciences - Abstract
Land surface models are useful tools to quantify contemporary and future climate impact on terrestrial carbon cycle processes, provided they can be appropriately constrained and tested with observations. Stable carbon isotopes of CO2 offer the potential to improve model representation of the coupled carbon and water cycles because they are strongly influenced by stomatal function. Recently, a representation of stable carbon isotope discrimination was incorporated into the Community Land Model component of the Community Earth System Model. Here, we tested the model's capability to simulate whole-forest isotope discrimination in a subalpine conifer forest at Niwot Ridge, Colorado, USA. We distinguished between isotopic behavior in response to a decrease of δ13C within atmospheric CO2 (Suess effect) vs. photosynthetic discrimination (Δcanopy), by creating a site-customized atmospheric CO2 and δ13C of CO2 time series. We implemented a seasonally varying Vcmax model calibration that best matched site observations of net CO2 carbon exchange, latent heat exchange, and biomass. The model accurately simulated observed δ13C of needle and stem tissue, but underestimated the δ13C of bulk soil carbon by 1-2%. The model overestimated the multiyear (2006-2012) average Δcanopy relative to prior data-based estimates by 2-4%. The amplitude of the average seasonal cycle of Δcanopy (i.e., higher in spring/fall as compared to summer) was correctly modeled but only when using a revised, fully coupled An - gs (net assimilation rate, stomatal conductance) version of the model in contrast to the partially coupled An - gs version used in the default model. The model attributed most of the seasonal variation in discrimination to An, whereas interannual variation in simulated Δcanopy during the summer months was driven by stomatal response to vapor pressure deficit (VPD). The model simulated a 10% increase in both photosynthetic discrimination and water-use efficiency (WUE) since 1850 which is counter to established relationships between discrimination and WUE. The isotope observations used here to constrain CLM suggest (1) the model overestimated stomatal conductance and (2) the default CLM approach to representing nitrogen limitation (partially coupled model) was not capable of reproducing observed trends in discrimination. These findings demonstrate that isotope observations can provide important information related to stomatal function driven by environmental stress from VPD and nitrogen limitation. Future versions of CLM that incorporate carbon isotope discrimination are likely to benefit from explicit inclusion of mesophyll conductance.
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- 2016
48. Wide discrepancies in the magnitude and direction of modeled solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence in response to light conditions
- Author
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N. C. Parazoo, T. Magney, A. Norton, B. Raczka, C. Bacour, F. Maignan, I. Baker, Y. Zhang, B. Qiu, M. Shi, N. MacBean, D. R. Bowling, S. P. Burns, P. D. Blanken, J. Stutz, K. Grossmann, and C. Frankenberg
- Subjects
Ecology ,QH540-549.5 ,Life ,QH501-531 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Recent successes in passive remote sensing of far-red solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) have spurred the development and integration of canopy-level fluorescence models in global terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs) for climate and carbon cycle research. The interaction of fluorescence with photochemistry at the leaf and canopy scales provides opportunities to diagnose and constrain model simulations of photosynthesis and related processes, through direct comparison to and assimilation of tower, airborne, and satellite data. TBMs describe key processes related to the absorption of sunlight, leaf-level fluorescence emission, scattering, and reabsorption throughout the canopy. Here, we analyze simulations from an ensemble of process-based TBM–SIF models (SiB3 – Simple Biosphere Model, SiB4, CLM4.5 – Community Land Model, CLM5.0, BETHY – Biosphere Energy Transfer Hydrology, ORCHIDEE – Organizing Carbon and Hydrology In Dynamic Ecosystems, and BEPS – Boreal Ecosystems Productivity Simulator) and the SCOPE (Soil Canopy Observation Photosynthesis Energy) canopy radiation and vegetation model at a subalpine evergreen needleleaf forest near Niwot Ridge, Colorado. These models are forced with local meteorology and analyzed against tower-based continuous far-red SIF and gross-primary-productivity-partitioned (GPP) eddy covariance data at diurnal and synoptic scales during the growing season (July–August 2017). Our primary objective is to summarize the site-level state of the art in TBM–SIF modeling over a relatively short time period (summer) when light, canopy structure, and pigments are similar, setting the stage for regional- to global-scale analyses. We find that these models are generally well constrained in simulating photosynthetic yield but show strongly divergent patterns in the simulation of absorbed photosynthetic active radiation (PAR), absolute GPP and fluorescence, quantum yields, and light response at the leaf and canopy scales. This study highlights the need for mechanistic modeling of nonphotochemical quenching in stressed and unstressed environments and improved the representation of light absorption (APAR), distribution of light across sunlit and shaded leaves, and radiative transfer from the leaf to the canopy scale.
