242 results on '"Walsh, Andrew J."'
Search Results
2. Accurate OH maser positions II. the Galactic Center region
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, Walsh, Andrew J., Breen, Shari L., Gómez, José F., Dawson, J. R., Imai, Hiroshi, Ellingsen, Simon P., Green, James A., and Shen, Zhi-Qiang
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present high spatial resolution observations of ground-state OH masers, achieved using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). These observations were conducted towards 171 pointing centres, where OH maser candidates were identified previously in the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH) towards the Galactic Center region, between Galactic longitudes of $355^{\circ}$ and $5^{\circ}$ and Galactic latitudes of $-2^{\circ}$ and $+2^{\circ}$. We detect maser emission towards 162 target fields and suggest that 6 out of 9 non-detections are due to intrinsic variability. Due to the superior spatial resolution of the follow-up ATCA observations, we have identified 356 OH maser sites in the 162 of the target fields with maser detections. Almost half (161 of 356) of these maser sites have been detected for the first time in these observations. After comparing the positions of these 356 maser sites to the literature, we find that 269 (76\%) sites are associated with evolved stars (two of which are planetary nebulae), 31 (9\%) are associated with star formation, four are associated with supernova remnants and we were unable to determine the origin of the remaining 52 (15\%) sites. Unlike the pilot region (\citealt{Qie2016a}), the infrared colors of evolved star sites with symmetric maser profiles in the 1612 MHz transition do not show obvious differences compared with those of evolved star sites with asymmetric maser profiles., Comment: 24 pages, 12 figures, accepted by ApJS
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- 2018
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3. Current stage of the ATCA follow-up for SPLASH
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, Walsh, Andrew J., and Shen, Zhi-Qiang
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Four ground-state OH transitions were detected in emission, absorption and maser emission in the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH). We re-observed these OH masers with the Australia Telescope Compact Array to obtain positions with high accuracy (~1 arcsec). According to the positions, we categorised these OH masers into different classes, i.e. star formation, evolved stars, supernova remnants and unknown origin. We found one interesting OH maser source (G336.644-0.695) in the pilot region, which has been studied in detail in Qiao et al. (2016a). In this paper, we present the current stage of the ATCA follow-up for SPLASH and discuss the potential future researches derived from the ATCA data., Comment: 2 pages, conference, IAU symposium 336
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- 2017
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4. A Face-on Accretion System in High-Mass Star-Formation: Possible Dusty Infall Streams within 100 AU
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Motogi, Kazuhito, Hirota, Tomoya, Sorai, Kazuo, Yonekura, Yoshinori, Sugiyama, Koichiro, Honma, Mareki, Niinuma, Kotaro, Hachisuka, Kazuya, Fujisawa, Kenta, and Walsh, Andrew J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on interferometric observations of a face-on accretion system around the High-Mass young stellar object, G353.273+0.641. The innermost accretion system of 100 au radius was resolved in a 45 GHz continuum image taken with the Jansky-Very Large Array. Our spectral energy distribution analysis indicated that the continuum could be explained by optically thick dust emission. The total mass of the dusty system is $\sim$ 0.2 $M_{\sun}$ at minimum and up to a few $M_{\sun}$ depending on the dust parameters. 6.7 GHz CH$_{3}$OH masers associated with the same system were also observed with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The masers showed a spiral-like, non-axisymmetric distribution with a systematic velocity gradient. The line-of-sight velocity field is explained by an infall motion along a parabolic streamline that falls onto the equatorial plane of the face-on system. The streamline is quasi-radial and reaches the equatorial plane at a radius of 16 au. This is clearly smaller than that of typical accretion disks in High-Mass star formation, indicating that the initial angular momentum was very small, or the CH$_{3}$OH masers selectively trace accreting material that has small angular momentum. In the former case, the initial specific angular momentum is estimated to be 8 $\times$ 10$^{20}$ ($M_{*}$$/$10 $M_{\sun}$)$^{0.5}$ cm$^{2}$ s$^{-1}$, or a significant fraction of the initial angular momentum was removed outside of 100 au. The physical origin of such a streamline is still an open question and will be constrained by the higher-resolution ($\sim$ 10 mas) thermal continuum and line observations with ALMA long baselines., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
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- 2017
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5. MALT-45: A 7mm survey of the southern Galaxy - II. ATCA follow-up observations of 44GHz class I methanol masers
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Jordan, Christopher H., Walsh, Andrew J., Breen, Shari L., Ellingsen, Simon P., Voronkov, Maxim A., and Hyland, Lucas J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We detail interferometric observations of 44GHz class I methanol masers detected by MALT-45 (a 7mm unbiased auto-correlated spectral-line Galactic-plane survey) using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. We detect 238 maser spots across 77 maser sites. Using high-resolution positions, we compare the class I CH$_3$OH masers to other star formation maser species, including CS (1-0), SiO $v=0$ and the H53$\alpha$ radio-recombination line. Comparison between the cross- and auto-correlated data has allowed us to also identify quasi-thermal emission in the 44GHz class I methanol maser line. We find that the majority of class I methanol masers have small spatial and velocity ranges ($<$0.5pc and $<$5 km s$^{-1}$), and closely trace the systemic velocities of associated clouds. Using 870$\mu$m dust continuum emission from the ATLASGAL survey, we determine clump masses associated with class I masers, and find they are generally associated with clumps between 1000 and 3000 $M_\odot$. For each class I methanol maser site, we use the presence of OH masers and radio recombination lines to identify relatively evolved regions of high-mass star formation; we find that maser sites without these associations have lower luminosities and preferentially appear toward dark infrared regions., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS on 12 July 2017
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- 2017
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6. Accurate OH maser positions from the SPLASH pilot region
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, Walsh, Andrew J., Green, James A., Breen, Shari L., Dawson, J. R., Ellingsen, Simon P., Gómez, José F., Jordan, Christopher H., Shen, Zhi-Qiang, Lowe, Vicki, and Jones, Paul A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on high spatial resolution observations, using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), of ground-state OH masers. These observations were carried out toward 196 pointing centres previously identified in the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH) pilot region, between Galactic longitudes of $334^{\circ}$ and $344^{\circ}$ and Galactic latitudes of $-2^{\circ}$ and $+2^{\circ}$. Supplementing our data with data from the MAGMO (Mapping the Galactic Magnetic field through OH masers) survey, we find maser emission towards 175 of the 196 target fields. We conclude that about half of the 21 non-detections were due to intrinsic variability. Due to the superior sensitivity of the follow-up ATCA observations, and the ability to resolve nearby sources into separate sites, we have identified 215 OH maser sites towards the 175 fields with detections. Among these 215 OH maser sites, 111 are new detections. After comparing the positions of these 215 maser sites to the literature, we identify 122 (57 per cent) sites associated with evolved stars (one of which is a planetary nebula), 64 (30 per cent) with star formation, two sites with supernova remnants and 27 (13 per cent) of unknown origin. The infrared colors of evolved star sites with symmetric maser profiles tend to be redder than those of evolved star sites with asymmetric maser profiles, which may indicate that symmetric sources are generally at an earlier evolutionary stage., Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures, accepted by ApJS, 162 on-line figures
