TY - INPR A1 - Acharya, B. S. A1 - Actis, M. A1 - Aghajani, T. A1 - Agnetta, G. A1 - Aguilar, J. A1 - Aharonian, Felix A. A1 - Ajello, M. A1 - Akhperjanian, A. G. A1 - Alcubierre, M. A1 - Aleksic, J. A1 - Alfaro, R. A1 - Aliu, E. A1 - Allafort, A. J. A1 - Allan, D. A1 - Allekotte, I. A1 - Amato, E. A1 - Anderson, J. A1 - Angüner, Ekrem Oǧuzhan A1 - Antonelli, L. A. A1 - Antoranz, P. A1 - Aravantinos, A. A1 - Arlen, T. A1 - Armstrong, T. A1 - Arnaldi, H. A1 - Arrabito, L. A1 - Asano, K. A1 - Ashton, T. A1 - Asorey, H. G. A1 - Awane, Y. A1 - Baba, H. A1 - Babic, A. A1 - Baby, N. A1 - Baehr, J. A1 - Bais, A. A1 - Baixeras, C. A1 - Bajtlik, S. A1 - Balbo, M. A1 - Balis, D. A1 - Balkowski, C. A1 - Bamba, A. A1 - Bandiera, R. A1 - Barber, A. A1 - Barbier, C. A1 - Barcelo, M. A1 - Barnacka, Anna A1 - Barnstedt, Jürgen A1 - Barres de Almeida, U. A1 - Barrio, J. A. A1 - Basili, A. A1 - Basso, S. A1 - Bastieri, D. A1 - Bauer, C. A1 - Baushev, Anton N. A1 - Becerra Gonzalez, J. A1 - Becherini, Yvonne A1 - Bechtol, K. C. A1 - Tjus, J. Becker A1 - Beckmann, Volker A1 - Bednarek, W. A1 - Behera, B. A1 - Belluso, M. A1 - Benbow, W. A1 - Berdugo, J. A1 - Berger, K. A1 - Bernard, F. A1 - Bernardino, T. A1 - Bernlöhr, K. A1 - Bhat, N. A1 - Bhattacharyya, S. A1 - Bigongiari, C. A1 - Biland, A. A1 - Billotta, S. A1 - Bird, T. A1 - Birsin, E. A1 - Bissaldi, E. A1 - Biteau, Jonathan A1 - Bitossi, M. A1 - Blake, S. A1 - Blanch Bigas, O. A1 - Blasi, P. A1 - Bobkov, A. A. A1 - Boccone, V. A1 - Boettcher, Markus A1 - Bogacz, L. A1 - Bogart, J. A1 - Bogdan, M. A1 - Boisson, Catherine A1 - Boix Gargallo, J. A1 - Bolmont, J. A1 - Bonanno, G. A1 - Bonardi, A. A1 - Bonev, T. A1 - Bonifacio, P. A1 - Bonnoli, G. A1 - Bordas, Pol A1 - Borgland, A. W. A1 - Borkowski, Janett A1 - Bose, R. A1 - Botner, O. A1 - Bottani, A. A1 - Bouchet, L. A1 - Bourgeat, M. A1 - Boutonnet, C. A1 - Bouvier, A. A1 - Brau-Nogue, S. A1 - Braun, I. A1 - Bretz, T. A1 - Briggs, M. S. A1 - Bringmann, T. A1 - Brook, P. A1 - Brun, Pierre A1 - Brunetti, L. A1 - Buanes, T. A1 - Buckley, J. H. A1 - Buehler, R. A1 - Bugaev, V. A1 - Bulgarelli, A. A1 - Bulik, Tomasz A1 - Busetto, G. A1 - Buson, S. A1 - Byrum, K. A1 - Cailles, M. A1 - Cameron, R. A. A1 - Camprecios, J. A1 - Canestrari, R. A1 - Cantu, S. A1 - Capalbi, M. A1 - Caraveo, P. A. A1 - Carmona, E. A1 - Carosi, A. A1 - Carr, John A1 - Carton, P. H. A1 - Casanova, Sabrina A1 - Casiraghi, M. A1 - Catalano, O. A1 - Cavazzani, S. A1 - Cazaux, S. A1 - Cerruti, M. A1 - Chabanne, E. A1 - Chadwick, Paula M. A1 - Champion, C. A1 - Chen, Andrew A1 - Chiang, J. A1 - Chiappetti, L. A1 - Chikawa, M. A1 - Chitnis, V. R. A1 - Chollet, F. A1 - Chudoba, J. A1 - Cieslar, M. A1 - Cillis, A. N. A1 - Cohen-Tanugi, J. A1 - Colafrancesco, Sergio A1 - Colin, P. A1 - Calome, J. A1 - Colonges, S. A1 - Compin, M. A1 - Conconi, P. A1 - Conforti, V. A1 - Connaughton, V. A1 - Conrad, Jan A1 - Contreras, J. L. A1 - Coppi, P. A1 - Corona, P. A1 - Corti, D. A1 - Cortina, J. A1 - Cossio, L. A1 - Costantini, H. A1 - Cotter, G. A1 - Courty, B. A1 - Couturier, S. A1 - Covino, S. A1 - Crimi, G. A1 - Criswell, S. J. A1 - Croston, J. A1 - Cusumano, G. A1 - Dafonseca, M. A1 - Dale, O. A1 - Daniel, M. A1 - Darling, J. A1 - Davids, I. A1 - Dazzi, F. A1 - De Angelis, A. A1 - De Caprio, V. A1 - De Frondat, F. A1 - de Gouveia Dal Pino, E. M. A1 - de la Calle, I. A1 - De La Vega, G. A. A1 - Lopez, R. de los Reyes A1 - De Lotto, B. A1 - De Luca, A. A1 - de Mello Neto, J. R. T. A1 - de Naurois, M. A1 - de Oliveira, Y. A1 - de Ona Wilhelmi, E. A1 - de Souza, V. A1 - Decerprit, G. A1 - Decock, G. A1 - Deil, C. A1 - Delagnes, E. A1 - Deleglise, G. A1 - Delgado, C. A1 - Della Volpe, D. A1 - Demange, P. A1 - Depaola, G. A1 - Dettlaff, A. A1 - Di Paola, A. A1 - Di Pierro, F. A1 - Diaz, C. A1 - Dick, J. A1 - Dickherber, R. A1 - Dickinson, H. A1 - Diez-Blanco, V. A1 - Digel, S. A1 - Dimitrov, D. A1 - Disset, G. A1 - Djannati-Ataï, A. A1 - Doert, M. A1 - Dohmke, M. A1 - Domainko, W. A1 - Prester, Dijana Dominis A1 - Donat, A. A1 - Dorner, D. A1 - Doro, M. A1 - Dournaux, J-L. A1 - Drake, G. A1 - Dravins, D. A1 - Drury, L. A1 - Dubois, F. A1 - Dubois, R. A1 - Dubus, G. A1 - Dufour, C. A1 - Dumas, D. A1 - Dumm, J. A1 - Durand, D. A1 - Dyks, J. A1 - Dyrda, M. A1 - Ebr, J. A1 - Edy, E. A1 - Egberts, Kathrin A1 - Eger, P. A1 - Einecke, S. A1 - Eleftheriadis, C. A1 - Elles, S. A1 - Emmanoulopoulos, D. A1 - Engelhaupt, D. A1 - Enomoto, R. A1 - Ernenwein, J-P A1 - Errando, M. A1 - Etchegoyen, A. A1 - Evans, P. A1 - Falcone, A. A1 - Fantinel, D. A1 - Farakos, K. A1 - Farnier, C. A1 - Fasola, G. A1 - Favill, B. A1 - Fede, E. A1 - Federici, S. A1 - Fegan, S. A1 - Feinstein, F. A1 - Ferenc, D. A1 - Ferrando, P. A1 - Fesquet, M. A1 - Fiasson, A. A1 - Fillin-Martino, E. A1 - Fink, D. A1 - Finley, C. A1 - Finley, J. P. A1 - Fiorini, M. A1 - Firpo Curcoll, R. A1 - Flores, H. A1 - Florin, D. A1 - Focke, W. A1 - Foehr, C. A1 - Fokitis, E. A1 - Font, L. A1 - Fontaine, G. A1 - Fornasa, M. A1 - Foerster, A. A1 - Fortson, L. A1 - Fouque, N. A1 - Franckowiak, A. A1 - Fransson, C. A1 - Fraser, G. A1 - Frei, R. A1 - Albuquerque, I. F. M. A1 - Fresnillo, L. A1 - Fruck, C. A1 - Fujita, Y. A1 - Fukazawa, Y. A1 - Fukui, Y. A1 - Funk, S. A1 - Gaebele, W. A1 - Gabici, S. A1 - Gabriele, R. A1 - Gadola, A. A1 - Galante, N. A1 - Gall, D. A1 - Gallant, Y. A1 - Gamez-Garcia, J. A1 - Garcia, B. A1 - Garcia Lopez, R. A1 - Gardiol, D. A1 - Garrido, D. A1 - Garrido, L. A1 - Gascon, D. A1 - Gaug, M. A1 - Gaweda, J. A1 - Gebremedhin, L. A1 - Geffroy, N. A1 - Gerard, L. A1 - Ghedina, A. A1 - Ghigo, M. A1 - Giannakaki, E. A1 - Gianotti, F. A1 - Giarrusso, S. A1 - Giavitto, G. A1 - Giebels, B. A1 - Gika, V. A1 - Giommi, P. A1 - Girard, N. A1 - Giro, E. A1 - Giuliani, A. A1 - Glanzman, T. A1 - Glicenstein, J. -F. A1 - Godinovic, N. A1 - Golev, V. A1 - Gomez Berisso, M. A1 - Gomez-Ortega, J. A1 - Gonzalez, M. M. A1 - Gonzalez, A. A1 - Gonzalez, F. A1 - Gonzalez Munoz, A. A1 - Gothe, K. S. A1 - Gougerot, M. A1 - Graciani, R. A1 - Grandi, P. A1 - Granena, F. A1 - Granot, J. A1 - Grasseau, G. A1 - Gredig, R. A1 - Green, A. A1 - Greenshaw, T. A1 - Gregoire, T. A1 - Grimm, O. A1 - Grube, J. A1 - Grudzinska, M. A1 - Gruev, V. A1 - Gruenewald, S. A1 - Grygorczuk, J. A1 - Guarino, V. A1 - Gunji, S. A1 - Gyuk, G. A1 - Hadasch, D. A1 - Hagiwara, R. A1 - Hahn, J. A1 - Hakansson, N. A1 - Hallgren, A. A1 - Hamer Heras, N. A1 - Hara, S. A1 - Hardcastle, M. J. A1 - Harris, J. A1 - Hassan, T. A1 - Hatanaka, K. A1 - Haubold, T. A1 - Haupt, A. A1 - Hayakawa, T. A1 - Hayashida, M. A1 - Heller, R. A1 - Henault, F. A1 - Henri, G. A1 - Hermann, G. A1 - Hermel, R. A1 - Herrero, A. A1 - Hidaka, N. A1 - Hinton, J. A1 - Hoffmann, D. A1 - Hofmann, W. A1 - Hofverberg, P. A1 - Holder, J. A1 - Horns, D. A1 - Horville, D. A1 - Houles, J. A1 - Hrabovsky, M. A1 - Hrupec, D. A1 - Huan, H. A1 - Huber, B. A1 - Huet, J. -M. A1 - Hughes, G. A1 - Humensky, T. B. A1 - Huovelin, J. A1 - Ibarra, A. A1 - Illa, J. M. A1 - Impiombato, D. A1 - Incorvaia, S. A1 - Inoue, S. A1 - Inoue, Y. A1 - Ioka, K. A1 - Ismailova, E. A1 - Jablonski, C. A1 - Jacholkowska, A. A1 - Jamrozy, M. A1 - Janiak, M. A1 - Jean, P. A1 - Jeanney, C. A1 - Jimenez, J. J. A1 - Jogler, T. A1 - Johnson, T. A1 - Journet, L. A1 - Juffroy, C. A1 - Jung, I. A1 - Kaaret, P. A1 - Kabuki, S. A1 - Kagaya, M. A1 - Kakuwa, J. A1 - Kalkuhl, C. A1 - Kankanyan, R. A1 - Karastergiou, A. A1 - Kaercher, K. A1 - Karczewski, M. A1 - Karkar, S. A1 - Kasperek, Aci. A1 - Kastana, D. A1 - Katagiri, H. A1 - Kataoka, J. A1 - Katarzynski, K. A1 - Katz, U. A1 - Kawanaka, N. A1 - Kellner-Leidel, B. A1 - Kelly, H. A1 - Kendziorra, E. A1 - Khelifi, B. A1 - Kieda, D. B. A1 - Kifune, T. A1 - Kihm, T. A1 - Kishimoto, T. A1 - Kitamoto, K. A1 - Kluzniak, W. A1 - Knapic, C. A1 - Knapp, J. w A1 - Knoedlseder, J. A1 - Koeck, F. A1 - Kocot, J. A1 - Kodani, K. A1 - Koehne, J. -H. A1 - Kohri, K. A1 - Kokkotas, K. A1 - Kolitzus, D. A1 - Komin, N. A1 - Kominis, I. A1 - Konno, Y. A1 - Koeppel, H. A1 - Korohoda, P. A1 - Kosack, K. A1 - Koss, G. A1 - Kossakowski, R. A1 - Kostka, P. A1 - Koul, R. A1 - Kowal, G. A1 - Koyama, S. A1 - Koziol, J. A1 - Kraehenbuehl, T. A1 - Krause, J. A1 - Krawzcynski, H. A1 - Krennrich, F. A1 - Krepps, A. A1 - Kretzschmann, A. A1 - Krobot, R. A1 - Krueger, P. A1 - Kubo, H. A1 - Kudryavtsev, V. A. A1 - Kushida, J. A1 - Kuznetsov, A. A1 - La Barbera, A. A1 - La Palombara, N. A1 - La Parola, V. A1 - La Rosa, G. A1 - Lacombe, K. A1 - Lamanna, G. A1 - Lande, J. A1 - Languignon, D. A1 - Lapington, J. A1 - Laporte, P. A1 - Lavalley, C. A1 - Le Flour, T. A1 - Le Padellec, A. A1 - Lee, S. -H. A1 - Lee, W. H. A1 - Leigui de Oliveira, M. A. A1 - Lelas, D. A1 - Lenain, J. -P. A1 - Leopold, D. J. A1 - Lerch, T. A1 - Lessio, L. A1 - Lieunard, B. A1 - Lindfors, E. A1 - Liolios, A. A1 - Lipniacka, A. A1 - Lockart, H. A1 - Lohse, T. A1 - Lombardi, S. A1 - Lopatin, A. A1 - Lopez, M. A1 - Lopez-Coto, R. A1 - Lopez-Oramas, A. A1 - Lorca, A. A1 - Lorenz, E. A1 - Lubinski, P. A1 - Lucarelli, F. A1 - Luedecke, H. A1 - Ludwin, J. A1 - Luque-Escamilla, P. L. A1 - Lustermann, W. A1 - Luz, O. A1 - Lyard, E. A1 - Maccarone, M. C. A1 - Maccarone, T. J. A1 - Madejski, G. M. A1 - Madhavan, A. A1 - Mahabir, M. A1 - Maier, G. A1 - Majumdar, P. A1 - Malaguti, G. A1 - Maltezos, S. A1 - Manalaysay, A. A1 - Mancilla, A. A1 - Mandat, D. A1 - Maneva, G. A1 - Mangano, A. A1 - Manigot, P. A1 - Mannheim, K. A1 - Manthos, I. A1 - Maragos, N. A1 - Marcowith, Alexandre A1 - Mariotti, M. A1 - Marisaldi, M. A1 - Markoff, S. A1 - Marszalek, A. A1 - Martens, C. A1 - Marti, J. A1 - Martin, J-M. A1 - Martin, P. A1 - Martinez, G. A1 - Martinez, F. A1 - Martinez, M. A1 - Masserot, A. A1 - Mastichiadis, A. A1 - Mathieu, A. A1 - Matsumoto, H. A1 - Mattana, F. A1 - Mattiazzo, S. A1 - Maurin, G. A1 - Maxfield, S. A1 - Maya, J. A1 - Mazin, D. A1 - Mc Comb, L. A1 - McCubbin, N. A1 - McHardy, I. A1 - McKay, R. A1 - Medina, C. A1 - Melioli, C. A1 - Melkumyan, D. A1 - Mereghetti, S. A1 - Mertsch, P. A1 - Meucci, M. A1 - Michalowski, J. A1 - Micolon, P. A1 - Mihailidis, A. A1 - Mineo, T. A1 - Minuti, M. A1 - Mirabal, N. A1 - Mirabel, F. A1 - Miranda, J. M. A1 - Mirzoyan, R. A1 - Mizuno, T. A1 - Moal, B. A1 - Moderski, R. A1 - Mognet, I. A1 - Molinari, E. A1 - Molinaro, M. A1 - Montaruli, T. A1 - Monteiro, I. A1 - Moore, P. A1 - Moralejo Olaizola, A. A1 - Mordalska, M. A1 - Morello, C. A1 - Mori, K. A1 - Mottez, F. A1 - Moudden, Y. A1 - Moulin, Emmanuel A1 - Mrusek, I. A1 - Mukherjee, R. A1 - Munar-Adrover, P. A1 - Muraishi, H. A1 - Murase, K. A1 - Murphy, A. A1 - Nagataki, S. A1 - Naito, T. A1 - Nakajima, D. A1 - Nakamori, T. A1 - Nakayama, K. A1 - Naumann, C. L. A1 - Naumann, D. A1 - Naumann-Godo, M. A1 - Nayman, P. A1 - Nedbal, D. A1 - Neise, D. A1 - Nellen, L. A1 - Neustroev, V. A1 - Neyroud, N. A1 - Nicastro, L. A1 - Nicolau-Kuklinski, J. A1 - Niedzwiecki, A. A1 - Niemiec, J. A1 - Nieto, D. A1 - Nikolaidis, A. A1 - Nishijima, K. A1 - Nolan, S. A1 - Northrop, R. A1 - Nosek, D. A1 - Nowak, N. A1 - Nozato, A. A1 - O'Brien, P. A1 - Ohira, Y. A1 - Ohishi, M. A1 - Ohm, S. A1 - Ohoka, H. A1 - Okuda, T. A1 - Okumura, A. A1 - Olive, J. -F. A1 - Ong, R. A. A1 - Orito, R. A1 - Orr, M. A1 - Osborne, J. A1 - Ostrowski, M. A1 - Otero, L. A. A1 - Otte, N. A1 - Ovcharov, E. A1 - Oya, I. A1 - Ozieblo, A. A1 - Padilla, L. A1 - Paiano, S. A1 - Paillot, D. A1 - Paizis, A. A1 - Palanque, S. A1 - Palatka, M. A1 - Pallota, J. A1 - Panagiotidis, K. A1 - Panazol, J. -L. A1 - Paneque, D. A1 - Panter, M. A1 - Paoletti, R. A1 - Papayannis, Alexandros A1 - Papyan, G. A1 - Paredes, J. M. A1 - Pareschi, G. A1 - Parks, G. A1 - Parraud, J. -M. A1 - Parsons, D. A1 - Arribas, M. Paz A1 - Pech, M. A1 - Pedaletti, G. A1 - Pelassa, V. A1 - Pelat, D. A1 - Perez, M. D. C. A1 - Persic, M. A1 - Petrucci, P-O A1 - Peyaud, B. A1 - Pichel, A. A1 - Pita, S. A1 - Pizzolato, F. A1 - Platos, L. A1 - Platzer, R. A1 - Pogosyan, L. A1 - Pohl, M. A1 - Pojmanski, G. A1 - Ponz, J. D. A1 - Potter, W. A1 - Poutanen, J. A1 - Prandini, E. A1 - Prast, J. A1 - Preece, R. A1 - Profeti, F. A1 - Prokoph, H. A1 - Prouza, M. A1 - Proyetti, M. A1 - Puerto-Gimenez, I. A1 - Puehlhofer, G. A1 - Puljak, I. A1 - Punch, M. A1 - Pyziol, R. A1 - Quel, E. J. A1 - Quinn, J. A1 - Quirrenbach, A. A1 - Racero, E. A1 - Rajda, P. J. A1 - Ramon, P. A1 - Rando, R. A1 - Rannot, R. C. A1 - Rataj, M. A1 - Raue, M. A1 - Reardon, P. A1 - Reimann, O. A1 - Reimer, A. A1 - Reimer, O. A1 - Reitberger, K. A1 - Renaud, M. A1 - Renner, S. A1 - Reville, B. A1 - Rhode, W. A1 - Ribo, M. A1 - Ribordy, M. A1 - Richer, M. G. A1 - Rico, J. A1 - Ridky, J. A1 - Rieger, F. A1 - Ringegni, P. A1 - Ripken, J. A1 - Ristori, P. R. A1 - Riviere, A. A1 - Rivoire, S. A1 - Rob, L. A1 - Roeser, U. A1 - Rohlfs, R. A1 - Rojas, G. A1 - Romano, Patrizia A1 - Romaszkan, W. A1 - Romero, G. E. A1 - Rosen, S. A1 - Lees, S. Rosier A1 - Ross, D. A1 - Rouaix, G. A1 - Rousselle, J. A1 - Rousselle, S. A1 - Rovero, A. C. A1 - Roy, F. A1 - Royer, S. A1 - Rudak, B. A1 - Rulten, C. A1 - Rupinski, M. A1 - Russo, F. A1 - Ryde, F. A1 - Sacco, B. A1 - Saemann, E. O. A1 - Saggion, A. A1 - Safiakian, V. A1 - Saito, K. A1 - Saito, T. A1 - Saito, Y. A1 - Sakaki, N. A1 - Sakonaka, R. A1 - Salini, A. A1 - Sanchez, F. A1 - Sanchez-Conde, M. A1 - Sandoval, A. A1 - Sandaker, H. A1 - Sant'Ambrogio, E. A1 - Santangelo, A. A1 - Santos, E. M. A1 - Sanuy, A. A1 - Sapozhnikov, L. A1 - Sarkar, S. A1 - Sartore, N. A1 - Sasaki, H. A1 - Satalecka, K. A1 - Sawada, M. A1 - Scalzotto, V. A1 - Scapin, V. A1 - Scarcioffolo, M. A1 - Schafer, J. A1 - Schanz, T. A1 - Schlenstedt, S. A1 - Schlickeiser, R. A1 - Schmidt, T. A1 - Schmoll, J. A1 - Schovanek, P. A1 - Schroedter, M. A1 - Schultz, C. A1 - Schultze, J. A1 - Schulz, A. A1 - Schure, K. A1 - Schwab, T. A1 - Schwanke, U. A1 - Schwarz, J. A1 - Schwarzburg, S. A1 - Schweizer, T. 