8,337 results on '"White, G"'
Search Results
2. Soccer Frontiers: The Global Game in the United States, 1863–1913 ed. by Chris Bolsmann, and George N. Kioussis (review)
- Author
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White, G. Edward
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- 2024
3. Justice Holmes and the Civil War
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Snyder, Brad, McPherson, James M., and White, G. Edward
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- 2023
- Full Text
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4. A study of Galactic Plane Planck Galactic Cold Clumps observed by SCOPE and the JCMT Plane Survey
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Eden, D. J., Liu, Tie, Moore, T. J. T., Di Francesco, J., Fuller, G., Kim, Kee-Tae, Li, Di, Liu, S. -Y., Plume, R., Tatematsu, Ken'ichi, Thompson, M. A., Wu, Y., Bronfman, L., Butner, H. M., Currie, M. J., Garay, G., Goldsmith, P. F., Hirano, N., Johnstone, D., Juvela, M., Lai, S. -P., Lee, C. W., Mannfors, E. E., Olguin, F., Pattle, K., Park, Geumsook, Polychroni, D., Rawlings, M., Rigby, A. J., Sanhueza, P., Traficante, A., Urquhart, J. S., Weferling, B., White, G. J., and Yadav, R. K.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We have investigated the physical properties of Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCCs) located in the Galactic Plane, using the JCMT Plane Survey (JPS) and the SCUBA-2 Continuum Observations of Pre-protostellar Evolution (SCOPE) survey. By utilising a suite of molecular-line surveys, velocities and distances were assigned to the compact sources within the PGCCs, placing them in a Galactic context. The properties of these compact sources show no large-scale variations with Galactic environment. Investigating the star-forming content of the sample, we find that the luminosity-to-mass ratio (L/M) is an order of magnitude lower than in other Galactic studies, indicating that these objects are hosting lower levels of star formation. Finally, by comparing ATLASGAL sources that are associated or are not associated with PGCCs, we find that those associated with PGCCs are typically colder, denser, and have a lower L/M ratio, hinting that PGCCs are a distinct population of Galactic Plane sources., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
5. Effects of galaxy environment on merger fraction
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Pearson, W. J., Santos, D. J. D., Goto, T., Huang, T. -C., Kim, S. J., Matsuhara, H., Pollo, A., Ho, S. C. -C., Hwang, H. S., Małek, K., Nakagawa, T., Romano, M., Serjeant, S., Suelves, L., Shim, H., and White, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Aims. In this work, we intend to examine how environment influences the merger fraction, from the low density field environment to higher density groups and clusters. We also aim to study how the properties of a group or cluster, as well as the position of a galaxy in the group or cluster, influences the merger fraction. Methods. We identified galaxy groups and clusters in the North Ecliptic Pole using a friends-of-friends algorithm and the local density. Once identified, we determined the central galaxies, group radii, velocity dispersions, and group masses of these groups and clusters. Merging systems were identified with a neural network as well as visually. With these, we examined how the merger fraction changes as the local density changes for all galaxies as well as how the merger fraction changes as the properties of the groups or clusters change. Results. We find that the merger fraction increases as local density increases and decreases as the velocity dispersion increases, as is often found in literature. A decrease in merger fraction as the group mass increases is also found. We also find groups with larger radii have higher merger fractions. The number of galaxies in a group does not influence the merger fraction. Conclusions. The decrease in merger fraction as group mass increases is a result of the link between group mass and velocity dispersion. Hence, this decrease of merger fraction with increasing mass is a result of the decrease of merger fraction with velocity dispersion. The increasing relation between group radii and merger fraction may be a result of larger groups having smaller velocity dispersion at a larger distance from the centre or larger groups hosting smaller, infalling groups with more mergers. However, we do not find evidence of smaller groups having higher merger fractions., Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, 8 tables, 2 appendices, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. LOFAR HBA Observations of the Euclid Deep Field North (EDFN)
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Bondi, M., Scaramella, R., Zamorani, G., Ciliegi, P., Vitello, F., Arias, M., Best, P. N., Bonato, M., Botteon, A., Brienza, M., Brunetti, G., Hardcastle, M. J., Magliocchetti, M., Massaro, F., Morabito, L. K., Pentericci, L., Prandoni, I., Röttgering, H. J. A., Shimwell, T. W., Tasse, C., van Weeren, R. J., and White, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the first deep (72 hours of observations) radio image of the Euclid Deep Field North (EDFN) obtained with the LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR) High Band Antenna (HBA) at 144 MHz. The EDFN is the latest addition to the LOFAR Two-Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) Deep Fields and these observations represent the first data release for this field. The observations produced a 6" resolution image with a central r.m.s. noise of $32\,\mu$Jy\,beam$^{-1}$. A catalogue of $\sim 23,000$ radio sources above a signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) threshold of 5 is extracted from the inner circular 10 deg$^2$ region. We discuss the data analysis and we provide a detailed description of how we derived the catalogue of radio sources and on the issues related to direction-dependent calibration and their effects on the final products. Finally, we derive the radio source counts at 144 MHz in the EDFN using catalogues of mock radio sources to derive the completeness correction factors. The source counts in the EDFN are consistent with those obtained from the first data release of the other LoTSS Deep Fields (ELAIS-N1, Lockman Hole and Bootes), despite the different method adopted to construct the final catalogue and to assess its completeness., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2023
7. Wakefield Generation in Hydrogen and Lithium Plasmas at FACET-II: Diagnostics and First Beam-Plasma Interaction Results
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Storey, D., Zhang, C., Claveria, P. San Miguel, Cao, G. J., Adli, E., Alsberg, L., Ariniello, R., Clarke, C., Corde, S., Dalichaouch, T. N., Ekerfelt, H., Emma, C., Gerstmayr, E., Gessner, S., Gilljohann, M., Hast, C., Knetsch, A., Lee, V., Litos, M., Loney, R., Marsh, K. A., Matheron, A., Mori, W. B., Nie, Z., O'Shea, B., Parker, M., White, G., Yocky, G., Zakharova, V., Hogan, M. J., and Joshi, C.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
Plasma Wakefield Acceleration (PWFA) provides ultrahigh acceleration gradients of 10s of GeV/m, providing a novel path towards efficient, compact, TeV-scale linear colliders and high brightness free electron lasers. Critical to the success of these applications is demonstrating simultaneously high gradient acceleration, high energy transfer efficiency, and preservation of emittance, charge, and energy spread. Experiments at the FACET-II National User Facility at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory aim to achieve all of these milestones in a single stage plasma wakefield accelerator, providing a 10 GeV energy gain in a <1 m plasma with high energy transfer efficiency. Such a demonstration depends critically on diagnostics able to measure emittance with mm-mrad accuracy, energy spectra to determine both %-level energy spread and broadband energy gain and loss, incoming longitudinal phase space, and matching dynamics. This paper discusses the experimental setup at FACET-II, including the incoming beam parameters from the FACET-II linac, plasma sources, and diagnostics developed to meet this challenge. Initial progress on the generation of beam ionized wakes in meter-scale hydrogen gas is discussed, as well as commissioning of the plasma sources and diagnostics.