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- 2016
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7. Ground-state OH maser distributions in the Galactic Centre region
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, Walsh, Andrew J., Shen, Zhi-Qiang, and Dawson, Joanne R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Ground-state OH masers identified in the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl were observed with the Australia Telescope Compact Array to obtain positions with high accuracy ($\sim$1\,arcsec). We classified these OH masers into evolved star OH maser sites, star formation OH maser sites, supernova remnant OH maser sites, planetary nebula OH maser sites and unknown maser sites using their accurate positions. Evolved star and star formation OH maser sites in the Galactic Centre region (between Galactic longitudes of $-5^{\circ}$ to $+5^{\circ}$ and Galactic latitudes of $-2^{\circ}$ and $+2^{\circ}$) were studied in detail to understand their distributions., Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, IAUS 322, conference paper
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- 2016
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8. A Brief Update on the CMZoom Survey
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Battersby, Cara, Keto, Eric, Zhang, Qizhou, Longmore, Steven N., Kruijssen, J. M. Diederik, Pillai, Thushara, Kauffmann, Jens, Walker, Dan, Lu, Xing, Ginsburg, Adam, Bally, John, Mills, Elisabeth A. C., Henshaw, Jonathan D., Immer, Katharina, Patel, Nimesh, Tolls, Volker, Walsh, Andrew J., Johnston, Katharine, and Ho, Luis C.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The inner few hundred parsecs of the Milky Way, the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), is our closest laboratory for understanding star formation in the extreme environments (hot, dense, turbulent gas) that once dominated the universe. We present an update on the first large-area survey to expose the sites of star formation across the CMZ at high-resolution in submillimeter wavelengths: the CMZoom survey with the Submillimeter Array (SMA). We identify the locations of dense cores and search for signatures of embedded star formation. CMZoom is a three-year survey in its final year and is mapping out the highest column density regions of the CMZ in dust continuum and a variety of spectral lines around 1.3 mm. CMZoom combines SMA compact and subcompact configurations with single-dish data from BGPS and the APEX telescope, achieving an angular resolution of about 4" (0.2 pc) and good image fidelity up to large spatial scales., Comment: 4 pages, Astrophysics of the Galactic Centre, Proceedings IAU Symposium No. 322, 2016; R. Crocker, S. Longmore & G. Bicknell. CMZoom website: https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/sma/LargeScale/CMZ/
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- 2016
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9. The Chemistry and Kinematics of Two Molecular Clouds near Sagittarius A*
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Lopez, John A. P., Cunningham, Maria R., Jones, Paul A., Marshall, Jonathan P., Bronfman, Leonardo, Lo, Nadia, and Walsh, Andrew J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have analysed the chemical and kinematic properties of the 20 and 50 km s$^{-1}$ molecular clouds in the Central Molecular Zone of the Milky Way Galaxy, as well as those of the molecular ridge bridging these two clouds. Our work has utilized 37 molecular transitions in the 0.65, 3 and 7-mm wavebands, from the Mopra and NANTEN2 telescopes. The 0.65-mm NANTEN2 data highlights a dense condensation of emission within the western part of the 20 km s$^{-1}$ cloud, visible in only four other transitions, which are 3-mm H$^{13}$CN (1--0), H$^{13}$CO$^{+}$ (1--0), HNC (1--0) and N$_{2}$H$^{+}$ (1--0), suggesting that the condensation is moderately optically thick and cold. We find that while the relative chemical abundances between both clouds are alike in many transitions, suggesting little variation in the chemistry between both clouds; the 20 km s$^{-1}$, cold cloud is brighter than the 50 km s$^{-1}$ cloud in shock and high density tracers. The spatial distribution of enhanced emission is widespread in the 20 km s$^{-1}$ cloud, as shown via line ratio maps. The position velocity diagrams across both clouds indicate that the gas is well mixed. We show that the molecular ridge is most likely part of the 20 km s$^{-1}$ cloud and that both of them may possibly extend to include the 50 km s$^{-1}$ cloud, as part of one larger cloud. Furthermore, we expect that the 20 km s$^{-1}$ cloud is being tidally sheared as a result of the gravitational potential from Sgr A*., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, on the 5th of August 2016. 39 pages (including online supplementary material). Main manuscript is 27 pages, containing 12 figures and 16 tables. The last 12 pages are the online supplementary material, containing 36 figures
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- 2016
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10. Identifying optimal wavelengths to maximise the detection rates of marine fauna from aerial surveys
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Colefax, Andrew P., Kelaher, Brendan P., Walsh, Andrew J., Purcell, Cormac R., Pagendam, Dan E., Cagnazzi, Daniele, and Butcher, Paul A.
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- 2021
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11. Unusual shock-excited OH maser emission in a young Planetary Nebula
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, Walsh, Andrew J., Gomez, Jose F., Imai, Hiroshi, Green, James A., Dawson, Joanne R., Shen, Zhi-Qiang, Ellingsen, Simon P., Breen, Shari L., Jones, Paul A., Gibson, Steven J., and Cunningham, Maria R.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on OH maser emission toward G336.644-0.695 (IRAS 16333-4807), which is a H2O maser-emitting Planetary Nebula (PN). We have detected 1612, 1667 and 1720 MHz OH masers at two epochs using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), hereby confirming it as the seventh known case of an OH-maser-emitting PN. This is only the second known PN showing 1720 MHz OH masers after K 3-35 and the only evolved stellar object with 1720 MHz OH masers as the strongest transition. This PN is one of a group of very young PNe. The 1612 MHz and 1667 MHz masers are at a similar velocity to the 22 GHz H2O masers, whereas the 1720 MHz masers show a variable spectrum, with several components spread over a higher velocity range (up to 36 km/s). We also detect Zeeman splitting in the 1720 MHz transition at two epochs (with field strengths of ~2 to ~10 mG), which suggests the OH emission at 1720 MHz is formed in a magnetized environment. These 1720 MHz OH masers may trace short-lived equatorial ejections during the formation of the PN., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by ApJ
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- 2015
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12. A search for High Mass Stars Forming in Isolation using CORNISH & ATLASGAL
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Tremblay, Chenoa D., Walsh, Andrew J., Longmore, Steven N., Urquhart, James S., and König, Carsten