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A1 - Yamamoto, T. A1 - Yamazaki, R. A1 - Yanagita, S. A1 - Yebras, J. M. A1 - Yelos, D. A1 - Yoshida, A. A1 - Yoshida, T. A1 - Yoshikoshi, T. A1 - Zabalza, V. A1 - Zacharias, M. A1 - Zajczyk, A. A1 - Zanin, R. A1 - Zdziarski, A. A1 - Zech, Alraune A1 - Zhao, A. A1 - Zhou, X. A1 - Zietara, K. A1 - Ziolkowski, J. A1 - Ziolkowski, P. A1 - Zitelli, V. A1 - Zurbach, C. A1 - Zychowski, P. T1 - Introducing the CTA concept T2 - Astroparticle physics N2 - The Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) is a new observatory for very high-energy (VHE) gamma rays. CTA has ambitions science goals, for which it is necessary to achieve full-sky coverage, to improve the sensitivity by about an order of magnitude, to span about four decades of energy, from a few tens of GeV to above 100 TeV with enhanced angular and energy resolutions over existing VHE gamma-ray observatories. An international collaboration has formed with more than 1000 members from 27 countries in Europe, Asia, Africa and North and South America. In 2010 the CTA Consortium completed a Design Study and started a three-year Preparatory Phase which leads to production readiness of CTA in 2014. In this paper we introduce the science goals and the concept of CTA, and provide an overview of the project. KW - TeV gamma-ray astronomy KW - Air showers KW - Cherenkov Telescopes Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.astropartphys.2013.01.007 SN - 0927-6505 SN - 1873-2852 VL - 43 IS - 2 SP - 3 EP - 18 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Actis, M. A1 - Agnetta, G. A1 - Aharonian, Felix A. A1 - Akhperjanian, A. G. A1 - Aleksic, J. A1 - Aliu, E. A1 - Allan, D. A1 - Allekotte, I. A1 - Antico, F. A1 - Antonelli, L. A. A1 - Antoranz, P. A1 - Aravantinos, A. A1 - Arlen, T. A1 - Arnaldi, H. A1 - Artmann, S. A1 - Asano, K. A1 - Asorey, H. G. A1 - Baehr, J. A1 - Bais, A. A1 - Baixeras, C. 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A1 - Tavernet, J. -P. A1 - Tchernin, C. A1 - Tejedor, L. A. A1 - Telezhinsky, Igor O. A1 - Temnikov, P. A1 - Tenzer, C. A1 - Terada, Y. A1 - Terrier, R. A1 - Teshima, M. A1 - Testa, V. A1 - Tibaldo, L. A1 - Tibolla, O. A1 - Tluczykont, M. A1 - Peixoto, C. J. Todero A1 - Tokanai, F. A1 - Tokarz, M. A1 - Toma, K. A1 - Torres, D. F. A1 - Tosti, G. A1 - Totani, T. A1 - Toussenel, F. A1 - Vallania, P. A1 - Vallejo, G. A1 - van der Walt, J. A1 - van Eldik, C. A1 - Vandenbroucke, J. A1 - Vankov, H. A1 - Vasileiadis, G. A1 - Vassiliev, V. V. A1 - Vegas, I. A1 - Venter, L. A1 - Vercellone, S. A1 - Veyssiere, C. A1 - Vialle, J. P. A1 - Videla, M. A1 - Vincent, P. A1 - Vink, J. A1 - Vlahakis, N. A1 - Vlahos, L. A1 - Vogler, P. A1 - Vollhardt, A. A1 - Volpe, F. A1 - Von Gunten, H. P. A1 - Vorobiov, S. A1 - Wagner, S. A1 - Wagner, R. M. A1 - Wagner, B. A1 - Wakely, S. P. A1 - Walter, P. A1 - Walter, R. A1 - Warwick, R. A1 - Wawer, P. A1 - Wawrzaszek, R. A1 - Webb, N. A1 - Wegner, P. A1 - Weinstein, A. A1 - Weitzel, Q. A1 - Welsing, R. A1 - Wetteskind, H. A1 - White, R. A1 - Wierzcholska, A. A1 - Wilkinson, M. I. A1 - Williams, D. A. A1 - Winde, M. A1 - Wischnewski, R. A1 - Wisniewski, L. A1 - Wolczko, A. A1 - Wood, M. A1 - Xiong, Q. A1 - Yamamoto, T. A1 - Yamaoka, K. A1 - Yamazaki, R. A1 - Yanagita, S. A1 - Yoffo, B. A1 - Yonetani, M. A1 - Yoshida, A. A1 - Yoshida, T. A1 - Yoshikoshi, T. A1 - Zabalza, V. A1 - Zagdanski, A. A1 - Zajczyk, A. A1 - Zdziarski, A. A1 - Zech, Alraune A1 - Zietara, K. A1 - Ziolkowski, P. A1 - Zitelli, V. A1 - Zychowski, P. T1 - Design concepts for the Cherenkov Telescope Array CTA an advanced facility for ground-based high-energy gamma-ray astronomy JF - Experimental astronomy : an international journal on astronomical instrumentation and data analysis N2 - Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has had a major breakthrough with the impressive results obtained using systems of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has a huge potential in astrophysics, particle physics and cosmology. CTA is an international initiative to build the next generation instrument, with a factor of 5-10 improvement in sensitivity in the 100 GeV-10 TeV range and the extension to energies well below 100 GeV and above 100 TeV. CTA will consist of two arrays (one in the north, one in the south) for full sky coverage and will be operated as open observatory. The design of CTA is based on currently available technology. This document reports on the status and presents the major design concepts of CTA. KW - Ground based gamma ray astronomy KW - Next generation Cherenkov telescopes KW - Design concepts Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10686-011-9247-0 SN - 0922-6435 SN - 1572-9508 VL - 32 IS - 3 SP - 193 EP - 316 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Li, Man A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Lihua A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Kirsten, Holger A1 - Giri, Ayush A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Sveinbjornsson, Gardar A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Fuchsberger, Christian A1 - Marten, Jonathan A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Xu, Yizhe A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Noce, Damia A1 - Van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Yu, Zhi A1 - Akiyama, Masato A1 - Afaq, Saima A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer Singh A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Amin, Najaf A1 - Arnlov, Johan A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Baptista, Daniela A1 - Bergmann, Sven A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Biino, Ginevra A1 - Boehnke, Michael A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Boissel, Mathilde A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Boutin, Thibaud S. A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Brumat, Marco A1 - Burkhardt, Ralph A1 - Butterworth, Adam S. A1 - Campana, Eric A1 - Campbell, Archie A1 - Campbell, Harry A1 - Canouil, Mickael A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Catamo, Eulalia A1 - Chambers, John C. A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chen, Xu A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Cheng, Yurong A1 - Christensen, Kaare A1 - Cifkova, Renata A1 - Ciullo, Marina A1 - Concas, Maria Pina A1 - Cook, James P. A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - Corre, Tanguy A1 - Sala, Cinzia Felicita A1 - Cusi, Daniele A1 - Danesh, John A1 - Daw, E. Warwick A1 - De Borst, Martin H. A1 - De Grandi, Alessandro A1 - De Mutsert, Renee A1 - De Vries, Aiko P. J. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Delgado, Graciela A1 - Demirkan, Ayse A1 - Di Angelantonio, Emanuele A1 - Dittrich, Katalin A1 - Divers, Jasmin A1 - Dorajoo, Rajkumar A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Ehret, Georg A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Evans, Michele K. A1 - Felix, Janine F. A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Franco, Oscar H. A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freedman, Barry I. A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Friedlander, Yechiel A1 - Froguel, Philippe A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Gao, He A1 - Gasparini, Paolo A1 - Gaziano, J. Michael A1 - Giedraitis, Vilmantas A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Girotto, Giorgia A1 - Giulianini, Franco A1 - Gogele, Martin A1 - Gordon, Scott D. A1 - Gudbjartsson, Daniel F. A1 - Gudnason, Vilmundur A1 - Haller, Toomas A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Harris, Tamara B. A1 - Hartman, Catharina A. A1 - Hayward, Caroline A1 - Hellwege, Jacklyn N. A1 - Heng, Chew-Kiat A1 - Hicks, Andrew A. A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Huang, Wei A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Indridason, Olafur S. A1 - Ingelsson, Erik A1 - Ising, Marcus A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Jakobsdottir, Johanna A1 - Jonas, Jost B. A1 - Joshi, Peter K. A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Kamatani, Yoichiro A1 - Kammerer, Candace M. A1 - Kanai, Masahiro A1 - Kastarinen, Mika A1 - Kerr, Shona M. A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Kiess, Wieland A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kooner, Jaspal S. A1 - Korner, Antje A1 - Kovacs, Peter A1 - Kraja, Aldi T. A1 - Krajcoviechova, Alena A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kramer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Kubo, Michiaki A1 - Kuhnel, Brigitte A1 - Kuokkanen, Mikko A1 - Kuusisto, Johanna A1 - La Bianca, Martina A1 - Laakso, Markku A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Langefeld, Carl D. A1 - Lee, Jeannette Jen-Mai A1 - Lehne, Benjamin A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Lim, Su-Chi A1 - Lind, Lars A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia M. A1 - Liu, Jun A1 - Liu, Jianjun A1 - Loeffler, Markus A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lucae, Susanne A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Magi, Reedik A1 - Magnusson, Patrik K. E. A1 - Mahajan, Anubha A1 - Martin, Nicholas G. A1 - Martins, Jade A1 - Marz, Winfried A1 - Mascalzoni, Deborah A1 - Matsuda, Koichi A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Metspalu, Andres A1 - Mikaelsdottir, Evgenia K. A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Miliku, Kozeta A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Program, V. A. Million Veteran A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Montgomery, Grant W. A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nalls, Mike A. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - Noordam, Raymond A1 - Olafsson, Isleifur A1 - Oldehinkel, Albertine J. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Ouwehand, Willem H. A1 - Padmanabhan, Sandosh A1 - Palmer, Nicholette D. A1 - Palsson, Runolfur A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Perls, Thomas A1 - Perola, Markus A1 - Pirastu, Mario A1 - Pirastu, Nicola A1 - Pistis, Giorgio A1 - Podgornaia, Anna I. A1 - Polasek, Ozren A1 - Ponte, Belen A1 - Porteous, David J. A1 - Poulain, Tanja A1 - Pramstaller, Peter P. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Prins, Bram P. A1 - Province, Michael A. A1 - Rabelink, Ton J. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Reilly, Dermot F. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Ridker, Paul M. A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Rizzi, Federica A1 - Roberts, David J. A1 - Robino, Antonietta A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rudan, Igor A1 - Rueedi, Rico A1 - Ruggiero, Daniela A1 - Ryan, Kathleen A. A1 - Saba, Yasaman A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Salomaa, Veikko A1 - Salvi, Erika A1 - Saum, Kai-Uwe A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Ben Schottker, A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Schupf, Nicole A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Shi, Yuan A1 - Smith, Albert V. A1 - Smith, Blair H. A1 - Soranzo, Nicole A1 - Spracklen, Cassandra N. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Stringham, Heather M. A1 - Stumvoll, Michael A1 - Svensson, Per O. A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Tai, E-Shyong A1 - Tajuddin, Salman M. A1 - Tan, Nicholas Y. Q. A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Teren, Andrej A1 - Tham, Yih-Chung A1 - Thiery, Joachim A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Thomsen, Hauke A1 - Thorleifsson, Gudmar A1 - Toniolo, Daniela A1 - Tonjes, Anke A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Tzoulaki, Ioanna A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Vaccargiu, Simona A1 - Van Dam, Rob M. A1 - Van der Harst, Pim A1 - Van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Edward, Digna R. Velez A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Vogelezang, Suzanne A1 - Volker, Uwe A1 - Vollenweider, Peter A1 - Waeber, Gerard A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Wang, Ya Xing A1 - Wang, Chaolong A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - Bin Wei, Wen A1 - White, Harvey A1 - Whitfield, John B. A1 - Wild, Sarah H. A1 - Wilson, James F. A1 - Wojczynski, Mary K. A1 - Wong, Charlene A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Xu, Liang A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Weihua A1 - Zonderman, Alan B. A1 - Rotter, Jerome I. A1 - Bochud, Murielle A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Vitart, Veronique A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Dehghan, Abbas A1 - Parsa, Afshin A1 - Chasman, Daniel I. A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Morris, Andrew P. A1 - Devuyst, Olivier A1 - Akilesh, Shreeram A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Sim, Xueling A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Okada, Yukinori A1 - Edwards, Todd L. A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Stefansson, Kari A1 - Hung, Adriana M. A1 - Heid, Iris M. A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Pattaro, Cristian T1 - A catalog of genetic loci associated with kidney function from analyses of a million individuals JF - Nature genetics N2 - Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is responsible for a public health burden with multi-systemic complications. Through transancestry meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and independent replication (n = 1,046,070), we identified 264 associated loci (166 new). Of these,147 were likely to be relevant for kidney function on the basis of associations with the alternative kidney function marker blood urea nitrogen (n = 416,178). Pathway and enrichment analyses, including mouse models with renal phenotypes, support the kidney as the main target organ. A genetic risk score for lower eGFR was associated with clinically diagnosed CKD in 452,264 independent individuals. Colocalization analyses of associations with eGFR among 783,978 European-ancestry individuals and gene expression across 46 human tissues, including tubulo-interstitial and glomerular kidney compartments, identified 17 genes differentially expressed in kidney. Fine-mapping highlighted missense driver variants in 11 genes and kidney-specific regulatory variants. These results provide a comprehensive priority list of molecular targets for translational research. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41588-019-0407-x SN - 1061-4036 SN - 1546-1718 VL - 51 IS - 6 SP - 957 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aarts, Alexander A. A1 - Anderson, Joanna E. A1 - Anderson, Christopher J. A1 - Attridge, Peter R. A1 - Attwood, Angela A1 - Axt, Jordan A1 - Babel, Molly A1 - Bahnik, Stepan A1 - Baranski, Erica A1 - Barnett-Cowan, Michael A1 - Bartmess, Elizabeth A1 - Beer, Jennifer A1 - Bell, Raoul A1 - Bentley, Heather A1 - Beyan, Leah A1 - Binion, Grace A1 - Borsboom, Denny A1 - Bosch, Annick A1 - Bosco, Frank A. A1 - Bowman, Sara D. A1 - Brandt, Mark J. A1 - Braswell, Erin A1 - Brohmer, Hilmar A1 - Brown, Benjamin T. A1 - Brown, Kristina A1 - Bruening, Jovita A1 - Calhoun-Sauls, Ann A1 - Callahan, Shannon P. A1 - Chagnon, Elizabeth A1 - Chandler, Jesse A1 - Chartier, Christopher R. A1 - Cheung, Felix A1 - Christopherson, Cody D. A1 - Cillessen, Linda A1 - Clay, Russ A1 - Cleary, Hayley A1 - Cloud, Mark D. A1 - Cohn, Michael A1 - Cohoon, Johanna A1 - Columbus, Simon A1 - Cordes, Andreas A1 - Costantini, Giulio A1 - Alvarez, Leslie D. Cramblet A1 - Cremata, Ed A1 - Crusius, Jan A1 - DeCoster, Jamie A1 - DeGaetano, Michelle A. A1 - Della Penna, Nicolas A1 - den Bezemer, Bobby A1 - Deserno, Marie K. A1 - Devitt, Olivia A1 - Dewitte, Laura A1 - Dobolyi, David G. A1 - Dodson, Geneva T. A1 - Donnellan, M. Brent A1 - Donohue, Ryan A1 - Dore, Rebecca A. A1 - Dorrough, Angela A1 - Dreber, Anna A1 - Dugas, Michelle A1 - Dunn, Elizabeth W. A1 - Easey, Kayleigh A1 - Eboigbe, Sylvia A1 - Eggleston, Casey A1 - Embley, Jo A1 - Epskamp, Sacha A1 - Errington, Timothy M. A1 - Estel, Vivien A1 - Farach, Frank J. A1 - Feather, Jenelle A1 - Fedor, Anna A1 - Fernandez-Castilla, Belen A1 - Fiedler, Susann A1 - Field, James G. A1 - Fitneva, Stanka A. A1 - Flagan, Taru A1 - Forest, Amanda L. A1 - Forsell, Eskil A1 - Foster, Joshua D. A1 - Frank, Michael C. A1 - Frazier, Rebecca S. A1 - Fuchs, Heather A1 - Gable, Philip A1 - Galak, Jeff A1 - Galliani, Elisa Maria A1 - Gampa, Anup A1 - Garcia, Sara A1 - Gazarian, Douglas A1 - Gilbert, Elizabeth A1 - Giner-Sorolla, Roger A1 - Glöckner, Andreas A1 - Göllner, Lars A1 - Goh, Jin X. A1 - Goldberg, Rebecca A1 - Goodbourn, Patrick T. A1 - Gordon-McKeon, Shauna A1 - Gorges, Bryan A1 - Gorges, Jessie A1 - Goss, Justin A1 - Graham, Jesse A1 - Grange, James A. A1 - Gray, Jeremy A1 - Hartgerink, Chris A1 - Hartshorne, Joshua A1 - Hasselman, Fred A1 - Hayes, Timothy A1 - Heikensten, Emma A1 - Henninger, Felix A1 - Hodsoll, John A1 - Holubar, Taylor A1 - Hoogendoorn, Gea A1 - Humphries, Denise J. A1 - Hung, Cathy O. -Y. A1 - Immelman, Nathali A1 - Irsik, Vanessa C. A1 - Jahn, Georg A1 - Jaekel, Frank A1 - Jekel, Marc A1 - Johannesson, Magnus A1 - Johnson, Larissa G. A1 - Johnson, David J. A1 - Johnson, Kate M. A1 - Johnston, William J. A1 - Jonas, Kai A1 - Joy-Gaba, Jennifer A. A1 - Kappes, Heather Barry A1 - Kelso, Kim A1 - Kidwell, Mallory C. A1 - Kim, Seung Kyung A1 - Kirkhart, Matthew A1 - Kleinberg, Bennett A1 - Knezevic, Goran A1 - Kolorz, Franziska Maria A1 - Kossakowski, Jolanda J. A1 - Krause, Robert Wilhelm A1 - Krijnen, Job A1 - Kuhlmann, Tim A1 - Kunkels, Yoram K. A1 - Kyc, Megan M. A1 - Lai, Calvin K. A1 - Laique, Aamir A1 - Lakens, Daniel A1 - Lane, Kristin A. A1 - Lassetter, Bethany A1 - Lazarevic, Ljiljana B. A1 - LeBel, Etienne P. A1 - Lee, Key Jung A1 - Lee, Minha A1 - Lemm, Kristi A1 - Levitan, Carmel A. A1 - Lewis, Melissa A1 - Lin, Lin A1 - Lin, Stephanie A1 - Lippold, Matthias A1 - Loureiro, Darren A1 - Luteijn, Ilse A1 - Mackinnon, Sean A1 - Mainard, Heather N. A1 - Marigold, Denise C. A1 - Martin, Daniel P. A1 - Martinez, Tylar A1 - Masicampo, E. J. A1 - Matacotta, Josh A1 - Mathur, Maya A1 - May, Michael A1 - Mechin, Nicole A1 - Mehta, Pranjal A1 - Meixner, Johannes A1 - Melinger, Alissa A1 - Miller, Jeremy K. A1 - Miller, Mallorie A1 - Moore, Katherine A1 - Möschl, Marcus A1 - Motyl, Matt A1 - Müller, Stephanie M. A1 - Munafo, Marcus A1 - Neijenhuijs, Koen I. A1 - Nervi, Taylor A1 - Nicolas, Gandalf A1 - Nilsonne, Gustav A1 - Nosek, Brian A. A1 - Nuijten, Michele B. A1 - Olsson, Catherine A1 - Osborne, Colleen A1 - Ostkamp, Lutz A1 - Pavel, Misha A1 - Penton-Voak, Ian S. A1 - Perna, Olivia A1 - Pernet, Cyril A1 - Perugini, Marco A1 - Pipitone, R. Nathan A1 - Pitts, Michael A1 - Plessow, Franziska A1 - Prenoveau, Jason M. A1 - Rahal, Rima-Maria A1 - Ratliff, Kate A. A1 - Reinhard, David A1 - Renkewitz, Frank A1 - Ricker, Ashley A. A1 - Rigney, Anastasia A1 - Rivers, Andrew M. A1 - Roebke, Mark A1 - Rutchick, Abraham M. A1 - Ryan, Robert S. A1 - Sahin, Onur A1 - Saide, Anondah A1 - Sandstrom, Gillian M. A1 - Santos, David A1 - Saxe, Rebecca A1 - Schlegelmilch, Rene A1 - Schmidt, Kathleen A1 - Scholz, Sabine A1 - Seibel, Larissa A1 - Selterman, Dylan Faulkner A1 - Shaki, Samuel A1 - Simpson, William B. A1 - Sinclair, H. Colleen A1 - Skorinko, Jeanine L. M. A1 - Slowik, Agnieszka A1 - Snyder, Joel S. A1 - Soderberg, Courtney A1 - Sonnleitner, Carina A1 - Spencer, Nick A1 - Spies, Jeffrey R. A1 - Steegen, Sara A1 - Stieger, Stefan A1 - Strohminger, Nina A1 - Sullivan, Gavin B. A1 - Talhelm, Thomas A1 - Tapia, Megan A1 - te Dorsthorst, Anniek A1 - Thomae, Manuela A1 - Thomas, Sarah L. A1 - Tio, Pia A1 - Traets, Frits A1 - Tsang, Steve A1 - Tuerlinckx, Francis A1 - Turchan, Paul A1 - Valasek, Milan A1 - Van Aert, Robbie A1 - van Assen, Marcel A1 - van Bork, Riet A1 - van de Ven, Mathijs A1 - van den Bergh, Don A1 - van der Hulst, Marije A1 - van Dooren, Roel A1 - van Doorn, Johnny A1 - van Renswoude, Daan R. A1 - van Rijn, Hedderik A1 - Vanpaemel, Wolf A1 - Echeverria, Alejandro Vasquez A1 - Vazquez, Melissa A1 - Velez, Natalia A1 - Vermue, Marieke A1 - Verschoor, Mark A1 - Vianello, Michelangelo A1 - Voracek, Martin A1 - Vuu, Gina A1 - Wagenmakers, Eric-Jan A1 - Weerdmeester, Joanneke A1 - Welsh, Ashlee A1 - Westgate, Erin C. A1 - Wissink, Joeri A1 - Wood, Michael A1 - Woods, Andy A1 - Wright, Emily A1 - Wu, Sining A1 - Zeelenberg, Marcel A1 - Zuni, Kellylynn T1 - Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science JF - Science N2 - Reproducibility is a defining feature of science, but the extent to which it characterizes current research is unknown. We conducted replications of 100 experimental and correlational studies published in three psychology journals using high-powered designs and original materials when available. Replication effects were half the magnitude of original effects, representing a substantial decline. Ninety-seven percent of original studies had statistically significant results. Thirty-six percent of replications had statistically significant results; 47% of original effect sizes were in the 95% confidence interval of the replication effect size; 39% of effects were subjectively rated to have replicated the original result; and if no bias in original results is assumed, combining original and replication results left 68% with statistically significant effects. Correlational tests suggest that replication success was better predicted by the strength of original evidence than by characteristics of the original and replication teams. Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aac4716 SN - 1095-9203 SN - 0036-8075 VL - 349 IS - 6251 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tucker, Marlee A. A1 - Boehning-Gaese, Katrin A1 - Fagan, William F. A1 - Fryxell, John M. A1 - Van Moorter, Bram A1 - Alberts, Susan C. A1 - Ali, Abdullahi H. A1 - Allen, Andrew M. A1 - Attias, Nina A1 - Avgar, Tal A1 - Bartlam-Brooks, Hattie A1 - Bayarbaatar, Buuveibaatar A1 - Belant, Jerrold L. A1 - Bertassoni, Alessandra A1 - Beyer, Dean A1 - Bidner, Laura A1 - van Beest, Floris M. A1 - Blake, Stephen A1 - Blaum, Niels A1 - Bracis, Chloe A1 - Brown, Danielle A1 - de Bruyn, P. J. Nico A1 - Cagnacci, Francesca A1 - Calabrese, Justin M. A1 - Camilo-Alves, Constanca A1 - Chamaille-Jammes, Simon A1 - Chiaradia, Andre A1 - Davidson, Sarah C. A1 - Dennis, Todd A1 - DeStefano, Stephen A1 - Diefenbach, Duane A1 - Douglas-Hamilton, Iain A1 - Fennessy, Julian A1 - Fichtel, Claudia A1 - Fiedler, Wolfgang A1 - Fischer, Christina A1 - Fischhoff, Ilya A1 - Fleming, Christen H. A1 - Ford, Adam T. A1 - Fritz, Susanne A. A1 - Gehr, Benedikt A1 - Goheen, Jacob R. A1 - Gurarie, Eliezer A1 - Hebblewhite, Mark A1 - Heurich, Marco A1 - Hewison, A. J. Mark A1 - Hof, Christian A1 - Hurme, Edward A1 - Isbell, Lynne A. A1 - Janssen, Rene A1 - Jeltsch, Florian A1 - Kaczensky, Petra A1 - Kane, Adam A1 - Kappeler, Peter M. A1 - Kauffman, Matthew A1 - Kays, Roland A1 - Kimuyu, Duncan A1 - Koch, Flavia A1 - Kranstauber, Bart A1 - LaPoint, Scott A1 - Leimgruber, Peter A1 - Linnell, John D. C. A1 - Lopez-Lopez, Pascual A1 - Markham, A. Catherine A1 - Mattisson, Jenny A1 - Medici, Emilia Patricia A1 - Mellone, Ugo A1 - Merrill, Evelyn A1 - Mourao, Guilherme de Miranda A1 - Morato, Ronaldo G. A1 - Morellet, Nicolas A1 - Morrison, Thomas A. A1 - Diaz-Munoz, Samuel L. A1 - Mysterud, Atle A1 - Nandintsetseg, Dejid A1 - Nathan, Ran A1 - Niamir, Aidin A1 - Odden, John A1 - Oliveira-Santos, Luiz Gustavo R. A1 - Olson, Kirk A. A1 - Patterson, Bruce D. A1 - de Paula, Rogerio Cunha A1 - Pedrotti, Luca A1 - Reineking, Bjorn A1 - Rimmler, Martin A1 - Rogers, Tracey L. A1 - Rolandsen, Christer Moe A1 - Rosenberry, Christopher S. A1 - Rubenstein, Daniel I. A1 - Safi, Kamran A1 - Said, Sonia A1 - Sapir, Nir A1 - Sawyer, Hall A1 - Schmidt, Niels Martin A1 - Selva, Nuria A1 - Sergiel, Agnieszka A1 - Shiilegdamba, Enkhtuvshin A1 - Silva, Joao Paulo A1 - Singh, Navinder A1 - Solberg, Erling J. A1 - Spiegel, Orr A1 - Strand, Olav A1 - Sundaresan, Siva A1 - Ullmann, Wiebke A1 - Voigt, Ulrich A1 - Wall, Jake A1 - Wattles, David A1 - Wikelski, Martin A1 - Wilmers, Christopher C. A1 - Wilson, John W. A1 - Wittemyer, George A1 - Zieba, Filip A1 - Zwijacz-Kozica, Tomasz A1 - Mueller, Thomas T1 - Moving in the Anthropocene BT - global reductions in terrestrial mammalian movements JF - Science N2 - Animal movement is fundamental for ecosystem functioning and species survival, yet the effects of the anthropogenic footprint on animal movements have not been estimated across species. Using a unique GPS-tracking database of 803 individuals across 57 species, we found that movements of mammals in areas with a comparatively high human footprint were on average one-half to one-third the extent of their movements in areas with a low human footprint. We attribute this reduction to behavioral changes of individual animals and to the exclusion of species with long-range movements from areas with higher human impact. Global loss of vagility alters a key ecological trait of animals that affects not only population persistence but also ecosystem processes such as predator-prey interactions, nutrient cycling, and disease transmission. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aam9712 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 359 IS - 6374 SP - 466 EP - 469 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Arnison, Paul G. A1 - Bibb, Mervyn J. A1 - Bierbaum, Gabriele A1 - Bowers, Albert A. A1 - Bugni, Tim S. A1 - Bulaj, Grzegorz A1 - Camarero, Julio A. A1 - Campopiano, Dominic J. A1 - Challis, Gregory L. A1 - Clardy, Jon A1 - Cotter, Paul D. A1 - Craik, David J. A1 - Dawson, Michael A1 - Dittmann-Thünemann, Elke A1 - Donadio, Stefano A1 - Dorrestein, Pieter C. A1 - Entian, Karl-Dieter A1 - Fischbach, Michael A. A1 - Garavelli, John S. A1 - Goeransson, Ulf A1 - Gruber, Christian W. A1 - Haft, Daniel H. A1 - Hemscheidt, Thomas K. A1 - Hertweck, Christian A1 - Hill, Colin A1 - Horswill, Alexander R. A1 - Jaspars, Marcel A1 - Kelly, Wendy L. A1 - Klinman, Judith P. A1 - Kuipers, Oscar P. A1 - Link, A. James A1 - Liu, Wen A1 - Marahiel, Mohamed A. A1 - Mitchell, Douglas A. A1 - Moll, Gert N. A1 - Moore, Bradley S. A1 - Mueller, Rolf A1 - Nair, Satish K. A1 - Nes, Ingolf F. A1 - Norris, Gillian E. A1 - Olivera, Baldomero M. A1 - Onaka, Hiroyasu A1 - Patchett, Mark L. A1 - Piel, Jörn A1 - Reaney, Martin J. T. A1 - Rebuffat, Sylvie A1 - Ross, R. Paul A1 - Sahl, Hans-Georg A1 - Schmidt, Eric W. A1 - Selsted, Michael E. A1 - Severinov, Konstantin A1 - Shen, Ben A1 - Sivonen, Kaarina A1 - Smith, Leif A1 - Stein, Torsten A1 - Suessmuth, Roderich D. A1 - Tagg, John R. A1 - Tang, Gong-Li A1 - Truman, Andrew W. A1 - Vederas, John C. A1 - Walsh, Christopher T. A1 - Walton, Jonathan D. A1 - Wenzel, Silke C. A1 - Willey, Joanne M. A1 - van der Donk, Wilfred A. T1 - Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptide natural products overview and recommendations for a universal nomenclature JF - Natural product reports : a journal of current developments in bio-organic chemistry N2 - This review presents recommended nomenclature for the biosynthesis of ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides (RiPPs), a rapidly growing class of natural products. The current knowledge regarding the biosynthesis of the >20 distinct compound classes is also reviewed, and commonalities are discussed. Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c2np20085f SN - 0265-0568 VL - 30 IS - 1 SP - 108 EP - 160 PB - Royal Society of Chemistry CY - Cambridge ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ellis, S. C. A1 - Bland-Hawthorn, Joss A1 - Lawrence, J. A1 - Horton, A. J. A1 - Trinh, C. A1 - Leon-Saval, S. G. A1 - Shortridge, K. A1 - Bryant, J. A1 - Case, S. A1 - Colless, M. A1 - Couch, W. A1 - Freeman, K. A1 - Gers, L. A1 - Glazebrook, K. A1 - Haynes, R. A1 - Lee, S. A1 - Löhmannsröben, Hans-Gerd A1 - O'Byrne, J. A1 - Miziarski, S. A1 - Roth, M. A1 - Schmidt, B. A1 - Tinney, C. G. A1 - Zheng, J. T1 - Suppression of the near-infrared OH night-sky lines with fibre Bragg gratings - first results JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - The background noise between 1 and 1.8 ?mu m in ground-based instruments is dominated by atmospheric emission from hydroxyl molecules. We have built and commissioned a new instrument, the Gemini Near-infrared OH Suppression Integral Field Unit (IFU) System (GNOSIS), which suppresses 103 OH doublets between 1.47 and 1.7?mu m by a factor of 1000 with a resolving power of 10?000. We present the first results from the commissioning of GNOSIS using the IRIS2 spectrograph at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. We present measurements of sensitivity, background and throughput. The combined throughput of the GNOSIS fore-optics, grating unit and relay optics is 36?per cent, but this could be improved to 46?per cent with a more optimal design. We measure strong suppression of the OH lines, confirming that OH suppression with fibre Bragg gratings will be a powerful technology for low-resolution spectroscopy. The integrated OH suppressed background between 1.5 and 1.7 mu m is reduced by a factor of 9 compared to a control spectrum using the same system without suppression. The potential of low-resolution OH-suppressed spectroscopy is illustrated with example observations of Seyfert galaxies and a low-mass star. The GNOSIS background is dominated by detector dark current below 1.67 mu m and by thermal emission above 1.67 mu m. After subtracting these, we detect an unidentified residual interline component of 860 +/- 210 photons s-1 m-2?arcsec-2?mu m-1, comparable to previous measurements. This component is equally bright in the suppressed and control spectra. We have investigated the possible source of the interline component, but were unable to discriminate between a possible instrumental artefact and intrinsic atmospheric emission. Resolving the source of this emission is crucial for the design of fully optimized OH suppression spectrographs. The next-generation OH suppression spectrograph will be focused on resolving the source of the interline component, taking advantage of better optimization for a fibre Bragg grating feed incorporating refinements of design based on our findings from GNOSIS. We quantify the necessary improvements for an optimal OH suppressing fibre spectrograph design. KW - atmospheric effects KW - instrumentation: miscellaneous KW - infrared: general Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21602.x SN - 0035-8711 VL - 425 IS - 3 SP - 1682 EP - 1695 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Taal, H. Rob A1 - St Pourcain, Beate A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth A1 - Das, Shikta A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Warrington, Nicole M. A1 - Kaakinen, Marika A1 - Kreiner-Moller, Eskil A1 - Bradfield, Jonathan P. A1 - Freathy, Rachel M. A1 - Geller, Frank A1 - Guxens, Monica A1 - Cousminer, Diana L. A1 - Kerkhof, Marjan A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Beilin, Lawrence J. A1 - Bonnelykke, Klaus A1 - Buxton, Jessica L. A1 - Charoen, Pimphen A1 - Chawes, Bo Lund Krogsgaard A1 - Eriksson, Johan A1 - Evans, David M. A1 - Hofman, Albert A1 - Kemp, John P. A1 - Kim, Cecilia E. A1 - Klopp, Norman A1 - Lahti, Jari A1 - Lye, Stephen J. A1 - McMahon, George A1 - Mentch, Frank D. A1 - Mueller-Nurasyid, Martina A1 - O'Reilly, Paul F. A1 - Prokopenko, Inga A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Steegers, Eric A. P. A1 - Sunyer, Jordi A1 - Tiesler, Carla A1 - Yaghootkar, Hanieh A1 - Breteler, Monique M. B. A1 - Debette, Stephanie A1 - Fornage, Myriam A1 - Gudnason, Vilmundur A1 - Launer, Lenore J. A1 - van der Lugt, Aad A1 - Mosley, Thomas H. A1 - Seshadri, Sudha A1 - Smith, Albert V. A1 - Vernooij, Meike W. A1 - Blakemore, Alexandra I. F. A1 - Chiavacci, Rosetta M. A1 - Feenstra, Bjarke A1 - Fernandez-Banet, Julio A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa A1 - van der Heijden, Albert J. A1 - Iniguez, Carmen A1 - Lathrop, Mark A1 - McArdle, Wendy L. A1 - Molgaard, Anne A1 - Newnham, John P. A1 - Palmer, Lyle J. A1 - Palotie, Aarno A1 - Pouta, Annneli A1 - Ring, Susan M. A1 - Sovio, Ulla A1 - Standl, Marie A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Wichmann, H-Erich A1 - Vissing, Nadja Hawwa A1 - DeCarli, Charles A1 - van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Koppelman, Gerard H. A1 - Estivill, Xavier A1 - Hattersley, Andrew T. A1 - Melbye, Mads A1 - Bisgaard, Hans A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Widen, Elisabeth A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Smith, George Davey A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Adair, Linda S. A1 - Ang, Wei A1 - Atalay, Mustafa A1 - van Beijsterveldt, Toos A1 - Bergen, Nienke A1 - Benke, Kelly A1 - Berry, Diane J. A1 - Bradfield, Jonathan P. A1 - Charoen, Pimphen A1 - Coin, Lachlan A1 - Cousminer, Diana L. A1 - Das, Shikta A1 - Davis, Oliver S. P. A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Evans, David M. A1 - Feenstra, Bjarke A1 - Flexeder, Claudia A1 - Frayling, Tim A1 - Freathy, Rachel M. A1 - Gaillard, Romy A1 - Geller, Frank A1 - Groen-Blokhuis, Maria A1 - Goh, Liang-Kee A1 - Guxens, Monica A1 - Haworth, Claire M. A. A1 - Hadley, Dexter A1 - Hebebrand, Johannes A1 - Hinney, Anke A1 - Hirschhorn, Joel N. A1 - Holloway, John W. A1 - Holst, Claus A1 - Hottenga, Jouke Jan A1 - Horikoshi, Momoko A1 - Huikari, Ville A1 - Hypponen, Elina A1 - Iniguez, Carmen A1 - Kaakinen, Marika A1 - Kilpelainen, Tuomas O. A1 - Kirin, Mirna A1 - Kowgier, Matthew A1 - Lakka, Hanna-Maaria A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lawlor, Debbie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lewin, Alex A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia A1 - Lindi, Virpi A1 - Maggi, Reedik A1 - Marsh, Julie A1 - Middeldorp, Christel A1 - Millwood, Iona A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Murray, Jeffrey C. A1 - Nivard, Michel A1 - Nohr, Ellen Aagaard A1 - Ntalla, Ioanna A1 - Oken, Emily A1 - O'Reilly, Paul F. A1 - Palmer, Lyle J. A1 - Panoutsopoulou, Kalliope A1 - Pararajasingham, Jennifer A1 - Prokopenko, Inga A1 - Rodriguez, Alina A1 - Salem, Rany M. A1 - Sebert, Sylvain A1 - Siitonen, Niina A1 - Sovio, Ulla A1 - St Pourcain, Beate A1 - Strachan, David P. A1 - Sunyer, Jordi A1 - Taal, H. Rob A1 - Teo, Yik-Ying A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth A1 - Tiesler, Carla A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Valcarcel, Beatriz A1 - Warrington, Nicole M. A1 - White, Scott A1 - Willemsen, Gonneke A1 - Yaghootkar, Hanieh A1 - Zeggini, Eleftheria A1 - Boomsma, Dorret I. A1 - Cooper, Cyrus A1 - Estivill, Xavier A1 - Gillman, Matthew A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Hattersley, Andrew T. A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - Lakka, Timo A. A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Melbye, Mads A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Dedoussis, George V. A1 - Ong, Ken K. A1 - Pearson, Ewan R. A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Price, Thomas S. A1 - Power, Chris A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Saw, Seang-Mei A1 - Scherag, Andre A1 - Simell, Olli A1 - Sorensen, Thorkild I. A. A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Widen, Elisabeth A1 - Wilson, James F. A1 - Ang, Wei A1 - van Beijsterveldt, Toos A1 - Bergen, Nienke A1 - Benke, Kelly A1 - Berry, Diane J. A1 - Bradfield, Jonathan P. A1 - Charoen, Pimphen A1 - Coin, Lachlan A1 - Cousminer, Diana L. A1 - Das, Shikta A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Evans, David M. A1 - Frayling, Tim A1 - Freathy, Rachel M. A1 - Gaillard, Romy A1 - Groen-Blokhuis, Maria A1 - Guxens, Monica A1 - Hadley, Dexter A1 - Hottenga, Jouke Jan A1 - Huikari, Ville A1 - Hypponen, Elina A1 - Kaakinen, Marika A1 - Kowgier, Matthew A1 - Lawlor, Debbie A. A1 - Lewin, Alex A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia A1 - Marsh, Julie A1 - Middeldorp, Christel A1 - Millwood, Iona A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Nivard, Michel A1 - O'Reilly, Paul F. A1 - Palmer, Lyle J. A1 - Prokopenko, Inga A1 - Rodriguez, Alina A1 - Sebert, Sylvain A1 - Sovio, Ulla A1 - St Pourcain, Beate A1 - Standl, Marie A1 - Strachan, David P. A1 - Sunyer, Jordi A1 - Taal, H. Rob A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth A1 - Tiesler, Carla A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Valcarcel, Beatriz A1 - Warrington, Nicole M. A1 - White, Scott A1 - Willemsen, Gonneke A1 - Yaghootkar, Hanieh A1 - Boomsma, Dorret I. A1 - Estivill, Xavier A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Hattersley, Andrew T. A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Power, Chris A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Widen, Elisabeth A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Fornage, Myriam A1 - Smith, Albert V. A1 - Seshadri, Sudha A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Debette, Stephanie A1 - Vrooman, Henri A. A1 - Sigurdsson, Sigurdur A1 - Ropele, Stefan A1 - Coker, Laura H. A1 - Longstreth, W. T. A1 - Niessen, Wiro J. A1 - DeStefano, Anita L. A1 - Beiser, Alexa A1 - Zijdenbos, Alex P. A1 - Struchalin, Maksim A1 - Jack, Clifford R. A1 - Nalls, Mike A. A1 - Au, Rhoda A1 - Hofman, Albert A1 - Gudnason, Haukur A1 - van der Lugt, Aad A1 - Harris, Tamara B. A1 - Meeks, William M. A1 - Vernooij, Meike W. A1 - van Buchem, Mark A. A1 - Catellier, Diane A1 - Gudnason, Vilmundur A1 - Windham, B. Gwen A1 - Wolf, Philip A. A1 - van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Mosley, Thomas H. A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Launer, Lenore J. A1 - Breteler, Monique M. B. A1 - DeCarli, Charles T1 - Common variants at 12q15 and 12q24 are associated with infant head circumference JF - Nature genetics N2 - To identify genetic variants associated with head circumference in infancy, we performed a meta-analysis of seven genome-wide association studies (GWAS) (N = 10,768 individuals of European ancestry enrolled in pregnancy and/or birth cohorts) and followed up three lead signals in six replication studies (combined N = 19,089). rs7980687 on chromosome 12q24 (P = 8.1 x 10(-9)) and rs1042725 on chromosome 12q15 (P = 2.8 x 10(-10)) were robustly associated with head circumference in infancy. Although these loci have previously been associated with adult height(1), their effects on infant head circumference were largely independent of height (P = 3.8 x 10(-7) for rs7980687 and P = 1.3 x 10(-7) for rs1042725 after adjustment for infant height). A third signal, rs11655470 on chromosome 17q21, showed suggestive evidence of association with head circumference (P = 3.9 x 10(-6)). SNPs correlated to the 17q21 signal have shown genome-wide association with adult intracranial volume(2), Parkinson's disease and other neurodegenerative diseases(3-5), indicating that a common genetic variant in this region might link early brain growth with neurological disease in later life. Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.2238 SN - 1061-4036 VL - 44 IS - 5 SP - 532 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Fornage, Myriam A1 - Smith, Albert V. A1 - Seshadri, Sudha A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Debette, Stephanie A1 - Vrooman, Henri A. A1 - Sigurdsson, Sigurdur A1 - Ropele, Stefan A1 - Taal, H. Rob A1 - Mook-Kanamori, Dennis O. A1 - Coker, Laura H. A1 - Longstreth, W. T. A1 - Niessen, Wiro J. A1 - DeStefano, Anita L. A1 - Beiser, Alexa A1 - Zijdenbos, Alex P. A1 - Struchalin, Maksim A1 - Jack, Clifford R. A1 - Rivadeneira, Fernando A1 - Uitterlinden, Andre G. A1 - Knopman, David S. A1 - Hartikainen, Anna-Liisa A1 - Pennell, Craig E. A1 - Thiering, Elisabeth A1 - Steegers, Eric A. P. A1 - Hakonarson, Hakon A1 - Heinrich, Joachim A1 - Palmer, Lyle J. A1 - Jarvelin, Marjo-Riitta A1 - McCarthy, Mark I. A1 - Grant, Struan F. A. A1 - St Pourcain, Beate A1 - Timpson, Nicholas J. A1 - Smith, George Davey A1 - Sovio, Ulla A1 - Nalls, Mike A. A1 - Au, Rhoda A1 - Hofman, Albert A1 - Gudnason, Haukur A1 - van der Lugt, Aad A1 - Harris, Tamara B. A1 - Meeks, William M. A1 - Vernooij, Meike W. A1 - van Buchem, Mark A. A1 - Catellier, Diane A1 - Jaddoe, Vincent W. V. A1 - Gudnason, Vilmundur A1 - Windham, B. Gwen A1 - Wolf, Philip A. A1 - van Duijn, Cornelia M. A1 - Mosley, Thomas H. A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Launer, Lenore J. A1 - Breteler, Monique M. B. A1 - DeCarli, Charles A1 - Adair, Linda S. A1 - Ang, Wei A1 - Atalay, Mustafa A1 - vanBeijsterveldt, Toos A1 - Bergen, Nienke A1 - Benke, Kelly A1 - Berry, Diane J. A1 - Coin, Lachlan A1 - Davis, Oliver S. P. A1 - Elliott, Paul A1 - Flexeder, Claudia A1 - Frayling, Tim A1 - Gaillard, Romy A1 - Groen-Blokhuis, Maria A1 - Goh, Liang-Kee A1 - Haworth, Claire M. A. A1 - Hadley, Dexter A1 - Hebebrand, Johannes A1 - Hinney, Anke A1 - Hirschhorn, Joel N. A1 - Holloway, John W. A1 - Holst, Claus A1 - Hottenga, Jouke Jan A1 - Horikoshi, Momoko A1 - Huikari, Ville A1 - Hypponen, Elina A1 - Kilpelainen, Tuomas O. A1 - Kirin, Mirna A1 - Kowgier, Matthew A1 - Lakka, Hanna-Maaria A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lawlor, Debbie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lewin, Alex A1 - Lindgren, Cecilia A1 - Lindi, Virpi A1 - Maggi, Reedik A1 - Marsh, Julie A1 - Middeldorp, Christel A1 - Millwood, Iona A1 - Murray, Jeffrey C. A1 - Nivard, Michel A1 - Nohr, Ellen Aagaard A1 - Ntalla, Ioanna A1 - Oken, Emily A1 - Panoutsopoulou, Kalliope A1 - Pararajasingham, Jennifer A1 - Rodriguez, Alina A1 - Salem, Rany M. A1 - Sebert, Sylvain A1 - Siitonen, Niina A1 - Strachan, David P. A1 - Teo, Yik-Ying A1 - Valcarcel, Beatriz A1 - Willemsen, Gonneke A1 - Zeggini, Eleftheria A1 - Boomsma, Dorret I. A1 - Cooper, Cyrus A1 - Gillman, Matthew A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Lakka, Timo A. A1 - Mohlke, Karen L. A1 - Dedoussis, George V. A1 - Ong, Ken K. A1 - Pearson, Ewan R. A1 - Price, Thomas S. A1 - Power, Chris A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Saw, Seang-Mei A1 - Scherag, Andre A1 - Simell, Olli A1 - Sorensen, Thorkild I. A. A1 - Wilson, James F. T1 - Common variants at 6q22 and 17q21 are associated with intracranial volume JF - Nature genetics N2 - During aging, intracranial volume remains unchanged and represents maximally attained brain size, while various interacting biological phenomena lead to brain volume loss. Consequently, intracranial volume and brain volume in late life reflect different genetic influences. Our genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 8,175 community-dwelling elderly persons did not reveal any associations at genome-wide significance (P < 5 x 10(-8)) for brain volume. In contrast, intracranial volume was significantly associated with two loci: rs4273712 (P = 3.4 x 10(-11)), a known height-associated locus on chromosome 6q22, and rs9915547 (P = 1.5 x 10(-12)), localized to the inversion on chromosome 17q21. We replicated the associations of these loci with intracranial volume in a separate sample of 1,752 elderly persons (P = 1.1 x 10(-3) for 6q22 and 1.2 x 10(-3) for 17q21). Furthermore, we also found suggestive associations of the 17q21 locus with head circumference in 10,768 children (mean age of 14.5 months). Our data identify two loci associated with head size, with the inversion at 17q21 also likely to be involved in attaining maximal brain size. Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.2245 SN - 1061-4036 VL - 44 IS - 5 SP - 539 EP - + PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gonzalez Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Pastor Yabar, A. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Fischer, C. E. A1 - Gömöry, P. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Hoch, S. A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Kneer, F. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco Suarez, D. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Fitting peculiar spectral profiles in He I 10830 angstrom absorption features JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes N2 - The new generation of solar instruments provides better spectral, spatial, and temporal resolution for a better understanding of the physical processes that take place on the Sun. Multiple-component profiles are more commonly observed with these instruments. Particularly, the He i 10830 triplet presents such peculiar spectral profiles, which give information on the velocity and magnetic fine structure of the upper chromosphere. The purpose of this investigation is to describe a technique to efficiently fit the two blended components of the He i 10830 triplet, which are commonly observed when two atmospheric components are located within the same resolution element. The observations used in this study were taken on 2015 April 17 with the very fast spectroscopic mode of the GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) attached to the 1.5-m GREGOR solar telescope, located at the Observatorio del Teide, Tenerife, Spain. We apply a double-Lorentzian fitting technique using Levenberg-Marquardt least-squares minimization. This technique is very simple and much faster than inversion codes. Line-of-sight Doppler velocities can be inferred for a whole map of pixels within just a few minutes. Our results show sub-and supersonic downflow velocities of up to 32 km s(-1) for the fast component in the vicinity of footpoints of filamentary structures. The slow component presents velocities close to rest. (C) 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH& Co. KGaA, Weinheim KW - Sun: chromosphere KW - methods: data analysis KW - techniques: spectroscopic KW - line: profiles Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201512433 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1057 EP - 1063 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Verma, Meetu A1 - Denker, Carsten A1 - Böhm, F. A1 - Balthasar, H. A1 - Fischer, C. E. A1 - Kuckein, Christoph A1 - Gonzalez, N. Bello A1 - Berkefeld, T. A1 - Collados Vera, M. A1 - Diercke, Andrea A1 - Feller, A. A1 - Gonzalez Manrique, Sergio Javier A1 - Hofmann, A. A1 - Lagg, A. A1 - Nicklas, H. A1 - Orozco Suarez, D. A1 - Pator Yabar, A. A1 - Rezaei, R. A1 - Schlichenmaier, R. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Schmidt, W. A1 - Sigwarth, M. A1 - Sobotka, M. A1 - Solanki, S. K. A1 - Soltau, D. A1 - Staude, J. A1 - Strassmeier, Klaus G. A1 - Volkmer, R. A1 - von der Lühe, O. A1 - Waldmann, T. T1 - Flow and magnetic field properties in the trailing sunspots of active region NOAA 12396 JF - Astronomische Nachrichten = Astronomical notes N2 - Improved measurements of the photospheric and chromospheric three-dimensional magnetic and flow fields are crucial for a precise determination of the origin and evolution of active regions. We present an illustrative sample of multi-instrument data acquired during a two-week coordinated observing campaign in August 2015 involving, among others, the GREGOR solar telescope (imaging and near-infrared spectroscopy) and the space missions Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS). The observations focused on the trailing part of active region NOAA 12396 with complex polarity inversion lines and strong intrusions of opposite polarity flux. The GREGOR Infrared Spectrograph (GRIS) provided Stokes IQUV spectral profiles in the photospheric Si i.1082.7 nm line, the chromospheric He I lambda 1083.0 nm triplet, and the photospheric Ca I lambda 1083.9 nm line. Carefully calibrated GRIS scans of the active region provided maps of Doppler velocity and magnetic field at different atmospheric heights. We compare quick-look maps with those obtained with the " Stokes Inversions based on Response functions" (SIR) code, which furnishes deeper insight into the magnetic properties of the region. We find supporting evidence that newly emerging flux and intruding opposite polarity flux are hampering the formation of penumbrae, i.e., a penumbra fully surrounding a sunspot is only expected after cessation of flux emergence in proximity to the sunspots. (C) 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH& Co.KGaA, Weinheim KW - Sun: magnetic fields KW - sunspots KW - methods: data analysis KW - techniques: polarimetric KW - techniques: spectroscopic Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201612447 SN - 0004-6337 SN - 1521-3994 VL - 337 SP - 1090 EP - 1098 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Zhang, Shuhao A1 - Plauth, Max A1 - Eberhardt, Felix A1 - Polze, Andreas A1 - Lehmann, Jens A1 - Sejdiu, Gezim A1 - Jabeen, Hajira A1 - Servadei, Lorenzo A1 - Möstl, Christian A1 - Bär, Florian A1 - Netzeband, André A1 - Schmidt, Rainer A1 - Knigge, Marlene A1 - Hecht, Sonja A1 - Prifti, Loina A1 - Krcmar, Helmut A1 - Sapegin, Andrey A1 - Jaeger, David A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Friedrich, Tobias A1 - Rothenberger, Ralf A1 - Sutton, Andrew M. A1 - Sidorova, Julia A. A1 - Lundberg, Lars A1 - Rosander, Oliver A1 - Sköld, Lars A1 - Di Varano, Igor A1 - van der Walt, Estée A1 - Eloff, Jan H. P. A1 - Fabian, Benjamin A1 - Baumann, Annika A1 - Ermakova, Tatiana A1 - Kelkel, Stefan A1 - Choudhary, Yash A1 - Cooray, Thilini A1 - Rodríguez, Jorge A1 - Medina-Pérez, Miguel Angel A1 - Trejo, Luis A. A1 - Barrera-Animas, Ari Yair A1 - Monroy-Borja, Raúl A1 - López-Cuevas, Armando A1 - Ramírez-Márquez, José Emmanuel A1 - Grohmann, Maria A1 - Niederleithinger, Ernst A1 - Podapati, Sasidhar A1 - Schmidt, Christopher A1 - Huegle, Johannes A1 - de Oliveira, Roberto C. L. A1 - Soares, Fábio Mendes A1 - van Hoorn, André A1 - Neumer, Tamas A1 - Willnecker, Felix A1 - Wilhelm, Mathias A1 - Kuster, Bernhard ED - Meinel, Christoph ED - Polze, Andreas ED - Beins, Karsten ED - Strotmann, Rolf ED - Seibold, Ulrich ED - Rödszus, Kurt ED - Müller, Jürgen T1 - HPI Future SOC Lab – Proceedings 2017 T1 - HPI Future SOC Lab – Proceedings 2017 N2 - The “HPI Future SOC Lab” is a cooperation of the Hasso Plattner Institute (HPI) and industry partners. Its mission is to enable and promote exchange and interaction between the research community and the industry partners. The HPI Future SOC Lab provides researchers with free of charge access to a complete infrastructure of state of the art hard and software. This infrastructure includes components, which might be too expensive for an ordinary research environment, such as servers with up to 64 cores and 2 TB main memory. The offerings address researchers particularly from but not limited to the areas of computer science and business information systems. Main areas of research include cloud computing, parallelization, and In-Memory technologies. This technical report presents results of research projects executed in 2017. Selected projects have presented their results on April 25th and November 15th 2017 at the Future SOC Lab Day events. N2 - Das Future SOC Lab am HPI ist eine Kooperation des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts mit verschiedenen Industriepartnern. Seine Aufgabe ist die Ermöglichung und Förderung des Austausches zwischen Forschungsgemeinschaft und Industrie. Am Lab wird interessierten Wissenschaftlern eine Infrastruktur von neuester Hard- und Software kostenfrei für Forschungszwecke zur Verfügung gestellt. Dazu zählen teilweise noch nicht am Markt verfügbare Technologien, die im normalen Hochschulbereich in der Regel nicht zu finanzieren wären, bspw. Server mit bis zu 64 Cores und 2 TB Hauptspeicher. Diese Angebote richten sich insbesondere an Wissenschaftler in den Gebieten Informatik und Wirtschaftsinformatik. Einige der Schwerpunkte sind Cloud Computing, Parallelisierung und In-Memory Technologien. In diesem Technischen Bericht werden die Ergebnisse der Forschungsprojekte des Jahres 2017 vorgestellt. Ausgewählte Projekte stellten ihre Ergebnisse am 25. April und 15. November 2017 im Rahmen der Future SOC Lab Tag Veranstaltungen vor. T3 - Technische Berichte des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts für Digital Engineering an der Universität Potsdam - 130 KW - Future SOC Lab KW - research projects KW - multicore architectures KW - In-Memory technology KW - cloud computing KW - machine learning KW - artifical intelligence KW - Future SOC Lab KW - Forschungsprojekte KW - Multicore Architekturen KW - In-Memory Technologie KW - Cloud Computing KW - maschinelles Lernen KW - Künstliche Intelligenz Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-433100 SN - 978-3-86956-475-3 SN - 1613-5652 SN - 2191-1665 IS - 130 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Matias-Garcia, Pamela R. A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Coassin, Stefan A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Winkler, Thomas W. A1 - Wanner, Veronika A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Li, Man A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Judy A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S. A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Banas, Bernhard A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Chalmers, John A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - de Borst, Martin H. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Gampawar, Piyush A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Ghanbari, Mohsen A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Holleczek, Bernd A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kraemer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kuehnel, Brigitte A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - O'Donoghue, Michelle L. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Rosenkranz, Alexander R. A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rotter, Jerome A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Schoettker, Ben A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Chaker, Layal A1 - van der Harst, Pim A1 - van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Voelker, Uwe A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - White, Harvey D. A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Woodward, Mark A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Yan A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Pattaro, Cristian A1 - Heid, Iris M. T1 - Meta-analysis uncovers genome-wide significant variants for rapid kidney function decline T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät N2 - Rapid decline of glomerular filtration rate estimated from creatinine (eGFRcrea) is associated with severe clinical endpoints. In contrast to cross-sectionally assessed eGFRcrea, the genetic basis for rapid eGFRcrea decline is largely unknown. To help define this, we meta-analyzed 42 genome-wide association studies from the Chronic Kidney Diseases Genetics Consortium and United Kingdom Biobank to identify genetic loci for rapid eGFRcrea decline. Two definitions of eGFRcrea decline were used: 3 mL/min/1.73m(2)/year or more ("Rapid3"; encompassing 34,874 cases, 107,090 controls) and eGFRcrea decline 25% or more and eGFRcrea under 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) at follow-up among those with eGFRcrea 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) or more at baseline ("CKDi25"; encompassing 19,901 cases, 175,244 controls). Seven independent variants were identified across six loci for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25: consisting of five variants at four loci with genome-wide significance (near UMOD-PDILT (2), PRKAG2, WDR72, OR2S2) and two variants among 265 known eGFRcrea variants (near GATM, LARP4B). All these loci were novel for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25 and our bioinformatic follow-up prioritized variants and genes underneath these loci. The OR2S2 locus is novel for any eGFRcrea trait including interesting candidates. For the five genome-wide significant lead variants, we found supporting effects for annual change in blood urea nitrogen or cystatin-based eGFR, but not for GATM or (LARP4B). Individuals at high compared to those at low genetic risk (8-14 vs. 0-5 adverse alleles) had a 1.20-fold increased risk of acute kidney injury (95% confidence interval 1.08-1.33). Thus, our identified loci for rapid kidney function decline may help prioritize therapeutic targets and identify mechanisms and individuals at risk for sustained deterioration of kidney function. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Reihe der Digital Engineering Fakultät - 19 KW - acute kidney injury KW - end-stage kidney disease KW - genome-wide association KW - study KW - rapid eGFRcrea decline Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-565379 IS - 19 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gorski, Mathias A1 - Jung, Bettina A1 - Li, Yong A1 - Matias-Garcia, Pamela R. A1 - Wuttke, Matthias A1 - Coassin, Stefan A1 - Thio, Chris H. L. A1 - Kleber, Marcus E. A1 - Winkler, Thomas W. A1 - Wanner, Veronika A1 - Chai, Jin-Fang A1 - Chu, Audrey Y. A1 - Cocca, Massimiliano A1 - Feitosa, Mary F. A1 - Ghasemi, Sahar A1 - Hoppmann, Anselm A1 - Horn, Katrin A1 - Li, Man A1 - Nutile, Teresa A1 - Scholz, Markus A1 - Sieber, Karsten B. A1 - Teumer, Alexander A1 - Tin, Adrienne A1 - Wang, Judy A1 - Tayo, Bamidele O. A1 - Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S. A1 - Almgren, Peter A1 - Bakker, Stephan J. L. A1 - Banas, Bernhard A1 - Bansal, Nisha A1 - Biggs, Mary L. A1 - Boerwinkle, Eric A1 - Böttinger, Erwin A1 - Brenner, Hermann A1 - Carroll, Robert J. A1 - Chalmers, John A1 - Chee, Miao-Li A1 - Chee, Miao-Ling A1 - Cheng, Ching-Yu A1 - Coresh, Josef A1 - de Borst, Martin H. A1 - Degenhardt, Frauke A1 - Eckardt, Kai-Uwe A1 - Endlich, Karlhans A1 - Franke, Andre A1 - Freitag-Wolf, Sandra A1 - Gampawar, Piyush A1 - Gansevoort, Ron T. A1 - Ghanbari, Mohsen A1 - Gieger, Christian A1 - Hamet, Pavel A1 - Ho, Kevin A1 - Hofer, Edith A1 - Holleczek, Bernd A1 - Foo, Valencia Hui Xian A1 - Hutri-Kahonen, Nina A1 - Hwang, Shih-Jen A1 - Ikram, M. Arfan A1 - Josyula, Navya Shilpa A1 - Kahonen, Mika A1 - Khor, Chiea-Chuen A1 - Koenig, Wolfgang A1 - Kramer, Holly A1 - Kraemer, Bernhard K. A1 - Kuehnel, Brigitte A1 - Lange, Leslie A. A1 - Lehtimaki, Terho A1 - Lieb, Wolfgang A1 - Loos, Ruth J. F. A1 - Lukas, Mary Ann A1 - Lyytikainen, Leo-Pekka A1 - Meisinger, Christa A1 - Meitinger, Thomas A1 - Melander, Olle A1 - Milaneschi, Yuri A1 - Mishra, Pashupati P. A1 - Mononen, Nina A1 - Mychaleckyj, Josyf C. A1 - Nadkarni, Girish N. A1 - Nauck, Matthias A1 - Nikus, Kjell A1 - Ning, Boting A1 - Nolte, Ilja M. A1 - O'Donoghue, Michelle L. A1 - Orho-Melander, Marju A1 - Pendergrass, Sarah A. A1 - Penninx, Brenda W. J. H. A1 - Preuss, Michael H. A1 - Psaty, Bruce M. A1 - Raffield, Laura M. A1 - Raitakari, Olli T. A1 - Rettig, Rainer A1 - Rheinberger, Myriam A1 - Rice, Kenneth M. A1 - Rosenkranz, Alexander R. A1 - Rossing, Peter A1 - Rotter, Jerome A1 - Sabanayagam, Charumathi A1 - Schmidt, Helena A1 - Schmidt, Reinhold A1 - Schoettker, Ben A1 - Schulz, Christina-Alexandra A1 - Sedaghat, Sanaz A1 - Shaffer, Christian M. A1 - Strauch, Konstantin A1 - Szymczak, Silke A1 - Taylor, Kent D. A1 - Tremblay, Johanne A1 - Chaker, Layal A1 - van der Harst, Pim A1 - van der Most, Peter J. A1 - Verweij, Niek A1 - Voelker, Uwe A1 - Waldenberger, Melanie A1 - Wallentin, Lars A1 - Waterworth, Dawn M. A1 - White, Harvey D. A1 - Wilson, James G. A1 - Wong, Tien-Yin A1 - Woodward, Mark A1 - Yang, Qiong A1 - Yasuda, Masayuki A1 - Yerges-Armstrong, Laura M. A1 - Zhang, Yan A1 - Snieder, Harold A1 - Wanner, Christoph A1 - Boger, Carsten A. A1 - Kottgen, Anna A1 - Kronenberg, Florian A1 - Pattaro, Cristian A1 - Heid, Iris M. T1 - Meta-analysis uncovers genome-wide significant variants for rapid kidney function decline JF - Kidney international : official journal of the International Society of Nephrology N2 - Rapid decline of glomerular filtration rate estimated from creatinine (eGFRcrea) is associated with severe clinical endpoints. In contrast to cross-sectionally assessed eGFRcrea, the genetic basis for rapid eGFRcrea decline is largely unknown. To help define this, we meta-analyzed 42 genome-wide association studies from the Chronic Kidney Diseases Genetics Consortium and United Kingdom Biobank to identify genetic loci for rapid eGFRcrea decline. Two definitions of eGFRcrea decline were used: 3 mL/min/1.73m(2)/year or more ("Rapid3"; encompassing 34,874 cases, 107,090 controls) and eGFRcrea decline 25% or more and eGFRcrea under 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) at follow-up among those with eGFRcrea 60 mL/min/1.73m(2) or more at baseline ("CKDi25"; encompassing 19,901 cases, 175,244 controls). Seven independent variants were identified across six loci for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25: consisting of five variants at four loci with genome-wide significance (near UMOD-PDILT (2), PRKAG2, WDR72, OR2S2) and two variants among 265 known eGFRcrea variants (near GATM, LARP4B). All these loci were novel for Rapid3 and/or CKDi25 and our bioinformatic follow-up prioritized variants and genes underneath these loci. The OR2S2 locus is novel for any eGFRcrea trait including interesting candidates. For the five genome-wide significant lead variants, we found supporting effects for annual change in blood urea nitrogen or cystatin-based eGFR, but not for GATM or (LARP4B). Individuals at high compared to those at low genetic risk (8-14 vs. 0-5 adverse alleles) had a 1.20-fold increased risk of acute kidney injury (95% confidence interval 1.08-1.33). Thus, our identified loci for rapid kidney function decline may help prioritize therapeutic targets and identify mechanisms and individuals at risk for sustained deterioration of kidney function. KW - acute kidney injury KW - end-stage kidney disease KW - genome-wide association KW - study KW - rapid eGFRcrea decline Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.kint.2020.09.030 SN - 0085-2538 SN - 1523-1755 VL - 99 IS - 4 SP - 926 EP - 939 PB - Elsevier CY - New York ER - TY - GEN A1 - Anderson, Christopher J. A1 - Bahnik, Stepan A1 - Barnett-Cowan, Michael A1 - Bosco, Frank A. A1 - Chandler, Jesse A1 - Chartier, Christopher R. A1 - Cheung, Felix A1 - Christopherson, Cody D. A1 - Cordes, Andreas A1 - Cremata, Edward J. A1 - Della Penna, Nicolas A1 - Estel, Vivien A1 - Fedor, Anna A1 - Fitneva, Stanka A. A1 - Frank, Michael C. A1 - Grange, James A. A1 - Hartshorne, Joshua K. A1 - Hasselman, Fred A1 - Henninger, Felix A1 - van der Hulst, Marije A1 - Jonas, Kai J. A1 - Lai, Calvin K. A1 - Levitan, Carmel A. A1 - Miller, Jeremy K. A1 - Moore, Katherine S. A1 - Meixner, Johannes M. A1 - Munafo, Marcus R. A1 - Neijenhuijs, Koen I. A1 - Nilsonne, Gustav A1 - Nosek, Brian A. A1 - Plessow, Franziska A1 - Prenoveau, Jason M. A1 - Ricker, Ashley A. A1 - Schmidt, Kathleen A1 - Spies, Jeffrey R. A1 - Stieger, Stefan A1 - Strohminger, Nina A1 - Sullivan, Gavin B. A1 - van Aert, Robbie C. M. A1 - van Assen, Marcel A. L. M. A1 - Vanpaemel, Wolf A1 - Vianello, Michelangelo A1 - Voracek, Martin A1 - Zuni, Kellylynn T1 - Response to Comment on "Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science" T2 - Science N2 - Gilbert et al. conclude that evidence from the Open Science Collaboration’s Reproducibility Project: Psychology indicates high reproducibility, given the study methodology. Their very optimistic assessment is limited by statistical misconceptions and by causal inferences from selectively interpreted, correlational data. Using the Reproducibility Project: Psychology data, both optimistic and pessimistic conclusions about reproducibility are possible, and neither are yet warranted. Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aad9163 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 351 SP - 1162 EP - 1165 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rusak, James A. A1 - Tanentzap, Andrew J. A1 - Klug, Jennifer L. A1 - Rose, Kevin C. A1 - Hendricks, Susan P. A1 - Jennings, Eleanor A1 - Laas, Alo A1 - Pierson, Donald C. A1 - Ryder, Elizabeth A1 - Smyth, Robyn L. A1 - White, D. S. A1 - Winslow, Luke A. A1 - Adrian, Rita A1 - Arvola, Lauri A1 - de Eyto, Elvira A1 - Feuchtmayr, Heidrun A1 - Honti, Mark A1 - Istvanovics, Vera A1 - Jones, Ian D. A1 - McBride, Chris G. A1 - Schmidt, Silke Regina A1 - Seekell, David A1 - Staehr, Peter A. A1 - Guangwei, Zhu T1 - Wind and trophic status explain within and among-lake variability of algal biomass JF - Limnology and oceanography letters / ASLO, Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography N2 - Phytoplankton biomass and production regulates key aspects of freshwater ecosystems yet its variability and subsequent predictability is poorly understood. We estimated within-lake variation in biomass using high-frequency chlorophyll fluorescence data from 18 globally distributed lakes. We tested how variation in fluorescence at monthly, daily, and hourly scales was related to high-frequency variability of wind, water temperature, and radiation within lakes as well as productivity and physical attributes among lakes. Within lakes, monthly variation dominated, but combined daily and hourly variation were equivalent to that expressed monthly. Among lakes, biomass variability increased with trophic status while, within-lake biomass variation increased with increasing variability in wind speed. Our results highlight the benefits of high-frequency chlorophyll monitoring and suggest that predicted changes associated with climate, as well as ongoing cultural eutrophication, are likely to substantially increase the temporal variability of algal biomass and thus the predictability of the services it provides. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/lol2.10093 SN - 2378-2242 VL - 3 IS - 6 SP - 409 EP - 418 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rader, Oliver A1 - Fauth, K. A1 - Gould, C. A1 - Ruster, C. A1 - Schott, G. M. A1 - Schmidt, G. A1 - Brunner, K. A1 - Molenkamp, Laurens W. A1 - Schutz, G. A1 - Kronast, F. A1 - Durr, H. A. A1 - Eberhardt, W. A1 - Gudat, Wolfgang T1 - Identification of extrinsic Mn contributions in Ga1-xMnxAs by field-dependent magnetic circular X-ray dichroism N2 - We combine sensitivity to atomic number, chemical shifts, probing depth, and magnetic order in a field- dependent magnetic circular X-ray dichroism study at the Mn L-edge of the diluted ferromagnetic semiconductor Ga1-xMnxAs and observe different Mn constituents: ferromagnetic Mn with an n(d) > 5 lineshape and paramagnetic Mn with distinct n(d) = 5 lineshape. The paramagnetic Mn is assigned to interstitials with surface segregation tendency. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved Y1 - 2005 SN - 0368-2048 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Srama, Ralf A1 - Krueger, H. A1 - Yamaguchi, T. A1 - Stephan, T. A1 - Burchell, M. A1 - Kearsley, A. T. A1 - Sterken, V. A1 - Postberg, F. A1 - Kempf, S. A1 - Grün, Eberhard A1 - Altobelli, Nicolas A1 - Ehrenfreund, P. A1 - Dikarev, V. A1 - Horanyi, M. A1 - Sternovsky, Zoltan A1 - Carpenter, J. D. A1 - Westphal, A. A1 - Gainsforth, Z. A1 - Krabbe, A. A1 - Agarwal, Jessica A1 - Yano, H. A1 - Blum, J. A1 - Henkel, H. A1 - Hillier, J. A1 - Hoppe, P. A1 - Trieloff, M. A1 - Hsu, S. A1 - Mocker, A. A1 - Fiege, K. A1 - Green, S. F. A1 - Bischoff, A. A1 - Esposito, F. A1 - Laufer, R. A1 - Hyde, T. W. A1 - Herdrich, G. A1 - Fasoulas, S. A1 - Jaeckel, A. A1 - Jones, G. A1 - Jenniskens, P. A1 - Khalisi, E. A1 - Moragas-Klostermeyer, Georg A1 - Spahn, Frank A1 - Keller, H. U. A1 - Frisch, P. A1 - Levasseur-Regourd, A. C. A1 - Pailer, N. A1 - Altwegg, K. A1 - Engrand, C. A1 - Auer, S. A1 - Silen, J. A1 - Sasaki, S. A1 - Kobayashi, M. A1 - Schmidt, J. A1 - Kissel, J. A1 - Marty, B. A1 - Michel, P. A1 - Palumbo, P. A1 - Vaisberg, O. A1 - Baggaley, J. A1 - Rotundi, A. A1 - Roeser, H. P. T1 - SARIM PLUS-sample return of comet 67P/CG and of interstellar matter JF - EXPERIMENTAL ASTRONOMY N2 - The Stardust mission returned cometary, interplanetary and (probably) interstellar dust in 2006 to Earth that have been analysed in Earth laboratories worldwide. Results of this mission have changed our view and knowledge on the early solar nebula. The Rosetta mission is on its way to land on comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko and will investigate for the first time in great detail the comet nucleus and its environment starting in 2014. Additional astronomy and planetary space missions will further contribute to our understanding of dust generation, evolution and destruction in interstellar and interplanetary space and provide constraints on solar system formation and processes that led to the origin of life on Earth. One of these missions, SARIM-PLUS, will provide a unique perspective by measuring interplanetary and interstellar dust with high accuracy and sensitivity in our inner solar system between 1 and 2 AU. SARIM-PLUS employs latest in-situ techniques for a full characterisation of individual micrometeoroids (flux, mass, charge, trajectory, composition()) and collects and returns these samples to Earth for a detailed analysis. The opportunity to visit again the target comet of the Rosetta mission 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimeenternko, and to investigate its dusty environment six years after Rosetta with complementary methods is unique and strongly enhances and supports the scientific exploration of this target and the entire Rosetta mission. Launch opportunities are in 2020 with a backup window starting early 2026. The comet encounter occurs in September 2021 and the reentry takes place in early 2024. An encounter speed of 6 km/s ensures comparable results to the Stardust mission. KW - Interstellar dust KW - Cometary dust KW - Churyumov Gerasimenko KW - Interplanetary dust KW - IMF KW - Cosmic vision KW - Sample return KW - Dust collector KW - Mass spectrometry Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10686-011-9285-7 SN - 0922-6435 SN - 1572-9508 VL - 33 IS - 2-3 SP - 723 EP - 751 PB - SPRINGER CY - DORDRECHT ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Robert W. A1 - Kundic, T. A1 - Pen, U.