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- 2023
8. Generation of meter-scale hydrogen plasmas and efficient, pump-depletion-limited wakefield excitation using 10 GeV electron bunches
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Zhang, C., Storey, D., Claveria, P. San Miguel, Nie, Z., Marsh, K. A., Hogan, M., Mori, W. B., Adli, E., An, W., Ariniello, R., Cao, G. J., Clarke, C., Corde, S., Dalichaouch, T., Doss, C. E., Emma, C., Ekerfelt, H., Gerstmayr, E., Gessner, S., Hansel, C., Knetsch, A., Lee, V., Li, F., Litos, M., O'Shea, B., White, G., Yocky, G., Zakharova, V., and Joshi, Chan
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Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
High repetition rates and efficient energy transfer to the accelerating beam are important for a future linear collider based on the beam-driven plasma wakefield acceleration scheme (PWFA-LC). This paper reports the first results from the Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Collaboration (E300) that are beginning to address both of these issues using the recently commissioned FACET-II facility at SLAC. We have generated meter-scale hydrogen plasmas using time-structured 10 GeV electron bunches from FACET-II, which hold the promise of dramatically increasing the repetition rate of PWFA by rapidly replenishing the gas between each shot compared to the hitherto used lithium plasmas that operate at 1-10 Hz. Furthermore, we have excited wakes in such plasmas that are suitable for high gradient particle acceleration with high drive-bunch to wake energy transfer efficiency -- a first step in achieving a high overall energy transfer efficiency. We have done this by using time-structured electron drive bunches that typically have one or more ultra-high current (>30 kA) femtosecond spike(s) superimposed on a longer (~0.4 ps) lower current (<10 kA) bunch structure. The first spike effectively field-ionizes the gas and produces a meter-scale (30-160 cm) plasma, whereas the subsequent beam charge creates a wake. The length and amplitude of the wake depends on the longitudinal current profile of the bunch and plasma density. We find that the onset of pump depletion, when some of the drive beam electrons are nearly fully depleted of their energy, occurs for hydrogen pressure >1.5 Torr. We also show that some electrons in the rear of the bunch can gain several GeV energies from the wake. These results are reproduced by particle-in-cell simulations using the QPAD code. At a pressure of ~2 Torr, simulations results and experimental data show that the beam transfers about 60% of its energy to the wake.
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- 2023
9. XCC: An X-ray FEL-based $\gamma\gamma$ Compton Collider Higgs Factory
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Barklow, T., Emma, C., Huang, Z., Naji, A., Nanni, E., Schwartzman, A., Tantawi, S., and White, G.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
This report describes the conceptual design of a $\gamma\gamma$ Higgs factory in which 62.8 GeV electron beams collide with 1 keV X-ray free electron laser (XFEL) beams to produce colliding beams of 62.5 GeV photons. The Higgs boson production rate is 80,000 Higgs bosons per 10$^7$ second year, roughly the same as the ILC Higgs rate at $\sqrt{s}$=250 GeV. The electron accelerator is based on cold copper distributed coupling (C$^3$) accelerator technology. Unlike the center-of-mass energy spectra of previous optical wavelength $\gamma\gamma$ collider designs, the sharply peaked $\gamma\gamma$ center-of-mass energy spectrum of XCC produces model independent Higgs coupling measurements with precision on par with $e^+e^-$ colliders. For the triple Higgs coupling measurement, the XCC center-of-mass energy can be upgraded to 380 GeV, where the cross section for $\gamma\gamma\rightarrow HH$ is twice that of $e^+e^- \rightarrow ZHH$ at $\sqrt{s}$=500 GeV. Design challenges are discussed, along with the R\&D to address them, including demonstrators., Comment: 30 pages, 21 figures, improved hadronic background calculation including QCD rad corr; accepted for publication by JINST. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2203.08484
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- 2023
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10. V-LoTSS: The Circularly-Polarised LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey
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Callingham, J. R., Shimwell, T. W., Vedantham, H. K., Bassa, C. G., O'Sullivan, S. P., Yiu, T. W. H., Bloot, S., Best, P. N., Hardcastle, M. J., Haverkorn, M., Kavanagh, R. D., Lamy, L., Pope, B. J. S., Röttgering, H. J. A., Schwarz, D. J., Tasse, C., van Weeren, R. J., White, G. J., Zarka, P., Bomans, D. J., Bonafede, A., Bonato, M., Botteon, A., Bruggen, M., Chyży, K. T., Drabent, A., Emig, K. L., Gloudemans, A. J., Gürkan, G., Hajduk, M., Hoang, D. N., Hoeft, M., Iacobelli, M., Kadler, M., Kunert-Bajraszewska, M., Mingo, B., Morabito, L. K., Nair, D. G., Pérez-Torres, M., Ray, T. P., Riseley, C. J., Rowlinson, A., Shulevski, A., Sweijen, F., Timmerman, R., Vaccari, M., and Zheng, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the detection of 68 sources from the most sensitive radio survey in circular polarisation conducted to date. We use the second data release of the 144 MHz LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey to produce circularly-polarised maps with median 140 $\mu$Jy beam$^{-1}$ noise and resolution of 20$''$ for $\approx$27% of the northern sky (5634 deg$^{2}$). The leakage of total intensity into circular polarisation is measured to be $\approx$0.06%, and our survey is complete at flux densities $\geq1$ mJy. A detection is considered reliable when the circularly-polarised fraction exceeds 1%. We find the population of circularly-polarised sources is composed of four distinct classes: stellar systems, pulsars, active galactic nuclei, and sources unidentified in the literature. The stellar systems can be further separated into chromospherically-active stars, M dwarfs, and brown dwarfs. Based on the circularly-polarised fraction and lack of an optical counterpart, we show it is possible to infer whether the unidentified sources are likely unknown pulsars or brown dwarfs. By the completion of this survey of the northern sky, we expect to detect 300$\pm$100 circularly-polarised sources., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 15 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. The catalogue will be publicly available at http://lofar-surveys.org/ and via Vizier shortly
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- 2022
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11. Optical Spectra of Radio Planetary Nebulae in the Small Magellanic Cloud
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Payne, J. L., Filipović, M. D., Crawford, E. J., De Horta, A. Y., White, G. L., and Stootman, F. H.
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Planetary nebulae: individual: N9 ,SMP11 ,N61 ,N68 ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Abstract
We present preliminary results from spectral observations of four (4) candidate radio sources co-identified with known planetary nebulae (PNe) in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). These were made using the Radcliffe 1.9-meter telescope in Sutherland, South Africa. These radio PNe were originally found in Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) surveys of the SMC at 1.42 and 2.37~GHz, and were further confirmed by new high resolution ATCA images at 6 and 3 cm (4arcsec/2arcsec). Optical PNe and radio candidates are within 2arcsec and may represent a sub-population of selected radio bright objects. Nebular ionized masses of these objects may be 2.6~$M_odot$ or greater, supporting the existence of PNe progenitor central stars with masses up to 8 $M_odot$.