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Theoretical models of high mass star formation lie between two extreme scenarios. At one extreme, all the mass comes from an initially gravitationally-bound core. At the other extreme, the majority of the mass comes from cluster scale gas, which lies far outside the initial core boundary. One way to unambiguously show high mass stars can assemble their gas through the former route would be to find a high mass star forming in isolation. Making use of recently available CORNISH and ATLASGAL Galactic plane survey data, we develop sample selection criteria to try and find such an object. From an initial list of approximately 200 sources, we identify the high mass star forming region G13.384+0.064 as the most promising candidate. The region contains a strong radio continuum source, that is powered by an early B-type star. The bolometric luminosity, derived from infrared measurements, is consistent with this. However, sub-millimetre continuum emission, measured in ATLASGAL, as well as dense gas tracers, such as HCO+(3-2) and N2H+(3-2) indicate that there is less than 100 M$_{\odot}$ of material surrounding this star. We conclude that this region is indeed a promising candidate for a high mass star forming in isolation, but that deeper near-IR observations are required to put a stronger constraint on the upper mass limit of young, lower mass stars in the region. Finally, we discuss the challenges facing future studies in proving a given high mass star is forming in isolation., Comment: 10pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2015
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13. A Survey for Hydroxyl in the THOR Pilot Region around W43
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Walsh, Andrew J., Beuther, Henrik, Bihr, Simon, Johnston, Katharine G., Dawson, Joanne R., Ott, Juergen, Longmore, Steven N., Luong, Q. Nguyen, Klessen, Ralf S., Ragan, Sarah, McClure-Griffiths, Naomi, Brunthaler, Andreas, Urquhart, James, Menten, Karl, Bigiel, Frank, Wyrowski, Friedrich, and Rugel, Michael
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on observations of the hydroxyl radical (OH) within The H{\sc I}, OH Recombination line survey (THOR) pilot region. The region is bounded approximately between Galactic coordinates l=29.2 to 31.5$^\circ$ and b=-1.0 to +1.0$^\circ$ and includes the high-mass star forming region W43. We identify 103 maser sites, including 72 with 1612\,MHz masers, 42 showing masers in either of the main line transitions at 1665 and 1667\,MHz and four showing 1720\,MHz masers. Most maser sites with either main-line or 1720\,MHz emission are associated with star formation, whereas most of the 1612\,MHz masers are associated with evolved stars. We find that nearly all of the main-line maser sites are co-spatial with an infrared source, detected by GLIMPSE. We also find diffuse OH emission, as well as OH in absorption towards selected unresolved or partially resolved sites. Extended OH absorption is found towards the well known star forming complex W43 Main., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2015
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14. An ATCA Survey of Sagittarius~B2 at 7~mm: Chemical Complexity Meets Broadband Interferometry
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Corby, Joanna F., Jones, Paul A., Cunningham, Maria R., Menten, Karl M., Belloche, Arnaud, Schwab, Frederic R., Walsh, Andrew J., Balnozan, Egon, Bronfman, Leonardo, Lo, Nadia, and Remijan, Anthony J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a 30 - 50 GHz survey of Sagittarius B2(N) conducted with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) with 5 - 10 arcsec resolution. This work releases the survey data and demonstrates the utility of scripts that perform automated spectral line fitting on broadband line data. We describe the line-fitting procedure, evaluate the performance of the method, and provide access to all data and scripts. The scripts are used to characterize the spectra at the positions of three HII regions, each with recombination line emission and molecular line absorption. Towards the most line-dense of the three regions characterised in this work, we detect ~500 spectral line components of which ~90 per cent are confidently assigned to H and He recombination lines and to 53 molecular species and their isotopologues. The data reveal extremely subthermally excited molecular gas absorbing against the continuum background at two primary velocity components. Based on the line radiation over the full spectra, the molecular abundances and line excitation in the absorbing components appear to vary substantially towards the different positions, possibly indicating that the two gas clouds are located proximate to the star forming cores instead of within the envelope of Sgr B2. Furthermore, the spatial distributions of species including CS, OCS, SiO, and HNCO indicate that the absorbing gas components likely have high UV-flux. Finally, the data contain line-of-sight absorption by $\sim$15 molecules observed in translucent gas in the Galactic Center, bar, and intervening spiral arm clouds, revealing the complex chemistry and clumpy structure of this gas. Formamide (NH$_2$CHO) is detected for the first time in a translucent cloud., Comment: 31 pages of the article, with 53 additional pages of appendices. 16 figures in the main article
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- 2015
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15. The Mopra Southern Galactic Plane CO Survey - Data Release 1
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Braiding, Catherine, Burton, Michael G., Blackwell, Rebecca, Glueck, Christian, Hawkes, Jarryd, Kulesa, Craig, Maxted, Nigel, Rebolledo, David, Rowell, Gavin, Stark, Tony, Tothill, Nick, Urquhart, James S., Voisin, Fabien, Walsh, Andrew J., de Wilt, Phoebe C., and Wong, Graeme F.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present observations of the first ten degrees of longitude in the Mopra carbon monoxide (CO) survey of the southern Galactic plane (Burton et al. 2013), covering Galactic longitude l = 320-330{\deg} and latitude b = $\pm$0.5{\deg}, and l = 327-330{\deg}, b = +0.5-1.0{\deg}. These data have been taken at 35 arc sec spatial resolution and 0.1 km/s spectral resolution, providing an unprecedented view of the molecular clouds and gas of the southern Galactic plane in the 109-115 GHz J = 1-0 transitions of 12CO, 13CO, C18O and C17O. Together with information about the noise statistics from the Mopra telescope, these data can be retrieved from the Mopra CO website and the CSIRO-ATNF data archive., Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, accepted by PASA
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- 2015
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16. MALT-45: A 7 mm survey of the southern Galaxy - I. Techniques and spectral line data
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Jordan, Christopher H., Walsh, Andrew J., Lowe, Vicki, Voronkov, Maxim A., Ellingsen, Simon P., Breen, Shari L., Purcell, Cormac R., Barnes, Peter J., Burton, Michael G., Cunningham, Maria R., Hill, Tracey, Jackson, James M., Longmore, Steven N., Peretto, Nicolas, and Urquhart, James S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first results from the MALT-45 (Millimetre Astronomer's Legacy Team - 45 GHz) Galactic Plane survey. We have observed 5 square-degrees ($l = 330 - 335$, $b = \pm0.5$) for spectral lines in the 7 mm band (42-44 and 48-49 GHz), including $\text{CS}$ $(1-0)$, class I $\text{CH}_3\text{OH}$ masers in the $7(0,7)-6(1,6)$ $\text{A}^{+}$ transition and $\text{SiO}$ $(1-0)$ $v=0,1,2,3$. MALT-45 is the first unbiased, large-scale, sensitive spectral line survey in this frequency range. In this paper, we present data from the survey as well as a few intriguing results; rigorous analyses of these science cases are reserved for future publications. Across the survey region, we detected 77 class I $\text{CH}_3\text{OH}$ masers, of which 58 are new detections, along with many sites of thermal and maser $\text{SiO}$ emission and thermal $\text{CS}$. We found that 35 class I $\text{CH}_3\text{OH}$ masers were associated with the published locations of class II $\text{CH}_3\text{OH}$, $\text{H}_2\text{O}$ and $\text{OH}$ masers but 42 have no known masers within 60 arcsec. We compared the MALT-45 $\text{CS}$ with $\text{NH}_3$ (1,1) to reveal regions of $\text{CS}$ depletion and high opacity, as well as evolved star-forming regions with a high ratio of $\text{CS}$ to $\text{NH}_3$. All $\text{SiO}$ masers are new detections, and appear to be associated with evolved stars from the $\it{Spitzer}$ Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE). Generally, within $\text{SiO}$ regions of multiple vibrational modes, the intensity decreases as $v=1,2,3$, but there are a few exceptions where $v=2$ is stronger than $v=1$., Comment: Accepted by Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on 2015 January 23. Appendices will be published with MNRAS
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- 2015
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17. Validating Digital Earth Australia NBART for the Landsat 9 Underfly of Landsat 8