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- 2020
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49. Estimation of Tool Life in the Milling Process - Testing Regression Models.
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Andrzej Paszkiewicz, Grzegorz Piecuch, Tomasz Zabinski, Marek Bolanowski, Mateusz Salach, and Dariusz Raczka
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- 2023
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50. Safety of pulsed field ablation in more than 17,000 patients with atrial fibrillation in the MANIFEST-17K study
- Author
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Ekanem, Emmanuel, Neuzil, Petr, Reichlin, Tobias, Kautzner, Joseph, van der Voort, Pepijn, Jais, Pierre, Chierchia, Gian Battista, Bulava, Alan, Blaauw, Yuri, Skala, Tomas, Fiala, Martin, Duytschaever, Mattias, Szeplaki, Gabor, Schmidt, Boris, Massoullie, Grégoire, Neven, Kars, Thomas, Olivier, Vijgen, Johan, Gandjbakhch, Estelle, Scherr, Daniel, Johannessen, Arne, Keane, David, Boveda, Serge, Maury, Philippe, García-Bolao, Ignacio, Anic, Ante, Hansen, Peter Steen, Raczka, Franck, Lepillier, Antoine, Guyomar, Yves, Gupta, Dhiraj, Van Opstal, Jurren, Defaye, Pascal, Sticherling, Christian, Sommer, Philipp, Kucera, Pavel, Osca, Joaquin, Tabrizi, Fariborz, Roux, Antoine, Gramlich, Michael, Bianchi, Stefano, Adragão, Pedro, Solimene, Francesco, Tondo, Claudio, Russo, Antonio Dello, Schreieck, Jürgen, Luik, Armin, Rana, Obaida, Frommeyer, Gerrit, Anselme, Frédéric, Kreis, Ingo, Rosso, Raphael, Metzner, Andreas, Geller, Laszlo, Baldinger, Samuel H., Ferrero, Angel, Willems, Stephan, Goette, Andreas, Mellor, Greg, Mathew, Shibu, Szumowski, Lukasz, Tilz, Roland, Iacopino, Saverio, Jacobsen, Peter Karl, George, Andrikopoulos, Osmancik, Pavel, Spitzer, Stefan, Balasubramaniam, Richard, Parwani, Abdul Shokor, Deneke, Thomas, Glowniak, Andrzej, Rossillo, Antonio, Pürerfellner, Helmut, Duncker, David, Reil, Peter, Arentz, Thomas, Steven, Daniel, Olalla, Juan José, de Jong, Jonas S.S.G., Wakili, Reza, Abbey, Selim, Timo, Gottschling, Asso, Antonio, Wong, Tom, Pierre, Bertrand, Ewertsen, Niels Christian, Bergau, Leonard, Lozano-Granero, Cristina, Rivero, Maximo, Breitenstein, Alexander, Inkovaara, Jaakko, Fareh, Samir, Latcu, Decebal Gabriel, Linz, Dominik, Müller, Patrick, Ramos-Maqueda, Javier, Beiert, Thomas, Themistoclakis, Sakis, Meininghaus, Dirk Grosse, Stix, Günter, Tzeis, Stylianos, Baran, Jakub, Almroth, Henrik, Munoz, Daniel Rodriguez, de Sousa, João, Efremidis, Michalis, Balsam, Pawel, Petru, Jan, Küffer, Thomas, Peichl, Petr, Dekker, Lukas, Della Rocca, Domenico G., Moravec, Ondrej, Funasako, Moritoshi, Knecht, Sebastien, Jauvert, Gael, Chun, Julian, Eschalier, Romain, Füting, Anna, Zhao, Alexandre, Koopman, Pieter, Laredo, Mikael, Manninger, Martin, Hansen, Jim, O’Hare, Daniel, Rollin, Anne, Jurisic, Zrinka, Fink, Thomas, Chaumont, Corentin, Rillig, Andreas, Gunawerdene, Melanie, Martin, Claire, Kirstein, Bettina, Nentwich, Karin, Lehrmann, Heiko, Sultan, Arian, Bohnen, Jan, Turagam, Mohit K., Reddy, Vivek Y., Ekanem, Emmanuel, Neuzil, Petr, Reichlin, Tobias, Kautzner, Joseph, van der Voort, Pepijn, Jais, Pierre, Chierchia, Gian Battista, Bulava, Alan, Blaauw, Yuri, Skala, Tomas, Fiala, Martin, Duytschaever, Mattias, Szeplaki, Gabor, Schmidt, Boris, Massoullie, Grégoire, Neven, Kars, Thomas, Olivier, Vijgen, Johan, Gandjbakhch, Estelle, Scherr, Daniel, Johannessen, Arne, Keane, David, Boveda, Serge, Maury, Philippe, García-Bolao, Ignacio, Anic, Ante, Hansen, Peter