- Published
- 2008
12. The Renaissance of Judicial Biography
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White, G. Edward
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- 1997
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13. Report of the Topical Group on Higgs Physics for Snowmass 2021: The Case for Precision Higgs Physics
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Dawson, Sally, Meade, Patrick, Ojalvo, Isobel, Vernieri, Caterina, Adhikari, S., Abu-Ajamieh, F., Alberta, A., Bahl, H., Barman, R., Basso, M., Beniwal, A., Bozovi-Jelisav, I., Bright-Thonney, S., Cairo, V., Celiberto, F., Chang, S., Chen, M., Damerell, C., Davis, J., de Blas, J., Dekens, W., Duarte, J., Egana-Ugrinovic, D., Einhaus, U., Gao, Y., Goncalves, D., Gritsan, A., Haber, H., Heintz, U., Homiller, S., Hsu, S. C., Jean, D., Kawada, S., Khoda, E., Kong, K., Konstantinidis, N., Korytov, A., Kyriacou, S., Lane, S., Lewis, I. M., Li, K., Li, S., Liu, Z., Luo, J., Mandacar-Guerra, L., Mantel, C., Monroy, J., Narain, M., Orr, R., Pan, R., Papaefstathiou, A., Peskin, M., Prim, M. T., Rajec, F., Ramsey-Musolf, M., Reichert, J., Reina, L., Robens, T., Roskes, J., Ryd, A., Schwartzman, A., Scott, P., Strube, J., Dong, Su, Su, W., Sullivan, M., Tanabe, T., Tian, J., Tricoli, A., Usai, E., Vavra, J., Wang, Z., White, G., White, M., Williams, A. G., Woodcock, A., Wu, Y., Young, C., Zhang, Y., Zhu, X., and Zou, R.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
A future Higgs Factory will provide improved precision on measurements of Higgs couplings beyond those obtained by the LHC, and will enable a broad range of investigations across the fields of fundamental physics, including the mechanism of electroweak symmetry breaking, the origin of the masses and mixing of fundamental particles, the predominance of matter over antimatter, and the nature of dark matter. Future colliders will measure Higgs couplings to a few per cent, giving a window to beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics in the 1-10 TeV range. In addition, they will make precise measurements of the Higgs width, and characterize the Higgs self-coupling. This report details the work of the EF01 and EF02 working groups for the Snowmass 2021 study., Comment: 44 pages, 40 figures, Report of the Topical Group on Higgs Physics for Snowmass 2021. The first four authors are the Conveners, with Contributions from the other authors
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- 2022
14. Ultimate Limit of Future Colliders
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Bai, M., Shiltsev, V., White, G., and Zimmermann, F.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
With seven operational colliders in the world and two under construction, the international particle physics community not only actively explores options for the next facilities for detailed studies of the Higgs/electroweak physics and beyond-the-LHC energy frontier, but also seeks a clear picture of the limits of the colliding beams method. In this paper, we try to consolidate various recent efforts in identifying physics limits of colliders in conjunction with societal sustainability, and share our thoughts about the perspective of reaching the ultimate collider that is at the quantum limit.
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- 2022
15. Approaching Petavolts per meter plasmonics using structured semiconductors
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Sahai, Aakash A., Golkowski, M., Katsouleas, T., Andonian, G., White, G., Joshi, C., Taborek, P., Harid, V., and Stohr, J.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Physics - Plasma Physics - Abstract
A new class of strongly excited plasmonic modes that open access to unprecedented Petavolts per meter electromagnetic fields promise wide-ranging, transformative impact. These modes are constituted by large amplitude oscillations of the ultradense, delocalized free electron Fermi gas which is inherent in conductive media. Here structured semiconductors with appropriate concentration of n-type dopant are introduced to tune the properties of the Fermi gas for matched excitation of an electrostatic, surface "crunch-in" plasmon using readily available electron beams of ten micron overall dimensions and hundreds of picoCoulomb charge launched inside a tube. Strong excitation made possible by matching results in relativistic oscillations of the Fermi electron gas and uncovers unique phenomena. Relativistically induced ballistic electron transport comes about due to relativistic multifold increase in the mean free path. Acquired ballistic transport also leads to unconventional heat deposition beyond the Ohm's law. This explains the absence of observed damage or solid-plasma formation in experiments on interaction of conductive samples with electron bunches shorter than $\rm 10^{-13} seconds$. Furthermore, relativistic momentum leads to copious tunneling of electron gas allowing it to traverse the surface and crunch inside the tube. Relativistic effects along with large, localized variation of Fermi gas density underlying these modes necessitate the kinetic approach coupled with particle-in-cell simulations. Experimental verification of acceleration and focusing of electron beams modeled here using tens of Gigavolts per meter fields excited in semiconductors with $\rm 10^{18}cm^{-3}$ free electron density will pave the way for Petavolts per meter plasmonics., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures
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- 2022
16. Evaluation of ultrastructure and random effects band recovery models for estimating relationships between survival and harvest rates in exploited populations
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Otis, D. L. and White, G. C.
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Compensatory mortality ,Exploitation ,Band recovery ,Ultrastructure model ,Random effects ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
Increased population survival rate after an episode of seasonal exploitation is considered a type of compensatory population response. Lack of an increase is interpreted as evidence that exploitation results in added annual mortality in the population. Despite its importance to management of exploited species, there are limited statistical techniques for comparing relative support for these two alternative models. For exploited bird species, the most common technique is to use a fixed effect, deterministic ultrastructure model incorporated into band recovery models to estimate the relationship between harvest and survival rate. We present a new likelihood-based technique within a framework that assumes that survival and harvest are random effects that covary through time. We conducted a Monte Carlo simulation study under this framework to evaluate the performance of these two techniques. The ultrastructure models performed poorly in all simulated scenarios, due mainly to pathological distributional properties. The random effects estimators and their associated estimators of precision had relatively small negative bias under most scenarios, and profile likelihood intervals achieved nominal coverage. We suggest that the random effects estimation method approach has many advantages compared to the ultrastructure models, and that evaluation of robustness and generalization to more complex population structures are topics for additional research.
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- 2004
17. Towards the mother-of-all-models: customised construction of the mark-recapture likelihood function
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Barker, R. J. and White, G. C.
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Capture–recapture ,Mark–recapture ,Likelihood ,Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
With a proliferation of mark–recapture models and studies collecting mark–recapture data, software and analysis methods are being continually revised. We consider the construction of the likelihood for a general model that incorporates all the features of the recently developed models: it is a multistate robust–design mark–recapture model that includes dead recoveries and resightings of marked animals and is parameterised in terms of state–specific recruitment, survival, movement, and capture probabilities, state–specific abundances, and state–specific recovery and resighting probabilities. The construction that we outline is based on a factorisation of the likelihood function with each factor corresponding to a different component of the data. Such a construction would allow the likelihood function for a mark–recapture analysis to be customized according to the components that are actually present in the dataset.