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Byrne, Guy, primary, Broomhall, Mark, additional, Walsh, Andrew J., additional, Thankappan, Medhavy, additional, Hay, Eric, additional, Li, Fuqin, additional, McAtee, Brendon, additional, Garcia, Rodrigo, additional, Anstee, Janet, additional, Kerrisk, Gemma, additional, Drayson, Nathan, additional, Barnetson, Jason, additional, Samford, Ian, additional, and Denham, Robert, additional
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- 2024
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18. New detections of HC$_{5}$N toward hot cores associated with 6.7 GHz methanol masers
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Green, Claire-Elise, Green, James A., Burton, Michael G., Horiuchi, Shinji, Tothill, Nicholas F. H., Walsh, Andrew J., Purcell, Cormac R., Lovell, James E. J., and Millar, Thomas J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present new detections of cyanodiacetylene (HC$_{5}$N) toward hot molecular cores, observed with the Tidbinbilla 34 m radio telescope (DSS-34). In a sample of 79 hot molecular cores, HC$_{5}$N was detected towards 35. These results are counter to the expectation that long chain cyanopolyynes, such as HC$_{5}$N, are not typically found in hot molecular cores, unlike their shorter chain counterpart HC$_{3}$N. However it is consistent with recent models which suggest HC$_{5}$N may exist for a limited period during the evolution of hot molecular cores., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS, July 3 2014
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- 2014
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19. Accurate water maser positions from HOPS
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Walsh, Andrew J., Purcell, Cormac R., Longmore, Steven N., Breen, Shari L., Green, James A., Harvey-Smith, Lisa, Jordan, Christopher H., and Macpherson, Christopher
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report on high spatial resolution water maser observations, using the Australia Telescope Compact Array, towards water maser sites previously identified in the H2O southern Galactic Plane Survey (HOPS). Of the 540 masers identified in the single-dish observations of Walsh et al. (2011), we detect emission in all but 31 fields. We report on 2790 spectral features (maser spots), with brightnesses ranging from 0.06 Jy to 576Jy and with velocities ranging from -238.5 to +300.5km/s. These spectral features are grouped into 631 maser sites. We have compared the positions of these sites to the literature to associate the sites with astrophysical objects. We identify 433 (69 per cent) with star formation, 121 (19 per cent) with evolved stars and 77 (12 per cent) as unknown. We find that maser sites associated with evolved stars tend to have more maser spots and have smaller angular sizes than those associated with star formation. We present evidence that maser sites associated with evolved stars show an increased likelihood of having a velocity range between 15 and 35 km/s compared to other maser sites. Of the 31 non-detections, we conclude they were not detected due to intrinsic variability and confirm previous results showing that such variable masers tend to be weaker and have simpler spectra with fewer peaks., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. The full preprint (718 pages, 21MB) can be downloaded from http://hops.org.au under "Publications"
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- 2014
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20. Molecular line mapping of the giant molecular cloud associated with RCW 106 - IV. Ammonia towards dust emission
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Lowe, Vicki, Cunningham, Maria R., Urquhart, James S., Marshall, Jonathan P., Horiuchi, Shinji, Lo, Nadia, Walsh, Andrew J., Jordan, Christopher H., and Jones, Paul A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Here we report observations of the two lowest inversion transitions of ammonia with the 70-m Tidbinbilla radio telescope. They were conducted to determine the kinetic temperatures in the dense clumps of the G333 giant molecular cloud associated with RCW 106 and to examine the effect that accurate temperatures have on the calculation of derived quantities such as mass. This project is part of a larger investigation to understand the timescales and evolutionary sequence associated with high-mass star formation, particularly its earliest stages. Assuming that the initial chemical composition of a giant molecular cloud is uniform, any abundance variations within will be due to evolutionary state. We have identified 63 clumps using SIMBA 1.2-mm dust continuum maps and have calculated gas temperatures for most (78 per cent) of these dense clumps. After using Spitzer GLIMPSE 8.0 $\mu$m emission to separate the sample into IR-bright and IR-faint clumps, we use statistical tests to examine whether our classification shows different populations in terms of mass and temperature. We find that clump mass and column density show no significant population difference, and that kinetic temperature is the best parameter to distinguish between the gravitationally bound state of each clump. The kinetic temperature was the only parameter found to have a significantly low probability of being drawn from the same population. This suggests that clump radii does not have a large effect on the temperature of a clump, so clumps of similar radii may have different internal heating mechanisms. We also find that while the IR-bright clumps have a higher median virial mass, both samples have a similar range for both virial mass and FWHM. There are 87 per cent (40 of 46) of the clumps with masses larger than the virial mass, suggesting that they will form stars or are already undergoing star formation., Comment: 36 pages (19+appendices), 11 figures (9+appendices), 6 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Appendix A = 6 pages, 63 sub-figures. Appendix B = 11 pages, 63 sub-figures
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- 2014
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21. Survey Study on the Experience, Practice Patterns, and Preferences of the Fellows of the Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound for Evaluation and Management of Gallbladder Polyps Detected With Ultrasound
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Middleton, William D., Fung, Christopher, Dahiya, Nirvikar, Szpakowski, Jean-Luc, Corwin, Michael T., Fetzer, David T., Gabriel, Helena, Rodgers, Shuchi K., Tublin, Mitchell E., Walsh, Andrew J., and Kamaya, Aya
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- 2022
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22. Dense Gas Towards the RXJ1713.7-3946 Supernova Remnant
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Maxted, Nigel I., Rowell, Gavin P., Dawson, Bruce R., Burton, Michael G., Fukui, Yasuo, Lazendic, Jasmina, Kawamura, Akiko, Horachi, Hirotaka, Sano, Hidetoshi, Walsh, Andrew J., Yoshiike, Satoshi, and Fukuda, Tatsuya
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present results from a Mopra 7mm-wavelength survey that targeted the dense gas-tracing CS(1-0) transition towards the young gamma-ray-bright supernova remnant, RXJ1713.7-3946 (SNR G347.3-0.5). In a hadronic gamma-ray emission scenario, where cosmic ray protons interact with gas to produce the observed gamma-ray emission, the mass of potential cosmic ray target material is an important factor. We summarise newly-discovered dense gas components, towards Cores G and L, and Clumps N1, N2, N3 and T1, which have masses of 1-10^4 solar masses. We argue that these components are not likely to contribute significantly to gamma-ray emission in a hadronic gamma-ray emission scenario. This would be the case if RXJ1713.7-3946 were at either the currently favoured distance of ~1kpc or an alternate distance (as suggested in some previous studies) of ~6kpc. This survey also targeted the shock-tracing SiO molecule. Although no SiO emission corresponding to the RXJ1713.7-3946 shock was observed, vibrationally-excited SiO(1-0) maser emission was discovered towards what may be an evolved star. Observations taken one year apart confirmed a transient nature, since the intensity, line-width and central velocity of SiO(J=1-0,v=1,2) emission varied significantly., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2013