Steen, Raczka, Franck, Lepillier, Antoine, Guyomar, Yves, Gupta, Dhiraj, Van Opstal, Jurren, Defaye, Pascal, Sticherling, Christian, Sommer, Philipp, Kucera, Pavel, Osca, Joaquin, Tabrizi, Fariborz, Roux, Antoine, Gramlich, Michael, Bianchi, Stefano, Adragão, Pedro, Solimene, Francesco, Tondo, Claudio, Russo, Antonio Dello, Schreieck, Jürgen, Luik, Armin, Rana, Obaida, Frommeyer, Gerrit, Anselme, Frédéric, Kreis, Ingo, Rosso, Raphael, Metzner, Andreas, Geller, Laszlo, Baldinger, Samuel H., Ferrero, Angel, Willems, Stephan, Goette, Andreas, Mellor, Greg, Mathew, Shibu, Szumowski, Lukasz, Tilz, Roland, Iacopino, Saverio, Jacobsen, Peter Karl, George, Andrikopoulos, Osmancik, Pavel, Spitzer, Stefan, Balasubramaniam, Richard, Parwani, Abdul Shokor, Deneke, Thomas, Glowniak, Andrzej, Rossillo, Antonio, Pürerfellner, Helmut, Duncker, David, Reil, Peter, Arentz, Thomas, Steven, Daniel, Olalla, Juan José, de Jong, Jonas S.S.G., Wakili, Reza, Abbey, Selim, Timo, Gottschling, Asso, Antonio, Wong, Tom, Pierre, Bertrand, Ewertsen, Niels Christian, Bergau, Leonard, Lozano-Granero, Cristina, Rivero, Maximo, Breitenstein, Alexander, Inkovaara, Jaakko, Fareh, Samir, Latcu, Decebal Gabriel, Linz, Dominik, Müller, Patrick, Ramos-Maqueda, Javier, Beiert, Thomas, Themistoclakis, Sakis, Meininghaus, Dirk Grosse, Stix, Günter, Tzeis, Stylianos, Baran, Jakub, Almroth, Henrik, Munoz, Daniel Rodriguez, de Sousa, João, Efremidis, Michalis, Balsam, Pawel, Petru, Jan, Küffer, Thomas, Peichl, Petr, Dekker, Lukas, Della Rocca, Domenico G., Moravec, Ondrej, Funasako, Moritoshi, Knecht, Sebastien, Jauvert, Gael, Chun, Julian, Eschalier, Romain, Füting, Anna, Zhao, Alexandre, Koopman, Pieter, Laredo, Mikael, Manninger, Martin, Hansen, Jim, O’Hare, Daniel, Rollin, Anne, Jurisic, Zrinka, Fink, Thomas, Chaumont, Corentin, Rillig, Andreas, Gunawerdene, Melanie, Martin, Claire, Kirstein, Bettina, Nentwich, Karin, Lehrmann, Heiko, Sultan, Arian, Bohnen, Jan, Turagam, Mohit K., and Reddy, Vivek Y.
- Abstract
Pulsed field ablation (PFA) is an emerging technology for the treatment of atrial fibrillation (AF), for which pre-clinical and early-stage clinical data are suggestive of some degree of preferentiality to myocardial tissue ablation without damage to adjacent structures. Here in the MANIFEST-17K study we assessed the safety of PFA by studying the post-approval use of this treatment modality. Of the 116 centers performing post-approval PFA with a pentaspline catheter, data were received from 106 centers (91.4% participation) regarding 17,642 patients undergoing PFA (mean age 64, 34.7% female, 57.8% paroxysmal AF and 35.2% persistent AF). No esophageal complications, pulmonary vein stenosis or persistent phrenic palsy was reported (transient palsy was reported in 0.06% of patients; 11 of 17,642). Major complications, reported for ~1% of patients (173 of 17,642), were pericardial tamponade (0.36%; 63 of 17,642) and vascular events (0.30%; 53 of 17,642). Stroke was rare (0.12%; 22 of 17,642) and death was even rarer (0.03%; 5 of 17,642). Unexpected complications of PFA were coronary arterial spasm in 0.14% of patients (25 of 17,642) and hemolysis-related acute renal failure necessitating hemodialysis in 0.03% of patients (5 of 17,642). Taken together, these data indicate that PFA demonstrates a favorable safety profile by avoiding much of the collateral damage seen with conventional thermal ablation. PFA has the potential to be transformative for the management of patients with AF.
- Published
- 2024
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