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- 2004
18. Filamentary structures of ionized gas in Cygnus X
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Emig, K. L., White, G. J., Salas, P., Karim, R. L., van Weeren, R. J., Teuben, P. J., Zavagno, A., Chiu, P., Haverkorn, M., Oonk, J. B. R., Orrú, E., Polderman, I. M., Reich, W., Röttgering, H. J. A., and Tielens, A. G. G. M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Ionized gas probes the influence of massive stars on their environment. The Cygnus X region (d~1.5 kpc) is one of the most massive star forming complexes in our Galaxy, in which the Cyg OB2 association (age of 3-5 Myr and stellar mass $2 \times 10^{4}$ M$_{\odot}$) has a dominant influence. We observe the Cygnus X region at 148 MHz using the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) and take into account short-spacing information during image deconvolution. Together with data from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey, we investigate the morphology, distribution, and physical conditions of low-density ionized gas in a $4^{\circ} \times 4^{\circ}$ (100 pc $\times$ 100 pc) region at a resolution of 2' (0.9 pc). The Galactic radio emission in the region analyzed is almost entirely thermal (free-free) at 148 MHz, with emission measures of $10^3 < EM~{\rm[pc~cm^{-6}]} < 10^6$. As filamentary structure is a prominent feature of the emission, we use DisPerSE and FilChap to identify filamentary ridges and characterize their radial ($EM$) profiles. The distribution of radial profiles has a characteristic width of 4.3 pc and a power-law distribution ($\beta = -1.8 \pm 0.1$) in peak $EM$ down to our completeness limit of 4200 pc cm$^{-6}$. The electron densities of the filamentary structure range from $10 < n_e~{\rm[cm^{-3}]} < 400$ with a median value of 35 cm$^{-3}$, remarkably similar to [N II] surveys of ionized gas. Cyg OB2 may ionize at most two-thirds of the total ionized gas and the ionized gas in filaments. More than half of the filamentary structures are likely photoevaporating surfaces flowing into a surrounding diffuse (~5 cm$^{-3}$) medium. However, this is likely not the case for all ionized gas ridges. A characteristic width in the distribution of ionized gas points to the stellar winds of Cyg OB2 creating a fraction of the ionized filaments through swept-up ionized gas or dissipated turbulence., Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Multi-wavelength properties of 850-$\mu$m selected sources from the North Ecliptic Pole SCUBA-2 survey
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Shim, H., Lee, D., Kim, Y., Scott, D., Serjeant, S., Ao, Y., Barrufet, L., Chapman, S. C., Clements, D., Conselice, C. J., Goto, T., Greve, T. R., Hwang, H. S., Im, M., Jeong, W. -S., Kim, H. K., Kim, M., Kim, S. J., Kong, A. K. H., Koprowski, M. P., Malkan, M. A., Michalowski, M., Pearson, C., Seo, H., Takagi, T., Toba, Y., White, G. J., and Woo, J. -H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the multi-wavelength counterparts of 850-$\mu$m selected submillimetre sources over a 2-deg$^2$ field centred on the North Ecliptic Pole. In order to overcome the large beam size (15 arcsec) of the 850-$\mu$m images, deep optical to near-infrared (NIR) photometric data and arcsecond-resolution 20-cm images are used to identify counterparts of submillimetre sources. Among 647 sources, we identify 514 reliable counterparts for 449 sources (69 per cent in number), based either on probabilities of chance associations calculated from positional offsets or offsets combined with the optical-to-NIR colours. In the radio imaging, the fraction of 850-$\mu$m sources having multiple counterparts is 7 per cent. The photometric redshift, infrared luminosity, stellar mass, star-formation rate (SFR), and the AGN contribution to the total infrared luminosity of the identified counterparts are investigated through spectral energy distribution fitting. The SMGs are infrared-luminous galaxies at an average $\langle z\rangle=2.5$ with $\mathrm{log}_{10} (L_\mathrm{IR}/\mathrm{L}_\odot)=11.5-13.5$, with a mean stellar mass of $\mathrm{log}_{10} (M_\mathrm{star}/\mathrm{M}_\odot)=10.90$ and SFR of $\mathrm{log}_{10} (\mathrm{SFR/M_\odot\,yr^{-1}})=2.34$. The SMGs show twice as large SFR as galaxies on the star-forming main sequence, and about 40 per cent of the SMGs are classified as objects with bursty star formation. At $z\ge4$, the contribution of AGN luminosity to total luminosity for most SMGs is larger than 30 per cent. The FIR-to-radio correlation coefficient of SMGs is consistent with that of main-sequence galaxies at $z\simeq2$., Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2022
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20. The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey -- V. Second data release
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Shimwell, T. W., Hardcastle, M. J., Tasse, C., Best, P. N., Röttgering, H. J. A., Williams, W. L., Botteon, A., Drabent, A., Mechev, A., Shulevski, A., van Weeren, R. J., Bester, L., Brüggen, M., Brunetti, G., Callingham, J. R., Chyży, K. T., Conway, J. E., Dijkema, T. J., Duncan, K., de Gasperin, F., Hale, C. L., Haverkorn, M., Hugo, B., Jackson, N., Mevius, M., Miley, G. K., Morabito, L. K., Morganti, R., Offringa, A., Oonk, J. B. R., Rafferty, D., Sabater, J., Smith, D. J. B., Schwarz, D. J., Smirnov, O., O'Sullivan, S. P., Vedantham, H., White, G. J., Albert, J. G., Alegre, L., Asabere, B., Bacon, D. J., Bonafede, A., Bonnassieux, E., Brienza, M., Bilicki, M., Bonato, M., Rivera, G. Calistro, Cassano, R., Cochrane, R., Croston, J. H., Cuciti, V., Dallacasa, D., Danezi, A., Dettmar, R. J., Di Gennaro, G., Edler, H. W., Enßlin, T. A., Emig, K. L., Franzen, T. M. O., García-Vergara, C., Grange, Y. G., Gürkan, G., Hajduk, M., Heald, G., Heesen, V., Hoang, D. N., Hoeft, M., Horellou, C., Iacobelli, M., Jamrozy, M., Jelić, V., Kondapally, R., Kukreti, P., Kunert-Bajraszewska, M., Magliocchetti, M., Mahatma, V., Małek, K., Mandal, S., Massaro, F., Meyer-Zhao, Z., Mingo, B., Mostert, R. I. J., Nair, D. G., Nakoneczny, S. J., Nikiel-Wroczyński, B., Orrú, E., Pajdosz-Śmierciak, U., Pasini, T., Prandoni, I., van Piggelen, H. E., Rajpurohit, K., Retana-Montenegro, E., Riseley, C. J., Rowlinson, A., Saxena, A., Schrijvers, C., Sweijen, F., Siewert, T. M., Timmerman, R., Vaccari, M., Vink, J., West, J. L., Wołowska, A., Zhang, X., and Zheng, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In this data release from the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) we present 120-168MHz images covering 27% of the northern sky. Our coverage is split into two regions centred at approximately 12h45m +44$^\circ$30' and 1h00m +28$^\circ$00' and spanning 4178 and 1457 square degrees respectively. The images were derived from 3,451hrs (7.6PB) of LOFAR High Band Antenna data which were corrected for the direction-independent instrumental properties as well as direction-dependent ionospheric distortions during extensive, but fully automated, data processing. A catalogue of 4,396,228 radio sources is derived from our total intensity (Stokes I) maps, where the majority of these have never been detected at radio wavelengths before. At 6" resolution, our full bandwidth Stokes I continuum maps with a central frequency of 144MHz have: a median rms sensitivity of 83$\mu$Jy/beam; a flux density scale accuracy of approximately 10%; an astrometric accuracy of 0.2"; and we estimate the point-source completeness to be 90% at a peak brightness of 0.8mJy/beam. By creating three 16MHz bandwidth images across the band we are able to measure the in-band spectral index of many sources, albeit with an error on the derived spectral index of +/-0.2 which is a consequence of our flux-density scale accuracy and small fractional bandwidth. Our circular polarisation (Stokes V) 20" resolution 120-168MHz continuum images have a median rms sensitivity of 95$\mu$Jy/beam, and we estimate a Stokes I to Stokes V leakage of 0.056%. Our linear polarisation (Stokes Q and Stokes U) image cubes consist of 480 x 97.6 kHz wide planes and have a median rms sensitivity per plane of 10.8mJy/beam at 4' and 2.2mJy/beam at 20"; we estimate the Stokes I to Stokes Q/U leakage to be approximately 0.2%. Here we characterise and publicly release our Stokes I, Q, U and V images in addition to the calibrated uv-data., Comment: 23 figures, 1 table and 29 pages. The catalogues, images and uv-data associated with this data release are publicly available via https://lofar-surveys.org/
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- 2022
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21. Truncated phase-based quantum arithmetic: error propagation and resource reduction
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White, G. A. L., Hill, C. D., and Hollenberg, L. C. L.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
There are two important, and potentially interconnecting, avenues to the realisation of large-scale quantum algorithms: improvement of the hardware, and reduction of resource requirements demanded by algorithm components. In focusing on the latter, one crucial subroutine to many sought-after applications is the quantum adder. A variety of different implementations exist with idiosyncratic pros and cons. One of these, the Draper quantum Fourier adder, offers the lowest qubit count of any adder, but requires a substantial number of gates as well as extremely fine rotations. In this work, we present a modification of the Draper adder which eliminates small-angle rotations to highly coarse levels, matched with some strategic corrections. This reduces hardware requirements without sacrificing the qubit saving. We show that the inherited loss of fidelity is directly given by the rate of carry and borrow bits in the computation. We derive formulae to predict this, complemented by complete gate-level matrix product state simulations of the circuit. Moreover, we analytically describe the effects of possible stochastic control error. We present an in-depth analysis of this approach in the context of Shor's algorithm, focusing on the factoring of RSA-2048. Surprisingly, we find that each of the $7\times 10^7$ quantum Fourier transforms may be truncated down to $\pi/64$, with additive rotations left only slightly finer. This result is much more efficient than previously realised. We quantify savings both in terms of logical resources and raw magic states, demonstrating that phase adders can be competitive with Toffoli-based constructions., Comment: Main text 18 pages, 8 figures. SI 11 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2021
22. Beam delivery and final focus systems for multi-TeV advanced linear colliders
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White, G, Gessner, S, Adli, E, Cao, GJ, Sjobak, K, Barber, S, Schroeder, C, Terzani, D, van Tilborg, J, Esarey, E, Doss, C, Litos, M, Lobach, I, Power, J, and Lindstrøm, CA
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Affordable and Clean Energy ,Beam dynamics ,Beam Optics ,Accelerator modelling and simulations (multi-particle dynamics ,single-particle dynamics) ,Wake-field acceleration (laser-driven ,electron-driven) ,Physical Sciences ,Engineering ,Nuclear & Particles Physics - Abstract
The Beam Delivery System (BDS) is a critical component of a high-energy linear collider. It transports the beam from the accelerator and brings it to a focus at the Interaction Point. The BDS system includes diagnostic sections for measuring the beam energy, emittance, and polarization, as well as collimators for machine protection. The length of the BDS increases with collision energy. Higher collision energies also require higher luminosities, and this is a significant constraint on the design for energy-frontier machines. Here, we review BDS designs based on traditional quadrupole magnets and examine the challenges involved in extending these to the Multi-TeV regime consistent with requirements for advanced accelerator concepts.