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23. Characterization of the MALT90 Survey and the Mopra Telescope at 90 GHz
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Foster, Jonathan B., Rathborne, Jill M., Sanhueza, Patricio, Claysmith, Chris, Whitaker, J. Scott, Jackson, James M., Mascoop, Joshua L., Wienen, Marion, Breen, Shari L., Herpin, Fabrice, Duarte-Cabral, Ana, Csengeri, Timea, Contreras, Yanett, Indermuehle, Balt, Barnes, Peter J., Walsh, Andrew J., Cunningham, Maria R., Britton, Tui R., Voronkov, Maxim A., Urquhart, James S., Alves, João, Jordan, Christopher H., Hill, Tracey, Hoq, Sadia, Brooks, Kate J., and Longmore, Steven N.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We characterize the Millimeter Astronomy Legacy Team 90 GHz (MALT90) Survey and the Mopra telescope at 90 GHz. We combine repeated position-switched observations of the source G300.968+01.145 with a map of the same source in order to estimate the pointing reliability of the position-switched observations and, by extension, the MALT90 survey; we estimate our pointing uncertainty to be 8 arcseconds. We model the two strongest sources of systematic gain variability as functions of elevation and time-of-day and quantify the remaining absolute flux uncertainty. Corrections based on these two variables reduce the scatter in repeated observations from 12-25% down to 10-17%. We find no evidence for intrinsic source variability in G300.968+01.145. For certain applications, the corrections described herein will be integral for improving the absolute flux calibration of MALT90 maps and other observations using the Mopra telescope at 90 GHz., Comment: Corrected Figure 5
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- 2013
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24. Pilot Observations for MALT-45: A Galactic Plane Survey at 7mm
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Jordan, Christopher H., Walsh, Andrew J., Lowe, Vicki, Lo, Nadia, Purcell, Cormac R., Voronkov, Maxim A., and Longmore, Steven
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We introduce the MALT-45 (Millimetre Astronomer's Legacy Team - 45 GHz) Galactic plane survey and describe pilot survey results with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). The pilot survey was conducted to test the instrumentation and observational technique of MALT-45, before commencing the full survey. We mapped two half-square degree regions within the southern Galactic plane around the G333 giant molecular cloud, using fast mosaic mapping. Using the new Compact Array Broadband Backend (CABB) on the ATCA, we were able to observe two 2048 MHz spectral windows, centred on frequencies 43.2 and 48.2 GHz. Although only a coarse spectral resolution of around 7 km/s was available to us, we detect widespread, extended emission in the CS (1-0) ground state transition. We also detect eight Class I CH3OH masers at 44 GHz and three SiO masers in vibrationally excited (1-0) transitions. We also detect the H53a radio recombination line, non-vibrationally excited SiO (1-0) and emission in the CH3OH 1_1-0_0 A+ line., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS on November 2, 2012
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- 2012
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25. 3 to 12 millimetre studies of dense gas towards the western rim of supernova remnant RX J1713.7-3946
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Maxted, Nigel I., Rowell, Gavin P., Dawson, Bruce R., Burton, Michael G., Nicholas, Brent P., Fukui, Yasuo, Walsh, Andrew J., Kawamura, Akiko, Horachi, Hirotaka, and Sano, Hidetoshi
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The young X-ray and gamma-ray-bright supernova remnant RXJ1713.7-3946 (SNR G347.3-0.5) is believed to be associated with molecular cores that lie within regions of the most intense TeV emission. Using the Mopra telescope, four of the densest cores were observed using high-critical density tracers such as CS(J=1-0,J=2-1) and its isotopologue counterparts, NH3(1,1) and (2,2) inversion transitions and N2H+(J=1-0) emission, confirming the presence of dense gas >10^4cm^-3 in the region. The mass estimates for Core C range from 40M_{\odot} (from CS(J=1-0)) to 80M_{\odot} (from NH3 and N2H+), an order of magnitude smaller than published mass estimates from CO(J=1-0) observations. We also modelled the energy-dependent diffusion of cosmic-ray protons accelerated by RXJ1713.7-3946 into Core C, approximating the core with average density and magnetic field values. We find that for considerably suppressed diffusion coefficients (factors \chi=10^{-3} down to 10^{-5} the galactic average), low energy cosmic-rays can be prevented from entering the inner core region. Such an effect could lead to characteristic spectral behaviour in the GeV to TeV gamma-ray and multi-keV X-ray fluxes across the core. These features may be measurable with future gamma-ray and multi-keV telescopes offering arcminute or better angular resolution, and can be a novel way to understand the level of cosmic-ray acceleration in RXJ1713.7-3946 and the transport properties of cosmic-rays in the dense molecular cores., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures and 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS 2012 February 17
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- 2012
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26. Maser Source Finding Methods in HOPS
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Walsh, Andrew J., Purcell, Cormac, Longmore, Steven, Jordan, Christopher H., and Lowe, Vicki
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The {\bf H}$_2${\bf O} Southern Galactic {\bf P}lane {\bf S}urvey (HOPS) has observed 100 square degrees of the Galactic plane, using the Mopra radio telescope to search for emission from multiple spectral lines in the 12\,mm band (19.5\,--\,27.5\,GHz). Perhaps the most important of these spectral lines is the 22.2\,GHz water maser transition. We describe the methods used to identify water maser candidates and subsequent confirmation of the sources. Our methods involve a simple determination of likely candidates by searching peak emission maps, utilising the intrinsic nature of water maser emission - spatially unresolved and spectrally narrow-lined. We estimate completeness limits and compare our method with results from the {\sc Duchamp} source finder. We find that the two methods perform similarly. We conclude that the similarity in performance is due to the intrinsic limitation of the noise characteristics of the data. The advantages of our method are that it is slightly more efficient in eliminating spurious detections and is simple to implement. The disadvantage is that it is a manual method of finding sources and so is not practical on datasets much larger than HOPS, or for datasets with extended emission that needs to be characterised. We outline a two-stage method for the most efficient means of finding masers, using {\sc Duchamp}., Comment: 8 pages, 1 table, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in PASA special issue on Source Finding & Visualisation
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- 2011
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27. A Pilot Survey for the H$_2$O Southern Galactic Plane Survey (HOPS)
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Walsh, Andrew J., Lo, Nadia, Burton, Michael G., White, Graeme L., Purcell, Cormac R., Longmore, Steven N., Phillips, Chris J., and Brooks, Kate J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe observations with the Mopra radiotelescope designed to assess the feasibility of the H$_2$O maser southern Galactic plane survey (HOPS). We mapped two one-square-degree regions along the Galactic plane using the new 12 mm receiver and the UNSW Mopra spectrometer (MOPS). We covered the entire spectrum between 19.5 and 27.5 GHz using this setup with the main aims of finding out which spectral lines can be detected with a quick mapping survey. We report on detected emission from H$_2$O masers, NH$_3$ inversion transitions (1,1), (2,2) and (3,3), HC$_3$N (3-2), as well as several radio recombination lines., Comment: accepted by PASA
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- 2008
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28. ATCA 1.2 cm Observations of the Massive Star Forming Region G305.2+0.2
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Walsh, Andrew J., Chapman, Jacqueline F., Burton, Michael G., Wardle, Mark, and Millar, T. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on Australia Telescope observations of the massive star forming region G305.2+0.2 at 1.2 cm. We detected emission in five molecules towards G305A, confirming its hot core nature. We determined a rotational temperature of 26 K for methanol. A non-LTE excitation calculation suggests a kinematic temperature of order 200 K. A time dependent chemical model is also used to model the gas phase chemistry of the hot core associated with G305A. A comparison with the observations suggest an age of between 2 x10^4 and 1.5 x10^5 years. We also report on a feature to the SE of G305A which may show weak Class I methanol maser emission in the line at 24.933 GHz. The more evolved source G305B does not show emission in any of the line tracers, but strong Class I methanol maser emission at 24.933 GHz is found 3\arcsec to the east. Radio continuum emission at 18.496 GHz is detected towards two \hii regions. The implications of the non-detection of radio continuum emission toward G305A and G305B are also discussed., Comment: 13 pages 11 figures
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- 2007
29. A Large Scale Survey of NGC1333
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Walsh, Andrew J., Myers, Philip C., Di Francesco, James, Mohanty, Subhanjoy, Bourke, Tyler L., Gutermuth, Robert, and Wilner, David
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We observed the clustered star forming complex NGC1333 with the BIMA and FCRAO telescopes in the transitions HCO+(1-0) and N2H+(1-0) over an 11'x11' area with resolution ~10" (0.015pc). The N2H+ emission follows very closely the submillimeter dust continuum emission, while HCO+ emission appears more spatially extended and also traces outflows. We have identified 93 N2H+ cores using the CLUMPFIND algorithm, and we derive N2H+ core masses between 0.05 and 2.5M_sun, with uncertainties of a factor of a few, dominated by the adopted N2H+ abundance. From a comparison with virial masses, we argue that most of these N2H+ cores are likely to be bound, even at the lowest masses, suggesting that the cores do not trace transient structures, and implies the entire mass distribution consists of objects that can potentially form stars. We find that the mass distribution of N2H+ cores resembles the field star IMF, which suggests that the IMF is locked in at the pre-stellar stage of evolution. We find that the N2H+ cores associated with stars identified from Spitzer infrared images have a flat mass distribution. This might be because lower mass cores lose a larger fraction of their mass when forming a star. Even in this clustered environment, we find no evidence for ballistic motions of the cores relative to their lower density surroundings traced by isotopic CO emission, though this conclusion must remain tentative until the surroundings are observed at the same high resolution as the N2H+., Comment: 35 pages, 13 figures
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- 2006
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30. Mopra Observations of G305.2+0.2: Massive Star Formation at Different Evolutionary Stages?
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Walsh, Andrew J. and Burton, Michael G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have successfully used a new on-the-fly mapping technique with the Mopra radiotelescope to image G305.2+0.2 in transitions of 13CO, HCO+, N2H+, CH3CN and CH3OH. All these species appear to be concentrated towards the infrared-quiet methanol maser site G305A (G305.21+0.21). We suggest that this region contains an extremely deeply embedded site of massive star formation, with comparable qualities to the low mass Class 0 stage. The infrared-bright methanol maser site G305B (G305.21+0.20) also exhibits emission in all the mapped transitions, but always at a lower level. We suggest this is because it harbours a site of massive star formation older and more developed than G305.21+0.21. All transitions appear to be extended beyond the size of the Mopra beam (30"). 13CO and HCO+ line wings are suggestive of an outflow in the region, but the spatial resolution of these data is insufficient to identify the powering source. A narrow-lined (1.6 km/s compared to a typical line FWHM of 6.4 km/s) N2H+ source (G305SW) is found 90" to the south-west of the main star forming centres, which does not correspond to any CH3CN or CH3OH source, nor does it correspond well to 13CO or HCO+ emission in the vicinity. We suggest this may be a massive, cold, quiescent and possibly prestellar core., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures
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- 2005
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31. Observations of Global and Local Infall in NGC 1333
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Walsh, Andrew J., Bourke, Tyler L., and Myers, Philip C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report ``infall asymmetry'' in the HCO$^+$ (1--0) and (3--2) lines toward NGC 1333, extended over $\sim 0.39 {\rm pc}^2$, a larger extent than has been reported be fore, for any star-forming region. The infall asymmetry extends over a major portion of the star-forming complex, and is not limited to a single protostar, or to a single dense core, or to a single spectral line. It seems likely that the infall asymmetry represents inward motions, and that these motions are physically associated with the complex. Both blue-asymmetric and red-asymmetric lines are seen, but in both the (3--2) and (1--0) lines of HCO$^+$ the vast majority of the asymmetric lines are blue, indicating inward motions. The (3--2) line, tracing denser gas, has the spectra with the strongest asymmetry and these spectra are associated with the protostars IRAS 4A and 4B, which most likely indicates a warm central source is affecting the line profiles. The (3--2) and (1--0) lines usually have the same sense of asymmetry in common positions, but their profiles differ significantly, and the (1--0) line appears to trace motions on much larger spatial scales than does the (3--2) line. Line profile models fit the spectra well, but do not strongly constrain their parameters. The mass accretion rate of the inward motions is of order 10$^{-4}$ M$_\odot$/yr, similar to the ratio of stellar mass to cluster age., Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures, 1 colour figure
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- 2005
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32. High-Resolution Mid-Infrared Imaging of G339.88-1.26
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De Buizer, James M., Walsh, Andrew J., Pina, Robert K., Phillips, Chris J., and Telesco, Charles M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
G339.88-1.26 is considered to be a good candidate for a massive star with a circumstellar disk. This has been supported by the observations of linearly distributed methanol maser spots believed to delineate this disk, and mid-infrared observations that have discovered a source at this location that is elongated at the same position angle as the methanol maser distribution. We used the mid-infrared imager/spectrometer OSCIR at Keck to make high-resolution images of G339.88-1.26. We resolve the mid-infrared emission into 3 sources within 1.5 arcsec of the location of the masers. We determine that the methanol masers are most likely not located in a circumstellar disk. Furthermore we find that the observed radio continuum emission most likely comes from two sources in close proximity to each other. One source is an unobscured massive star with an extended HII region that is responsible for the peak in the radio continuum emission. A second source is embedded and centered on the elongation in the radio continuum emission that is believed to be tracing an outflow in this region., Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2001
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33. Utility of Spectral Filtering to Improve the Reliability of Marine Fauna Detections from Drone-Based Monitoring
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Colefax, Andrew P., primary, Walsh, Andrew J., additional, Purcell, Cormac R., additional, and Butcher, Paul, additional
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- 2023
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34. Synthesis of triplex-forming oligonucleotide conjugates of the anticancer drug temodal
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Walsh, Andrew J.