- Published
- 2022
23. Globules and pillars in Cygnus X III. Herschel and upGREAT/SOFIA far-infrared spectroscopy of the globule IRAS 20319+3958 inCygnus X
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Schneider, N., Roellig, M., Polehampton, E. T., Comeron, F., Djupvik, A. A., Makai, Z., Buchbender, C., Simon, R., Bontemps, S., Guesten, R., White, G., Okada, Y., Parikka, A., and Rothbart, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
IRAS 20319+3958 in Cygnus X South is a rare example of a free-floating globule (mass ~240 Msun, length ~1.5 pc) with an internal HII region created by the stellar feedback of embedded intermediate-mass stars, in particular, one Herbig Be star. Here, we present a Herschel/HIFI CII 158 mu map of the whole globule and a large set of other FIR lines (mid-to high-J CO lines observed with Herschel/PACS and SPIRE, the OI 63 mu line and the CO 16-15 line observed with upGREAT on SOFIA), covering the globule head and partly a position in the tail. The CII map revealed that the whole globule is probably rotating. Highly collimated, high-velocity CII emission is detected close to the Herbig Be star. We performed a PDR analysis using the KOSMA-tau PDR code for one position in the head and one in the tail. The observed FIR lines in the head can be reproduced with a two-component model: an extended, non-clumpy outer PDR shell and a clumpy, dense, and thin inner PDR layer, representing the interface between the HII region cavity and the external PDR. The modelled internal UV field of ~2500 Go is similar to what we obtained from the Herschel FIR fluxes, but lower than what we estimated from the census of the embedded stars. External illumination from the ~30 pc distant Cyg OB2 cluster, producing an UV field of ~150-600 G0 as an upper limit, is responsible for most of the CII emission. For the tail, we modelled the emission with a non-clumpy component, exposed to a UV-field of around 140 Go., Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2021
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24. Environmental and university opportunity factors and CPA exam performance
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Espahbodi, Arya, Espahbodi, Hassanali, Espahbodi, Linda, Espahbodi, Reza, Walker, Rosemary, and White, G. Thomas
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- 2024
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25. Hyperpolarisation of external nuclear spins using nitrogen-vacancy centre ensembles
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Healey, A. J., Hall, L. T., White, G. A. L., Teraji, T., Sani, M. -A., Separovic, F., Tetienne, J. -P., and Hollenberg, L. C. L.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
The nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centre in diamond has emerged as a candidate to non-invasively hyperpolarise nuclear spins in molecular systems to improve the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments. Several promising proof of principle experiments have demonstrated small-scale polarisation transfer from single NVs to hydrogen spins outside the diamond. However, the scaling up of these results to the use of a dense NV ensemble, which is a necessary prerequisite for achieving realistic NMR sensitivity enhancement, has not yet been demonstrated. In this work, we present evidence for a polarising interaction between a shallow NV ensemble and external nuclear targets over a micrometre scale, and characterise the challenges in achieving useful polarisation enhancement. In the most favourable example of the interaction with hydrogen in a solid state target, a maximum polarisation transfer rate of $\approx 7500$ spins per second per NV is measured, averaged over an area containing order $10^6$ NVs. Reduced levels of polarisation efficiency are found for liquid state targets, where molecular diffusion limits the transfer. Through analysis via a theoretical model, we find that our results suggest implementation of this technique for NMR sensitivity enhancement is feasible following realistic diamond material improvements.
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- 2021
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26. Challenges and Opportunities of Gravitational Wave Searches at MHz to GHz Frequencies
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Aggarwal, N., Aguiar, O. D., Bauswein, A., Cella, G., Clesse, S., Cruise, A. M., Domcke, V., Figueroa, D. G., Geraci, A., Goryachev, M., Grote, H., Hindmarsh, M., Muia, F., Mukund, N., Ottaway, D., Peloso, M., Quevedo, F., Ricciardone, A., Steinlechner, J., Steinlechner, S., Sun, S., Tobar, M. E., Torrenti, F., Unal, C., and White, G.