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615.1 ,Pharmacy ,Biological Sciences - Abstract
Covalent attachment of the anticancer drugs temozolomide (Temodal) and mitozolomide to triplex-forming oligonucleotides (TFOs) is a potential way of targeting these alkylating agents to specific gene sequences to maximise site-selectivity. In this work, polypyrimidine TFO conjugates of both drugs were synthesised and targeted to duplex DNA in an attempt to effect site-specific alkylation of guanine residues. Concurrently, in an attempt to enhance the triple helix stability of TFOs at neutral pH, the thermal stabilities of triplexes formed from TFOs containing isoguanine, 2-O-benzyl- and 2-O-allyl-adenine were evaluated. A novel cleavage and deprotection procedure was developed which allowed for the solid phase synthesis of the base-sensitive TFO-drug conjugates using a recently developed silyl-linked controlled pore glass (SLCPG) support. Covalent attachment of either temozolomide or mitozolomide at the 5'-end of TFO conjugates caused no destabilisation of the triplexes studied. The synthesis of a phosphoramidite derivative of mitozolomide enabled direct incorporation of this reagent into a model sequence during DNA synthesis. After cleavage and deprotection of the TFO-drug conjugate, the 5'-end mitozolomide residue was found to have decomposed presumably as a result of ring-opening of the tetrazinone ring. The base-sensitive antibacterial and antitumour agent, metronidazole, was also successfully incorporated at the 5'-end of the oligonucleotide d(T8) using conventional methods. Two C2-substituted derivatives of 2'-deoxyadenosine containing 2-O-benzyl and 2-O-allyl groups were synthesised. Hydrogenolysis of the 2-O-benzyl analogue provided a useful route, amenable to scale-up, for the synthesis of the rare nucleoside 2'-deoxyisoguanosine (isoG). Both the 2-O-allyl and 2-O-benzyl derivatives were incorporated into TFO sequences using phosphoramidite methodology. Thermal melting experiments showed that the 2-O-allyl and 2-O-benzyl groups caused marked destabilisation of the triple helices studied, in contrast to hexose-DNA duplexes, where aralkyl substituents caused significant stabilisation of duplexes.
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- 1999
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35. Validation of quantitative susceptibility mapping with Perls' iron staining for subcortical gray matter
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Sun, Hongfu, Walsh, Andrew J., Lebel, R. Marc, Blevins, Gregg, Catz, Ingrid, Lu, Jian-Qiang, Johnson, Edward S., Emery, Derek J., Warren, Kenneth G., and Wilman, Alan H.
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- 2015
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36. Reply to “Risk Factors and Recommendations for Follow-Up of Gallbladder Polyps”
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Walsh, Andrew J., primary, Bingham, David B., additional, and Kamaya, Aya, additional
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- 2022
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37. Management of Incidentally Detected Gallbladder Polyps: Society of Radiologists in Ultrasound Consensus Conference Recommendations
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Kamaya, Aya, primary, Fung, Christopher, additional, Szpakowski, Jean-Luc, additional, Fetzer, David T., additional, Walsh, Andrew J., additional, Alimi, Yewande, additional, Bingham, David B., additional, Corwin, Michael T., additional, Dahiya, Nirvikar, additional, Gabriel, Helena, additional, Park, Walter G., additional, Porembka, Matthew R., additional, Rodgers, Shuchi K., additional, Tublin, Mitchell E., additional, Yuan, Xin, additional, Zhang, Yang, additional, and Middleton, William D., additional
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- 2022
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38. Assessing the ability of deep learning techniques to perform real-time identification of shark species in live streaming video from drones
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Purcell, Cormac R., primary, Walsh, Andrew J., additional, Colefax, Andrew P., additional, and Butcher, Paul, additional
- Published
- 2022
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39. SPLASH: the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl – data description and release
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Australian Research Council, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Dawson, J. R., Jones, P. A., Purcell, C., Walsh, Andrew J., Breen, S. L., Brown, C., Carretti, E., Cunningham, M. R., Dickey, J. M., Ellingsen, S. P., Gibson, S. J., Gómez Rivero, José Francisco, Green, J.A., Imai, H., Krishnan, V., Lo, N., Lowe, V., Marquarding, M., McClure-Griffiths, N. M., Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), European Commission, Australian Research Council, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Dawson, J. R., Jones, P. A., Purcell, C., Walsh, Andrew J., Breen, S. L., Brown, C., Carretti, E., Cunningham, M. R., Dickey, J. M., Ellingsen, S. P., Gibson, S. J., Gómez Rivero, José Francisco, Green, J.A., Imai, H., Krishnan, V., Lo, N., Lowe, V., Marquarding, M., and McClure-Griffiths, N. M.
- Abstract
We present the full data release for the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH), a sensitive, unbiased single-dish survey of the Southern Galactic Plane in all four ground-state transitions of the OH radical at 1612, 1665, 1667, and 1720 MHz. The survey covers the inner Galactic Plane, Central Molecular Zone, and Galactic Centre over the range |b| < 2°, 332∘
- Published
- 2022
40. Susceptibility phase imaging with comparison to R2* mapping of iron-rich deep grey matter
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Walsh, Andrew J. and Wilman, Alan H.
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- 2011
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41. Longitudinal Ultrasound Assessment of Changes in Size and Number of Incidentally Detected Gallbladder Polyps
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Walsh, Andrew J., primary, Bingham, David B., additional, and Kamaya, Aya, additional
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- 2022
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42. A Case Study of Measurement Uncertainty in Field Spectroscopy
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Walsh, Andrew J., primary, Byrne, Guy, additional, and Broomhall, Mark, additional
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- 2022
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43. Subcortical gray matter segmentation and voxel-based analysis using transverse relaxation and quantitative susceptibility mapping with application to multiple sclerosis
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Cobzas, Dana, Sun, Hongfu, Walsh, Andrew J., Lebel, Marc R., Blevins, Gregg, and Wilman, Alan H.
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- 2015
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44. A concise synthesis of isoguanine 2’-deoxyriboside and its adenine-like triplex formation when incorporated into DNA
- Author
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Walsh, Andrew J., Schwalbe, Carl H., Fraser, William, Walsh, Andrew J., Schwalbe, Carl H., and Fraser, William
- Abstract
A concise synthesis of 2’-deoxyisoguanosine is achieved whereby 2,6-dichloropurine is glycosylated using the Hoffer sugar to give a pair of beta-configured nucleoside N9/N7 regioisomers that are aminated using methanolic ammonia with concomitant deprotection of the sugar. Following chromatographic separation, pure 2-chloro-2’-deoxyadenosine was isolated as a single isomer. Displacement of the C2 chlorine atom using sodium benzyloxide, followed by hydrogenolysis of the benzyl group, gives 2’-deoxyisoguanosine. Isoguanine was incorporated into DNA by solid supported synthesis using the suitably protected 2-allyloxy-2’-deoxyadenosine phosphoramidite with the allyl group being removed post-oligomerisation under Noyori conditions. DNA melting studies showed isoguanine to exhibit adenine-like triplex formation.
- Published
- 2021
45. Intervertebral Disc Cell Therapy for Regeneration: Mesenchymal Stem Cell Implantation in Rat Intervertebral Discs
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Crevensten, Gwen, Walsh, Andrew J. L., Ananthakrishnan, Dheera, Page, Paul, Wahba, George M., Lotz, Jeffrey C., and Berven, Sigurd
- Published
- 2004
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46. Susceptibility phase imaging with improved image contrast using moving window phase gradient fitting and minimal filtering
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Walsh, Andrew J., Eissa, Amir, Blevins, Gregg, and Wilman, Alan H.
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- 2012
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47. A concise synthesis of isoguanine 2ʹ-deoxyriboside and its adenine-like triplex formation when incorporated into DNA
- Author
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Walsh, Andrew J., primary, Schwalbe, Carl H., additional, and Fraser, William, additional
- Published
- 2021
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48. The Solar Orbiter mission: Science overview
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German Centre for Air and Space Travel, Max Planck Society, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales (France), Müller, D., St. Cyr, O. C., Zouganelis, I., Gilbert, H. R., Marsden, R., Nieves-Chinchilla, T., Antonucci, E., Auchère, Frederic, Berghmans, D., Horbury, T. S., Howard, R. A., Krucker, S., Maksimovic, M., Owen, C. J., Rochus, P., Rodriguez-Pacheco, J., Romoli, M., Solanki, S. K., Bruno, R., Carlsson, M., Fludra, A., Harra, L., Hassler, D. M., Livi, S., Louarn, P., Peter, H., Schühle, U., Teriaca, L., Toro, José Carlos del, Wimmer-Schweingruber, R. F., Marsch, E., Velli, M., De Groof, A., Walsh, Andrew J., Williams, D., German Centre for Air and Space Travel, Max Planck Society, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales (France), Müller, D., St. Cyr, O. C., Zouganelis, I., Gilbert, H. R., Marsden, R., Nieves-Chinchilla, T., Antonucci, E., Auchère, Frederic, Berghmans, D., Horbury, T. S., Howard, R. A., Krucker, S., Maksimovic, M., Owen, C. J., Rochus, P., Rodriguez-Pacheco, J., Romoli, M., Solanki, S. K., Bruno, R., Carlsson, M., Fludra, A., Harra, L., Hassler, D. M., Livi, S., Louarn, P., Peter, H., Schühle, U., Teriaca, L., Toro, José Carlos del, Wimmer-Schweingruber, R. F., Marsch, E., Velli, M., De Groof, A., Walsh, Andrew J., and Williams, D.
- Abstract
Aims. Solar Orbiter, the first mission of ESA's Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 programme and a mission of international collaboration between ESA and NASA, will explore the Sun and heliosphere from close up and out of the ecliptic plane. It was launched on 10 February 2020 04:03 UTC from Cape Canaveral and aims to address key questions of solar and heliospheric physics pertaining to how the Sun creates and controls the Heliosphere, and why solar activity changes with time. To answer these, the mission carries six remote-sensing instruments to observe the Sun and the solar corona, and four in-situ instruments to measure the solar wind, energetic particles, and electromagnetic fields. In this paper, we describe the science objectives of the mission, and how these will be addressed by the joint observations of the instruments onboard. Methods. The paper first summarises the mission-level science objectives, followed by an overview of the spacecraft and payload. We report the observables and performance figures of each instrument, as well as the trajectory design. This is followed by a summary of the science operations concept. The paper concludes with a more detailed description of the science objectives. Results. Solar Orbiter will combine in-situ measurements in the heliosphere with high-resolution remote-sensing observations of the Sun to address fundamental questions of solar and heliospheric physics. The performance of the Solar Orbiter payload meets the requirements derived from the mission's science objectives. Its science return will be augmented further by coordinated observations with other space missions and ground-based observatories. © 2020 ESO.
- Published
- 2020
49. Accurate OH Maser Positions from the SPLASH Survey. III. The Final 96 deg2
- Author
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Chinese Academy of Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Qiao, Hai-Hua, Breen, Shari L., Gómez Rivero, José Francisco, Dawson, J.R., Walsh, Andrew J., Green, James A., Ellingsen, Simon P., Imai, Hiroshi, Shen, Zhi-Qiang, Chinese Academy of Sciences, National Natural Science Foundation of China, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Qiao, Hai-Hua, Breen, Shari L., Gómez Rivero, José Francisco, Dawson, J.R., Walsh, Andrew J., Green, James A., Ellingsen, Simon P., Imai, Hiroshi, and Shen, Zhi-Qiang
- Abstract
We present high spatial resolution observations of ground-state OH masers achieved with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). These observations targeted 253 pointing centers containing OH maser candidates at all four ground-state OH transitions identified in the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl (SPLASH) across 96 deg2 of the southern Galactic plane (332° < l < 334° and −2° < b < +2°, 344° < l < 355° and −2° < b < +2°, 358° < l < 4° and +2° < b < +6°, 5° < l < 10° and −2° < b < +2°). We detect maser emission toward 236 fields and suggest that 7 out of 17 nondetections are due to the slightly lower sensitivity of the ATCA observations, combined with some temporal variability. The superior resolution provided by the ATCA data has allowed us to identify 362 OH maser sites in the 236 target fields. Almost half (160 of 362) of these masers have been detected for the first time. Comparison between these 362 maser sites and information presented in the literature allowed us to categorize 238 sites as evolved star sites (66%), 63 as star formation (17%), 8 as supernova remnants, and 53 as unknown maser sites (15%). We present an analysis of the OH masers across the full SPLASH survey range (176 deg2) and find that the detection rate of 1.7 GHz radio continuum sources (18%) is lower than that previously found at 8.2 and 9.2 GHz (38%). We also find that the velocity separations of evolved star sites with symmetric 1612 MHz maser profiles are generally smaller than those with asymmetric profiles.© 2020. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2020
50. The Astrophysical Journal Supplement
- Author
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Qiao, Hai-Hua, primary, Qiao, Hai-Hua, additional, Breen, Shari L., additional, Gómez, José F., additional, Dawson, J. R., additional, Walsh, Andrew J., additional, Green, James A., additional, Ellingsen, Simon P., additional, Imai, Hiroshi, additional, and Shen, Zhi-Qiang, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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