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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The first direct measurement of gravitational waves by the LIGO and Virgo collaborations has opened up new avenues to explore our Universe. This white paper outlines the challenges and gains expected in gravitational wave searches at frequencies above the LIGO/Virgo band, with a particular focus on Ultra High-Frequency Gravitational Waves (UHF-GWs), covering the MHz to GHz range. The absence of known astrophysical sources in this frequency range provides a unique opportunity to discover physics beyond the Standard Model operating both in the early and late Universe, and we highlight some of the most promising gravitational sources. We review several detector concepts which have been proposed to take up this challenge, and compare their expected sensitivity with the signal strength predicted in various models. This report is the summary of the workshop "Challenges and opportunities of high-frequency gravitational wave detection" held at ICTP Trieste, Italy in October 2019, that set up the stage for the recently launched Ultra-High-Frequency Gravitational Wave (UHF-GW) initiative., Comment: Published in Living Reviews in Relativity
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- 2020
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27. A population of galaxy-scale jets discovered using LOFAR
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Webster, B., Croston, J. H., Mingo, B., Baldi, R. D., Barkus, B., Gurkan, G., Hardcastle, M. J., Morganti, R., Rottgering, H. J. A., Sabater, J., Shimwell, T. W., Tasse, C., and White, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The effects of feedback from high luminosity radio-loud AGN have been extensively discussed in the literature, but feedback from low-luminosity radio-loud AGN is less well understood. The advent of high sensitivity, high angular resolution, large field of view telescopes such as LOFAR is now allowing wide-area studies of such faint sources for the first time. Using the first data release of the LOFAR Two Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) we report on our discovery of a population of 195 radio galaxies with 150 MHz luminosities between $3\times10^{22}$ and $1.5\times10^{25}\text{ W Hz}^{-1}$ and total radio emission no larger than 80 kpc. These objects, which we term galaxy-scale jets (GSJ), are small enough to be directly influencing the evolution of the host on galaxy scales. We report upon the typical host properties of our sample, finding that 9 per cent are hosted by spirals with the remainder being hosted by elliptical galaxies. Two of the spiral-hosted GSJ are highly unusual with low radio luminosities and FRII-like morphology. The host properties of our GSJ show that they are ordinary AGN observed at a stage in their life shortly after the radio emission has expanded beyond the central regions of the host. Based on our estimates, we find that about half of our GSJ have internal radio lobe energy within an order of magnitude of the ISM energy so that, even ignoring any possible shocks, GSJ are energetically capable of affecting the evolution of the host. The current sample of GSJ will grow in size with future releases of LoTSS and can also form the basis for further studies of feedback from low-luminosity radio sources., Comment: 23 pages, accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
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28. CHIMPS2: Survey description and $^{12}$CO emission in the Galactic Centre
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Eden, D. J., Moore, T. J. T., Currie, M. J., Rigby, A. J., Rosolowsky, E., Su, Y., Kim, Kee-Tae, Parsons, H., Morata, O., Chen, H. -R., Minamidani, T., Park, Geumsook, Ragan, S. E., Urquhart, J. S., Rani, R., Tahani, K., Billington, S. J., Deb, S., Figura, C., Fujiyoshi, T., Joncas, G., Liao, L. W., Liu, T., Ma, H., Tuan-Anh, P., Yun, Hyeong-Sik, Zhang, S., Zhu, M., Henshaw, J. D., Longmore, S. N., Kobayashi, M. I. N., Thompson, M. A., Ao, Y., Campbell-White, J., Ching, T. -C., Chung, E. J., Duarte-Cabral, A., Fich, M., Gao, Y., Graves, S. F., Jiang, X. -J., Kemper, F., Kuan, Y. -J., Kwon, W., Lee, C. W., Lee, J. -E., Liu, M., Penaloza, C. H., Peretto, N., Phuong, N. T., Pineda, J. E., Plume, R., Puspitaningrum, E., Samal, M. R., Soam, A., Sun, Y., Tang, X. D., Traficante, A., White, G. J., Yan, C. -H., Yang, A., Yuan, J., Yue, N., Bemis, A., Brunt, C. M., Chen, Z., Cho, J., Clark, P. C., Cyganowski, C. J., Friberg, P., Fuller, G. A., Han, I., Hoare, M. G., Izumi, N., Kim, H. -J., Kim, J., Kim, S., Koch, E. W., Kuno, N., Lacialle, K. M., Lai, S. -P., Lee, H. Lee Y. -H., Li, D. L., Liu, S. -Y., Mairs, S., Oka, T., Pan, Z., Qian, L., Scicluna, P., Shi, C. -S., Shi, H., Srinivasan, S., Tan, Q. -H., Thomas, H. S., Torii, K., Trejo, A., Umemoto, T., Violino, G., Wallstrom, S., Wang, B., Wu, Y., Yuan, L., Zhang, C., Zhang, M., Zhou, C., and Zhou, J. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The latest generation of Galactic-plane surveys is enhancing our ability to study the effects of galactic environment upon the process of star formation. We present the first data from CO Heterodyne Inner Milky Way Plane Survey 2 (CHIMPS2). CHIMPS2 is a survey that will observe the Inner Galaxy, the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ), and a section of the Outer Galaxy in $^{12}$CO, $^{13}$CO, and C$^{18}$O $(J = 3\rightarrow2)$ emission with the Heterodyne Array Receiver Program on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT). The first CHIMPS2 data presented here are a first look towards the CMZ in $^{12}$CO J = 3$\rightarrow$2 and cover $-3^{\circ}\leq\,\ell\,\leq\,5^{\circ}$ and $\mid$b$\mid \leq 0.5^{\circ}$ with angular resolution of 15 arcsec, velocity resolution of 1 km s$^{-1}$, and rms $\Delta T_A ^\ast =$ 0.58 K at these resolutions. Such high-resolution observations of the CMZ will be a valuable data set for future studies, whilst complementing the existing Galactic Plane surveys, such as SEDIGISM, the Herschel infrared Galactic Plane Survey, and ATLASGAL. In this paper, we discuss the survey plan, the current observations and data, as well as presenting position-position maps of the region. The position-velocity maps detect foreground spiral arms in both absorption and emission., Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
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29. Prospects for nuclear spin hyperpolarisation of molecular samples using nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond
- Author
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Tetienne, J. -P., Hall, L. T., Healey, A. J., White, G. A. L., Sani, M. -A., Separovic, F., and Hollenberg, L. C. L.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
After initial proof-of-principle demonstrations, optically pumped nitrogen-vacancy (NV) centres in diamond have been proposed as a non-invasive platform to achieve hyperpolarisation of nuclear spins in molecular samples over macroscopic volumes and enhance the sensitivity in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments. In this work, we model the process of polarisation of external samples by NV centres and theoretically evaluate their performance in a range of scenarios. We find that average nuclear spin polarisations exceeding 10% can in principle be generated over macroscopic sample volumes ($\gtrsim\mu$L) with a careful engineering of the system's geometry to maximise the diamond-sample contact area. The fabrication requirements and other practical challenges are discussed. We then explore the possibility of exploiting local polarisation enhancements in nano/micro-NMR experiments based on NV centres. For micro-NMR, we find that modest signal enhancements over thermal polarisation (by 1-2 orders of magnitude) can in essence be achieved with existing technology, with larger enhancements achievable via micro-structuring of the sample/substrate interface. However, there is generally no benefit for nano-NMR where the detection of statistical polarisation provides the largest signal-to-noise ratio. This work will guide future experimental efforts to integrate NV-based hyperpolarisation to NMR systems.
- Published
- 2020
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30. A high redshift population of galaxies at the North Ecliptic Pole: unveiling the main sequence of dusty galaxies
- Author
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Barrufet, L., Pearson, C., Serjeant, S., Małek, K., Baronchelli, I., Campos-Varillas, M. C., White, G. J., Valtchanov, I., Matsuhara, H., Conversi, L., Kim, S. J., Goto, T., Oi, N., Malkan, M., Kim, H., Ikeda, H., Takagi, T., Toba, Y., and Miyaji, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Dusty high-z galaxies are extreme objects with high star formation rates (SFRs) and luminosities. Characterising the properties of this population and analysing their evolution over cosmic time is key to understanding galaxy evolution in the early Universe. We select a sample of high-z dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) and evaluate their position on the main sequence (MS) of star-forming galaxies, the well-known correlation between stellar mass and SFR. We aim to understand the causes of their high star formation and quantify the percentage of DSFGs that lie above the MS. We adopted a multi-wavelength approach with data from optical to submillimetre wavelengths from surveys at the North Ecliptic Pole (NEP) to study a submillimetre sample of high-redshift galaxies. Two submillimetre selection methods were used, including: sources selected at 850$\mathrm{\, \mu m}$ with the Sub-millimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2) SCUBA-2 instrument and {\it Herschel}-Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver (SPIRE) selected sources (colour-colour diagrams and 500$\mathrm{\, \mu m}$ risers), finding that 185 have good multi-wavelength coverage. The resulting sample of 185 high-z candidates was further studied by spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting with the CIGALE fitting code. We derived photometric redshifts, stellar masses, SFRs, and additional physical parameters, such as the infrared luminosity and active galactic nuclei (AGN) contribution. We find that the different results in the literature are, only in part, due to selection effects. The difference in measured SFRs affects the position of DSFGs on the MS of galaxies; most of the DSFGs lie on the MS (60\%). Finally, we find that the star formation efficiency (SFE) depends on the epoch and intensity of the star formation burst in the galaxy; the later the burst, the more intense the star formation.
- Published
- 2020
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31. Coherent radio emission from a quiescent red dwarf indicative of star-planet interaction
- Author
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Vedantham, H. K., Callingham, J. R., Shimwell, T. W., Tasse, C., Pope, B. J. S., Bedell, M., Snellen, I., Best, P., Hardcastle, M. J., Haverkorn, M., Mechev, A., O'Sullivan, S. P., Röttgering, H. J. A., and White, G. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Low frequency ($\nu\lesssim 150\,$MHz) stellar radio emission is expected to originate in the outer corona at heights comparable to and larger than the stellar radius. Such emission from the Sun has been used to study coronal structure, mass ejections, space-weather conditions around the planets (Schwenn 2006). Searches for low-frequency emission from other stars have only detected a single active flare-star (Lynch et al. 2017) that is not representative of the wider stellar population. Here we report the detection of low-frequency radio emission from a quiescent star, GJ 1151--- a member of the most common stellar type (red dwarf or spectral class M) in the Galaxy. The characteristics of the emission are similar to those of planetary auroral emissions (Zarka 1998) (e.g. Jupiter's decametric emission), suggesting a coronal structure dominated by a global magnetosphere with low plasma density. Our results show that large-scale currents that power radio aurorae operate over a vast range of mass and atmospheric composition, ranging from terrestrial planets to main-sequence stars. The Poynting flux required to produce the observed radio emission cannot be generated by GJ 1151's slow rotation, but can originate in a sub-Alfv\'{e}nic interaction of its magnetospheric plasma with a short-period exoplanet. The emission properties are consistent with theoretical expectations (Zarka 2007; Lanza 2009; Saur et al. 2013; Turnpenney et al. 2018) for interaction with an Earth-size planet in a $\sim 1-5$ day-long orbit., Comment: Accepted version, Nat Astron (2020)
- Published
- 2020
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32. Computing and software
- Author
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White, G. C. and Hines, J. E.
- Subjects
Zoology ,QL1-991 - Abstract
The reality is that the statistical methods used for analysis of data depend upon the availability of software. Analysis of marked animal data is no different than the rest of the statistical field. The methods used for analysis are those that are available in reliable software packages. Thus, the critical importance of having reliable, up–to–date software available to biologists is obvious. Statisticians have continued to develop more robust models, ever expanding the suite of potential analysis methods available. But without software to implement these newer methods, they will languish in the abstract, and not be applied to the problems deserving them. In the Computers and Software Session, two new software packages are described, a comparison of implementation of methods for the estimation of nest survival is provided, and a more speculative paper about how the next generation of software might be structured is presented. Rotella et al. (2004) compare nest survival estimation with different software packages: SAS logistic regression, SAS non–linear mixed models, and Program MARK. Nests are assumed to be visited at various, possibly infrequent, intervals. All of the approaches described compute nest survival with the same likelihood, and require that the age of the nest is known to account for nests that eventually hatch. However, each approach offers advantages and disadvantages, explored by Rotella et al. (2004). Efford et al. (2004) present a new software package called DENSITY. The package computes population abundance and density from trapping arrays and other detection methods with a new and unique approach. DENSITY represents the first major addition to the analysis of trapping arrays in 20 years. Barker & White (2004) discuss how existing software such as Program MARK require that each new model’s likelihood must be programmed specifically for that model. They wishfully think that future software might allow the user to combine pieces of likelihood functions together to generate estimates. The idea is interesting, and maybe some bright young statistician can work out the specifics to implement the procedure. Choquet et al. (2004) describe MSURGE, a software package that implements the multistate capture–recapture models. The unique feature of MSURGE is that the design matrix is constructed with an interpreted language called GEMACO. Because MSURGE is limited to just multistate models, the special requirements of these likelihoods can be provided. The software and methods presented in these papers gives biologists and wildlife managers an expanding range of possibilities for data analysis. Although ease–of–use is generally getting better, it does not replace the need for understanding of the requirements and structure of the models being computed. The internet provides access to many free software packages as well as user–discussion groups to share knowledge and ideas. (A starting point for wildlife–related applications is (http://www.phidot.org).
- Published
- 2004
33. The Work of the American Law Institute in Historical Context
- Author
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Abraham, Kenneth S., primary and White, G. Edward, additional
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- 2023
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34. Determinants of CPA exam performance
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Espahbodi, Arya, Espahbodi, Linda, Espahbodi, Reza, Walker, Rosemary, and Thomas White, G.
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
35. Federated Learning for Coalition Operations
- Author
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Verma, D., Calo, S., Witherspoon, S., Bertino, E., Jabal, A. Abu, Swami, A., Cirincione, G., Julier, S., White, G., de Mel, G., and Pearson, G.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
Machine Learning in coalition settings requires combining insights available from data assets and knowledge repositories distributed across multiple coalition partners. In tactical environments, this requires sharing the assets, knowledge and models in a bandwidth-constrained environment, while staying in conformance with the privacy, security and other applicable policies for each coalition member. Federated Machine Learning provides an approach for such sharing. In its simplest version, federated machine learning could exchange training data available among the different coalition members, with each partner deciding which part of the training data from other partners to accept based on the quality and value of the offered data. In a more sophisticated version, coalition partners may exchange models learnt locally, which need to be transformed, accepted in entirety or in part based on the quality and value offered by each model, and fused together into an integrated model. In this paper, we examine the challenges present in creating federated learning solutions in coalition settings, and present the different flavors of federated learning that we have created as part of our research in the DAIS ITA. The challenges addressed include dealing with varying quality of data and models, determining the value offered by the data/model of each coalition partner, addressing the heterogeneity in data representation, labeling and AI model architecture selected by different coalition members, and handling the varying levels of trust present among members of the coalition. We also identify some open problems that remain to be addressed to create a viable solution for federated learning in coalition environments., Comment: Presented at AAAI FSS-19: Artificial Intelligence in Government and Public Sector, Arlington, Virginia, USA
- Published
- 2019
36. Properties of the dense core population in Orion B as seen by the Herschel Gould Belt survey
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Konyves, V., Andre, Ph., Arzoumanian, D., Schneider, N., Men'shchikov, A., Bontemps, S., Ladjelate, B., Didelon, P., Pezzuto, S., Benedettini, M., Bracco, A., Di Francesco, J., Goodwin, S., Rygl, K. L. J., Shimajiri, Y., Spinoglio, L., Ward-Thompson, D., and White, G. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the Orion B clouds (d~400 pc), imaged with the PACS/SPIRE cameras at 70-500 $\mu$m by the Herschel Gould Belt survey (HGBS). We release new high-res. maps of column density and dust temperature. In the filamentary sub-regions NGC2023/2024, NGC2068/2071, and L1622, 1768 starless dense cores were identified, ~28-45% of which are self-gravitating prestellar cores. A total of 76 protostellar dense cores were also found. The typical lifetime of the prestellar cores was found to be $t_{\rm pre}=1.7_{-0.6}^{+0.8}$ Myr. The prestellar core mass function (CMF) peaks at ~0.5 $M_\odot$ and is consistent with a power law with log slope -1.27$\pm$0.24 at the high-mass end, compared to the Salpeter slope of -1.35. In this region, we confirm the existence of a transition in prestellar core formation efficiency (CFE) around a fiducial value A_V_bg~7 mag in background visual extinction, similar to the trend observed with Herschel in other clouds. This is not a sharp threshold, but a smooth transition between a regime with very low prestellar CFE at A_V_bg<5 and a regime with higher, roughly constant CFE at A_V_bg$\gtrsim$10. The total mass in the form of prestellar cores represents only ~20% of the dense molecular cloud gas at A_V_bg$\gtrsim$7 mag. About 60-80% of the prestellar cores are closely associated with filaments, and this fraction increases up to >90% when a more complete sample of filamentary structures is considered. Interestingly, the median separation between nearest core neighbors corresponds to the typical inner filament width of ~0.1 pc commonly observed in nearby molecular clouds. Analysis of the CMF observed as a function of background cloud column density shows that the most massive prestellar cores are spatially segregated in the highest column density areas, and suggests that both higher- and lower-mass prestellar cores may form in denser filaments., Comment: In press in Astronomy and Astrophysics. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1507.05926
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- 2019
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37. LOFAR first look at the giant radio galaxy 3C 236
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Shulevski, A., Barthel, P. D., Morganti, R., Harwood, J. J., Brienza, M., Shimwell, T. W., Röttgering, H. J. A., White, G. J., Callingham, J. R., Mooney, S., and Rafferty, D. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have examined the giant radio galaxy 3C~236 using LOFAR at 143 MHz down to an angular resolution of 7", in combination with observations at higher frequencies. We have used the low frequency data to derive spectral index maps with the highest resolution yet at these low frequencies. We confirm a previous detection of an inner hotspot in the north-west lobe and for the first time observe that the south-east lobe hotspot is in fact a triple hotspot, which may point to an intermittent source activity. Also, the spectral index map of 3C 236 shows that the spectral steepening at the inner region of the northern lobe is prominent at low frequencies. The outer regions of both lobes show spectral flattening, in contrast with previous high frequency studies. We derive spectral age estimates for the lobes, as well as particle densities of the IGM at various locations. We propose that the morphological differences between the lobes are driven by variations in the ambient medium density as well as the source activity history., Comment: 10 pages, 6 6figures
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- 2019
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38. Quantum bath control with nuclear spin state selectivity via pulse-adjusted dynamical decoupling
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Lang, J. E., Broadway, D. A., White, G. A. L., Hall, L. T., Stacey, A., Hollenberg, L. C. L., Monteiro, T. S., and Tetienne, J. -P.
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Dynamical decoupling (DD) is a powerful method for controlling arbitrary open quantum systems. In quantum spin control, DD generally involves a sequence of timed spin flips ($\pi$ rotations) arranged to average out or selectively enhance coupling to the environment. Experimentally, errors in the spin flips are inevitably introduced, motivating efforts to optimise error-robust DD. Here we invert this paradigm: by introducing particular control "errors" in standard DD, namely a small constant deviation from perfect $\pi$ rotations (pulse adjustments), we show we obtain protocols that retain the advantages of DD while introducing the capabilities of quantum state readout and polarisation transfer. We exploit this nuclear quantum state selectivity on an ensemble of nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond to efficiently polarise the $^{13}$C quantum bath. The underlying physical mechanism is generic and paves the way to systematic engineering of pulse-adjusted protocols with nuclear state selectivity for quantum control applications.
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- 2019
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39. SCOPE: SCUBA-2 Continuum Observations of Pre-protostellar Evolution - Survey Description and Compact Source Catalogue
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Eden, D. J., Liu, Tie, Kim, Kee-Tae, Liu, S. -Y., Tatematsu, K., Di Francesco, J., Wang, K., Wu, Y., Thompson, M. A., Fuller, G. A., Li, Di, Ristorcelli, I., Kang, Sung-ju, Hirano, N., Johnstone, D., Lin, Y., He, J. H., Koch, P. M., Sanhueza, Patricio, Qin, S. -L., Zhang, Q., Goldsmith, P. F., Evans II, N. J., Yuan, J., Zhang, C. -P., White, G. J., Choi, Minho, Lee, Chang Won, Toth, L. V., Mairs, S., Yi, H. -W., Tang, M., Soam, A., Peretto, N., Samal, M. R., Fich, M., Parsons, H., Malinen, J., Bendo, G. J., Rivera-Ingraham, A., Liu, H. -L., Wouterloot, J., Li, P. S., Qian, L., Rawlings, J., Rawlings, M. G., Feng, S., Wang, B., Li, Dalei, Liu, M., Luo, G., Marston, A. P., Pattle, K. M., Pelkonen, V. -M., Rigby, A. J., Zahorecz, S., Zhang, G., Bogner, R., Aikawa, Y., Akhter, S., Alina, D., Bell, G., Bernard, J. -P., Blain, A., Bronfman, L., Byun, D. -Y., Chapman, S., Chen, H. -R., Chen, M., Chen, W. -P., Chen, X., Chen, Xuepeng, Chrysostomou, A., Chu, Y. -H., Chung, E. J., Cornu, D., Cosentino, G., Cunningham, M. R., Demyk, K., Drabek-Maunder, E., Doi, Y., Eswaraiah, C., Falgarone, E., Feher, O., Fraser, H., Friberg, P., Garay, G., Ge, J. X., Gear, W. K., Greaves, J., Guan, X., Harvey-Smith, L., Hasegawa, T., He, Y., Henkel, C., Hirota, T., Holland, W., Hughes, A., Jarken, E., Ji, T. -G., Jimenez-Serra, I., Kang, Miju, Kawabata, K. S., Kim, Gwanjeong, Kim, Jungha, Kim, Jongsoo, Kim, S., Koo, B. -C., Kwon, Woojin, Kuan, Y. -J., Lacaille, K. M., Lai, S. -P., Lee, C. F., Lee, J. E., Lee, Y. -U., Li, H., Lo, N., Lopez, J. A. P., Lu, X., Lyo, A. -R., Mardones, D., McGehee, P., Meng, F., Montier, L., Montillaud, J., Moore, T. J. T., Morata, O., Moriarty-Schieven, G. H., Ohashi, S., Pak, S., Park, Geumsook, Paladini, R., Pech, G., Qiu, K., Ren, Z. -Y., Richer, J., Sakai, T., Shang, H., Shinnaga, H., Stamatellos, D., Tang, Y. -W., Traficante, A., Vastel, C., Viti, S., Walsh, A., Wang, H., Wang, J., Ward-Thompson, D., Whitworth, A., Wilson, C. D., Xu, Y., Yang, J., Yuan, Y. -L., Yuan, L., Zavagno, A., Zhang, C., Zhang, H. -W., Zhou, C., Zhu, J. Zhou. L., and Zuo, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first release of the data and compact-source catalogue for the JCMT Large Program SCUBA-2 Continuum Observations of Pre-protostellar Evolution (SCOPE). SCOPE consists of 850-um continuum observations of 1235 Planck Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCCs) made with the Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array 2 on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. These data are at an angular resolution of 14.4 arcsec, significantly improving upon the 353-GHz resolution of Planck at 5 arcmin, and allowing for a catalogue of 3528 compact sources in 558 PGCCs. We find that the detected PGCCs have significant sub-structure, with 61 per cent of detected PGCCs having 3 or more compact sources, with filamentary structure also prevalent within the sample. A detection rate of 45 per cent is found across the survey, which is 95 per cent complete to Planck column densities of $N_{H_{2}}$ $>$ 5 $\times$ 10$^{21}$ cm$^{-2}$. By positionally associating the SCOPE compact sources with YSOs, the star formation efficiency, as measured by the ratio of luminosity to mass, in nearby clouds is found to be similar to that in the more distant Galactic Plane, with the column density distributions also indistinguishable from each other., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2019
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40. Index
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
41. References
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
42. 3. Remington, Roosevelt, Wister: The East andAdolescence
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
43. 7. The Rough Riders: Regiment of TrueAmericans
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
44. 8. Technocracy and Arcadia: Conservationunder Roosevelt
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
45. 4. Roosevelt's West: The Beat of Hardy Life
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
46. 6. Wister's West: The Cowboy as Cultural Hero
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
47. 9. Roosevelt, Remington, Wister: Consensusand the West
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
48. 5. Remington's West: Men with the Bark On
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
49. Part III: East and West in the Decade of Consensus
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
50. Part II: The West
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White, G. Edward
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- 1989
Catalog
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