-L. A1 - Wambsganß, Joachim A1 - Bergeron, L. E. A1 - Colley, W. A1 - Corson, C. A1 - Hastings, N. G. A1 - Hoyes, T. A1 - Long, D. C. A1 - Loomis, K. A. A1 - Malhotra, S. A1 - Rhoads, J. E. A1 - Stanek, K. Z. T1 - Optical monitoring of the gravitationally lensed quasar Q2237+0305 from APO between June 1995 and January 1998 N2 - We present a data set of images of the gravitationally lensed quasar Q2237+0305, that was obtained at the Apache Point Observatory (APO) between June 1995 and January 1998. Although the images were taken under variable, often poor seeing conditions and with coarse pixel sampling, photometry is possible for the two brighter quasar images A and B with the help of exact quasar image positions from HST observations. We obtain a light curve with 73 data points for each of the images A and B. There is evidence for a long (ga 100 day) brightness peak in image A in 1996 with an amplitude of about 0.4 to 0.5 mag (relative to 1995), which indicates that microlensing has been taking place in the lensing galaxy. Image B does not vary much over the course of the observation period. The long, smooth variation of the light curve is similar to the results from the OGLE monitoring of the system (Wozniak et al. cite{Wozniak00}). Based on observations obtained with the Apache Point Observatory 3.5-meter telescope, which is owned and operated by the Astrophysical Research Consortium. Y1 - 2002 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - van Rees, Charles B. A1 - Waylen, Kerry A. A1 - Schmidt-Kloiber, Astrid A1 - Thackeray, Stephen J. A1 - Kalinkat, Gregor A1 - Martens, Koen A1 - Domisch, Sami A1 - Lillebo, Ana A1 - Hermoso, Virgilio A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Schinegger, Rafaela A1 - Decleer, Kris A1 - Adriaens, Tim A1 - Denys, Luc A1 - Jaric, Ivan A1 - Janse, Jan H. A1 - Monaghan, Michael T. A1 - De Wever, Aaike A1 - Geijzendorffer, Ilse A1 - Adamescu, Mihai C. A1 - Jähnig, Sonja C. T1 - Safeguarding freshwater life beyond 2020 BT - recommendations for the new global biodiversity framework from the European experience JF - Conservation letters N2 - Plans are currently being drafted for the next decade of action on biodiversity-both the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and Biodiversity Strategy of the European Union (EU). Freshwater biodiversity is disproportionately threatened and underprioritized relative to the marine and terrestrial biota, despite supporting a richness of species and ecosystems with their own intrinsic value and providing multiple essential ecosystem services. Future policies and strategies must have a greater focus on the unique ecology of freshwater life and its multiple threats, and now is a critical time to reflect on how this may be achieved. We identify priority topics including environmental flows, water quality, invasive species, integrated water resources management, strategic conservation planning, and emerging technologies for freshwater ecosystem monitoring. We synthesize these topics with decades of first-hand experience and recent literature into 14 special recommendations for global freshwater biodiversity conservation based on the successes and setbacks of European policy, management, and research. Applying and following these recommendations will inform and enhance the ability of global and European post-2020 biodiversity agreements to halt and reverse the rapid global decline of freshwater biodiversity. KW - climate change KW - conservation KW - ecosystem services KW - rivers KW - sustainable KW - development goals KW - water resources KW - wetlands Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12771 SN - 1755-263X VL - 14 IS - 1 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Darwall, William A1 - Bremerich, Vanessa A1 - De Wever, Aaike A1 - Dell, Anthony I. A1 - Freyhof, Joerg A1 - Gessner, Mark O. A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Harrison, Ian A1 - Irvine, Ken A1 - Jähnig, Sonja C. A1 - Jeschke, Jonathan M. A1 - Lee, Jessica J. A1 - Lu, Cai A1 - Lewandowska, Aleksandra M. A1 - Monaghan, Michael T. A1 - Nejstgaard, Jens C. A1 - Patricio, Harmony A1 - Schmidt-Kloiber, Astrid A1 - Stuart, Simon N. A1 - Thieme, Michele A1 - Tockner, Klement A1 - Turak, Eren A1 - Weyl, Olaf T1 - The alliance for freshwater life BT - a global call to unite efforts for freshwater biodiversity science and conservation JF - Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems N2 - 1. Global pressures on freshwater ecosystems are high and rising. Viewed primarily as a resource for humans, current practices of water use have led to catastrophic declines in freshwater species and the degradation of freshwater ecosystems, including their genetic and functional diversity. Approximately three-quarters of the world's inland wetlands have been lost, one-third of the 28 000 freshwater species assessed for the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List are threatened with extinction, and freshwater vertebrate populations are undergoing declines that are more rapid than those of terrestrial and marine species. This global loss continues unchecked, despite the importance of freshwater ecosystems as a source of clean water, food, livelihoods, recreation, and inspiration. 2. The causes of these declines include hydrological alterations, habitat degradation and loss, overexploitation, invasive species, pollution, and the multiple impacts of climate change. Although there are policy initiatives that aim to protect freshwater life, these are rarely implemented with sufficient conviction and enforcement. Policies that focus on the development and management of fresh waters as a resource for people almost universally neglect the biodiversity that they contain. 3. Here we introduce the Alliance for Freshwater Life, a global initiative, uniting specialists in research, data synthesis, conservation, education and outreach, and policymaking. This expert network aims to provide the critical mass required for the effective representation of freshwater biodiversity at policy meetings, to develop solutions balancing the needs of development and conservation, and to better convey the important role freshwater ecosystems play in human well-being. Through this united effort we hope to reverse this tide of loss and decline in freshwater biodiversity. We introduce several short- and medium-term actions as examples for making positive change, and invite individuals, organizations, authorities, and governments to join the Alliance for Freshwater Life. KW - biodiversity KW - conservation evaluation KW - endangered species KW - fish KW - invertebrates KW - macrophytes Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.2958 SN - 1052-7613 SN - 1099-0755 VL - 28 IS - 4 SP - 1015 EP - 1022 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Trinh, Christopher Q. A1 - Ellis, Simon C. A1 - Bland-Hawthorn, Joss A1 - Lawrence, Jon S. A1 - Horton, Anthony J. A1 - Leon-Saval, Sergio G. A1 - Shortridge, Keith A1 - Bryant, Julia A1 - Case, Scott A1 - Colless, Matthew A1 - Couch, Warrick A1 - Freeman, Kenneth A1 - Löhmannsröben, Hans-Gerd A1 - Gers, Luke A1 - Glazebrook, Karl A1 - Haynes, Roger A1 - Lee, Steve A1 - O'Byrne, John A1 - Miziarski, Stan A1 - Roth, Martin M. A1 - Schmidt, Brian A1 - Tinney, Christopher G. A1 - Zheng, Jessica T1 - Gnosis - the first instrument to use fiber bragg gratings for OH suppression JF - The astronomical journal N2 - The near-infrared is an important part of the spectrum in astronomy, especially in cosmology because the light from objects in the early universe is redshifted to these wavelengths. However, deep near-infrared observations are extremely difficult to make from ground-based telescopes due to the bright background from the atmosphere. Nearly all of this background comes from the bright and narrow emission lines of atmospheric hydroxyl (OH) molecules. The atmospheric background cannot be easily removed from data because the brightness fluctuates unpredictably on short timescales. The sensitivity of ground-based optical astronomy far exceeds that of near-infrared astronomy because of this long-standing problem. GNOSIS is a prototype astrophotonic instrument that utilizes "OH suppression fibers" consisting of fiber Bragg gratings and photonic lanterns to suppress the 103 brightest atmospheric emission doublets between 1.47 and 1.7 mu m. GNOSIS was commissioned at the 3.9 m Anglo-Australian Telescope with the IRIS2 spectrograph to demonstrate the potential of OH suppression fibers, but may be potentially used with any telescope and spectrograph combination. Unlike previous atmospheric suppression techniques GNOSIS suppresses the lines before dispersion and in a manner that depends purely on wavelength. We present the instrument design and report the results of laboratory and on-sky tests from commissioning. While these tests demonstrated high throughput (approximate to 60%) and excellent suppression of the skylines by the OH suppression fibers, surprisingly GNOSIS produced no significant reduction in the interline background and the sensitivity of GNOSIS+IRIS2 is about the same as IRIS2. It is unclear whether the lack of reduction in the interline background is due to physical sources or systematic errors as the observations are detector noise dominated. OH suppression fibers could potentially impact ground-based astronomy at the level of adaptive optics or greater. However, until a clear reduction in the interline background and the corresponding increasing in sensitivity is demonstrated optimized OH suppression fibers paired with a fiber-fed spectrograph will at least provide a real benefit at low resolving powers. KW - atmospheric effects KW - infrared: diffuse background KW - instrumentation: miscellaneous Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/145/2/51 SN - 0004-6256 VL - 145 IS - 2 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wilke, Max A1 - Farges, Francois A1 - Partzsch, G. M. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Behrens, Harald T1 - Speciation of Fe in silicate glasses and melts by in-situ XANES spectroscopy Y1 - 2007 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Viana-Wackermann, Paula C. A1 - Furtado, Erikson F. A1 - Esser, Günter A1 - Schmidt, Martin H. A1 - Laucht, Manfred T1 - Lower P300 amplitude in eight-year-old offspring of alcoholic fathers with a delinquent history N2 - The aim of the present study was to investigate the P300 amplitude as a possible vulnerability marker in children of alcoholic (COA) fathers with and without paternal delinquency. Event-related potentials (ERPs) of 122 children aged 8 years (63 boys, 59 girls) were compared depending on father's alcoholism subtype: 30 COAs without paternal delinquency, 10 COAs with paternal delinquency, and 82 children of non-alcoholic and non-delinquent fathers. ERPs were recorded from Fz, Cz, and Pz, using an auditory oddball paradigm. Sinus tones of 60 dB HL were presented binaurally at 1,000 Hz (standard stimulus) and 2,000 Hz (target stimulus), at a relative frequency ratio of 80:20. Two trial blocks of 250 stimuli each were collected. Results indicated that only COAs with paternal delinquency displayed significant differences from the control group, characterized by reduced P300 amplitude at frontal site and in the second trial block. Thus, the combination of fathers' alcoholism and delinquency was more likely to relate to attenuated P300 amplitude in the offspring than paternal alcoholism alone. Our results suggest that both alcoholic and delinquent family history appear to play a role in P300 amplitude reduction in the offspring. Y1 - 2006 UR - http://www.springerlink.com/content/101492 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-006-0709-8 SN - 0940-1334 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wilke, Max A1 - Partzsch, G. M. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Farges, Francois T1 - In-situ study of the iron species in silicate melts Y1 - 2004 SN - 0016-7037 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Allen, S. W. A1 - Schmidt, Robert W. A1 - Ebeling, H. A1 - Fabian, A. C. A1 - van Speybroeck, L. T1 - Constraints on dark energy from Chandra observations of the largest relaxed galaxy clusters N2 - We present constraints on the mean dark energy density, Omega(X) and dark energy equation of state parameter, w(X), based on Chandra measurements of the X-ray gas mass fraction in 26 X-ray luminous, dynamically relaxed galaxy clusters spanning the redshift range 0.07 < z < 0.9. Under the assumption that the X-ray gas mass fraction measured within r(2500) is constant with redshift and using only weak priors on the Hubble constant and mean baryon density of the Universe, we obtain a clear detection of the effects of dark energy on the distances to the clusters, confirming (at comparable significance) previous results from Type la supernovae studies. For a standard Lambda cold dark matter (CDM) cosmology with the curvature Omega(K) included as a free parameter, we find Omega(Lambda) = 0.94(-0.23)(+0.21) (68 per cent confidence limits). We also examine extended XCDM dark energy models. Combining the Chandra data with independent constraints from cosmic microwave background experiments, we find Omega(X) = 0.75 +/- 0.04, Omega(m) = 0.26(- 0.04)(+0.06) and w(X) =-1.26 +/- 0.24. Imposing the prior constraint w(X) > -1, the same data require w(X) < -0.7 at 95 per cent confidence. Similar results on the mean matter density and dark energy equation of state parameter, &UOmega;(m) = 0.24 ± 0.04 and w(X) 1.20(-0.28)(+0.24), are obtained by replacing the cosmic microwave background data with standard priors on the Hubble constant and mean baryon density and assuming a flat geometry Y1 - 2004 SN - 0035-8711 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Columnar liquid crystalline phases through hydrogen bonding and nanoscale segregation N2 - Two columnar phases forming 2,4,6-triarylamino-1,3,5-triazines have been investigated in binary mixtures with calamitic and non-liquid crystalline benzoic acids carrying one or two alkoxy chains at the aromatic core. The triazines form hydrogen bonded aggregates with the complementary acids. Each investigated equimolar mixture exhibits a columnar mesophase due to segregation of the H-bonded polar core region from the lipophilic aliphatic molecular segments. The cross sectional shape of cylindrical aggregates and, therefore, the two-dimensional lattice symmetries, hexagonal or rectangular, are defined by the number of alkoxy chains of the benzoic acid component Y1 - 2004 SN - 0959-9428 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Nordsieck, A. A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Frese, T. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Smectic and columnar liquid crystalline phases through charge-transfer interactions N2 - New heterocyclic electron donors based on. a 1,3,5-triazine nucleus are presented. Three phenyl rings are grafted to the triazine core either via secondary amino groups or by a direct C,C-linkage and a specific number of decyloxy chains is attached to the molecular periphery. The compounds are non-liquid crystalline in their pure states. Lamellar or columnar mesophases are induced by attractive interactions with electron acceptors Y1 - 2004 SN - 1058-725X ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kress, H. A1 - Jarrin, A. A1 - Thuroff, E. A1 - Saunders, R. A1 - Weise, C. A1 - Schmidt am Busch, Marcel A1 - Knapp, E. W. A1 - Wedde, M. A1 - Vilcinskas, Andreas T1 - A Kunitz type protease inhibitor related protein is synthesized in Drosophila prepupal salivary glands and released into the moulting fluid during pupation N2 - From the Drosophila virilis late puff region 31C, we microcloned two neighbouring genes, Kil-1 and Kil-2, that encode putative Kunitz serine protease inhibitor like proteins. The Kil-1 gene is expressed exclusively in prepupal salivary glands. Using a size mutant of the KIL-1 protein and MALDI-TOF analysis, we demonstrate that during pupation this protein is released from the prepupal salivary glands into the pupation fluid covering the surface of the pupa. 3-D- structure predictions are consistent with the known crystal structure of the human Kunitz type protease inhibitor 2KNT. This is the first experimental proof for the extra-corporal presence of a distinct Drosophila prepupal salivary gland protein. Possible functions of KIL-1 in the context of the control of proteolytic activities in the pupation fluid are discussed. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved Y1 - 2004 SN - 0965-1748 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schmidt, Robert W. A1 - Allen, S. W. A1 - Fabian, A. C. T1 - An improved approach to measuring H-0 using X-ray and SZ observations of galaxy clusters N2 - We present an improved method for predicting the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect in galaxy clusters from spatially resolved, spectroscopic X-ray data. Using the deprojected electron density and temperature profiles measured within a fraction of the virial radius, and assuming a Navarro-Frenk-White mass model, we show how the pressure profile of the X-ray gas can be extrapolated to large radii, allowing the Comptonization parameter profile for the cluster to be predicted precisely. We apply our method to Chandra observations of three X-ray-luminous, dynamically relaxed clusters with published SZ data: RX J1347.5-1145, Abell 1835 and Abell 478. Combining the predicted and observed SZ signals, we determine improved estimates for the Hubble constant from each cluster and obtain a weighted mean of H (0) = 69 +/- 8 km s(-1) Mpc(-1) for a cosmology with Omega(m) = 0.3 and Omega(Lambda) = 0.7. This result is in good agreement with independent findings from the Hubble Key Project and the combination of cosmic microwave background and galaxy cluster data Y1 - 2004 SN - 0035-8711 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Altmann, Thomas A1 - Törjek, Otto A1 - Berger, Dieter A1 - Meyer, Rhonda C. A1 - Müssig, Carsten A1 - Schmidt, K. J. A1 - Sorensen, T. R. A1 - Weisshaar, Bernd A1 - Olds-Mitchell, T. T1 - Establishment of a high-efficiency SNP-based framework marker set for Arabidopsis Y1 - 2003 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sirbescu, Mona-Liza C. A1 - Schmidt, Christian A1 - Veksler, Ilya V. A1 - Whittington, Alan G. A1 - Wilke, Max T1 - Experimental crystallization of undercooled felsic liquids BT - generation of pegmatitic texture JF - Journal of petrology N2 - The crystallization kinetics of silicate liquids were studied experimentally in the system haplogranite-B-Li-H2O, at variable degrees of undercooling and variable water concentration. We investigated the kinetics of nucleation and crystallization of unseeded synthetic hydrous haplogranite with 1 wt % Li2O + 2 center dot 3 wt % B2O3 added (composition C1) and 2 wt % Li2O + 4 center dot 6 wt % B2O3 added (composition C2). Compositions C1 and C2 are simplified representative bulk compositions of Li-rich pegmatites and their highly differentiated cores, respectively. Starting water contents varied between 3 and 9 wt %. With few exceptions, the system remained water-undersaturated. About 86 isothermal runs of 1-60 days duration, grouped in 25 time series of constant temperature and initial H2O content, were carried out at temperatures from 400 to 700A degrees C at 300 MPa, corresponding to variable degrees of undercooling between the liquidus and glass transition. Viscosity measurements indicate that the glass transition for both compositions is below 400A degrees C for 3 wt % water and below 300A degrees C for 6 center dot 5 wt % water. The melts remained virtually crystal free at 400A degrees C, about 100A degrees C and 120A degrees C above the glass transition for compositions C1 and C2, respectively, in experiments up to 30 days long. This result is consistent with the existence of low-temperature, undercooled melts in the crust. At lower values of undercooling the runs crystallized partially, up to about 70% volume fraction. Undercooling and the amount of water are the main factors controlling nucleation and growth rates, and therefore textures. Minerals nucleate and grow sequentially according to mineral-specific nucleation delays. The mineral assemblage started with Li-Al stuffed quartz (in C1) and virgilite (in C2), solid-solutions between quartz and gamma-spodumene. The quartz-like phases were typically followed by spherulitic alkali feldspar-quartz intergrowths, euhedral petalite, and fine-grained muscovite. Nearly pure quartz formed as rims and replacement of metastable virgilite and stuffed quartz, in particular at the boron- and water-rich crystallization front of large feldspar or petalite. With the exception of muscovite, all minerals nucleated heterogeneously, on the capsule wall or on pre-existing minerals, and grew inwards, towards the capsule center. Experimental textures resembled the textures of zoned pegmatites, including skeletal, graphic, unidirectional, radiating, spherulitic, massive, and replacement textures. In some cases, when fluid saturation was reached, miarolitic cavities developed containing euhedral crystals. Although unidirectional growth rates appeared to slow down in time, volumetric rates for stable graphic alkali-feldspar quartz intergrowths and petalite remained constant for up to 60 days and similar to 70% crystallization. Metastable stuffed quartz and virgilite diminished in their growth rates in runs of 30 days or longer, were resorbed in the melt, and were partially replaced by second-generation quartz. Unobstructed, self-sustained crystal growth in conditions of very low nucleation density appears to be the dominant mechanism to form giant pegmatitic crystals, although experimental growth rates are much slower than predicted in nature based on conductive-cooling models. KW - experimental petrology KW - lithium pegmatites KW - igneous texture KW - viscosity KW - crystal nucleation KW - crystal growth rate Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egx027 SN - 0022-3530 SN - 1460-2415 VL - 58 IS - 3 SP - 539 EP - 568 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Nguyen, Hiep N. A1 - Lee, Hyeunjoo A1 - Audörsch, Stephan A1 - Reznichenko, Alexander L. A1 - Nawara-Hultzsch, Agnieszka J. A1 - Schmidt, Bernd A1 - Hultzsch, Kai C. T1 - Asymmetric Intra- and Intermolecular Hydroamination Catalyzed by 3,3′-Bis(trisarylsilyl)- and 3,3′-Bis(arylalkylsilyl)-Substituted Binaphtholate Rare-Earth-Metal Complexes JF - Organometallics N2 - The series of novel 3,3′-bis(trisarylsilyl)- and 3,3′-bis(arylalkylsilyl)-substituted binaphtholate rare-earth-metal complexes 2a–i (SiR3 = Si(o-biphenylene)Ph (a), SiCyPh2 (b), Si-t-BuPh2 (c), Si(i-Pr)3 (d), SiCy2Ph (e), Si(2-tolyl)Ph2 (f), Si(4-t-Bu-C6H4)3 (g), Si(4-MeO-C6H4)Ph2 (h), SiBnPh2 (i)) have been prepared via arene elimination from [Ln(o-C6H4CH2NMe2)3] (Ln = Y, Lu) and the corresponding 3,3′-bis(silyl)-substituted binaphthol. The complexes exhibit high catalytic activity in the hydroamination/cyclization of aminoalkenes, with activities exceeding 1000 h–1 for (R)-2f-Ln, (R)-2g-Ln, and (R)-2h-Ln in the cyclization of 2,2-diphenylpent-4-enylamine (3a) at 25 °C, while the rigid dibenzosilole-substituted complexes (R)-2a-Ln and the triisopropylsilyl-substituted complexes (R)-2d-Ln exhibited the lowest activity in the range of 150–270 h–1. Catalysts (R)-2b-Lu, (R)-2c-Lu, (R)-2f-Lu, and (R)-2i-Lu provide the highest selectivities for the majority of the substrates, while the yttrium congeners are usually less selective. The highest enantioselectivities of 96% ee were observed using (R)-2a-Lu and (R)-2c-Lu in the cyclization of (4E)-2,2,5-triphenylpent-4-enylamine (9). The reactions show apparently zero-order rate dependence on substrate concentration and first-order rate dependence on catalyst concentration, with some reactions exhibiting a slightly accelerated rate at high conversion due to a shift in the equilibrium between a less active, higher coordinate catalyst species in favor of a more active, lower coordinate species as a result of weaker binding of the hydroamination product in comparison to the aminoalkene substrate. The shift in equilibrium from the higher to the lower coordinate species is also entropically favored at elevated temperatures, which results in an unusual increase in selectivity in the cyclization of 2,2-dimethylpent-4-enylamine (3d), presumably due to a higher selectivity of the lower coordinate catalyst species. All binaphtholate yttrium complexes, except (R)-2a-Y, are catalytically active in the intermolecular hydroamination of benzylamines with terminal alkenes. The highest selectivity of 66% ee was observed for the reaction of benzylamine with 4-phenyl-1-butene using (R)-2h-Y at 110 °C. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.8b00510 SN - 0276-7333 SN - 1520-6041 VL - 37 IS - 23 SP - 4358 EP - 4379 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meyer, Rhonda C. A1 - Witucka-Wall, Hanna A1 - Becher, Martina A1 - Blacha, Anna Maria A1 - Boudichevskaia, Anastassia A1 - Dörmann, Peter A1 - Fiehn, Oliver A1 - Friedel, Svetlana A1 - von Korff, Maria A1 - Lisec, Jan A1 - Melzer, Michael A1 - Repsilber, Dirk A1 - Schmidt, Renate A1 - Scholz, Matthias A1 - Selbig, Joachim A1 - Willmitzer, Lothar A1 - Altmann, Thomas T1 - Heterosis manifestation during early Arabidopsis seedling development is characterized by intermediate gene expression and enhanced metabolic activity in the hybrids JF - The plant journal N2 - Heterosis-associated cellular and molecular processes were analyzed in seeds and seedlings of Arabidopsis thaliana accessions Col-0 and C24 and their heterotic hybrids. Microscopic examination revealed no advantages in terms of hybrid mature embryo organ sizes or cell numbers. Increased cotyledon sizes were detectable 4 days after sowing. Growth heterosis results from elevated cell sizes and numbers, and is well established at 10 days after sowing. The relative growth rates of hybrid seedlings were most enhanced between 3 and 4 days after sowing. Global metabolite profiling and targeted fatty acid analysis revealed maternal inheritance patterns for a large proportion of metabolites in the very early stages. During developmental progression, the distribution shifts to dominant, intermediate and heterotic patterns, with most changes occurring between 4 and 6 days after sowing. The highest incidence of heterotic patterns coincides with establishment of size differences at 4 days after sowing. In contrast, overall transcript patterns at 4, 6 and 10 days after sowing are characterized by intermediate to dominant patterns, with parental transcript levels showing the largest differences. Overall, the results suggest that, during early developmental stages, intermediate gene expression and higher metabolic activity in the hybrids compared to the parents lead to better resource efficiency, and therefore enhanced performance in the hybrids. KW - heterosis KW - seedlings KW - metabolite profiling KW - transcript profiling KW - morphological analysis KW - Arabidopsis thaliana KW - biomass Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05021.x SN - 0960-7412 VL - 71 IS - 4 SP - 669 EP - 683 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Mahlstedt, S. A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Busch, P. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Stracke, A. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Mesomorphic donor-acceptor twin molecules with covalently linked sheet-like pentaalkyne and nitrofluorenone subunits Y1 - 1998 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Liquid crystalline 1,3,5-triazines incorporating rod-like azobenzene sub-units Y1 - 1998 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Disc-shaped mesogens based on 1,3,5-triazines : variation and induction of columnar mesophases through complementary intermolecular interactions Y1 - 1996 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Festag, R. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Amphotropic oligomeric 1,3,5-triazines containing disc-shaped pentaalkyne and triphenylene side groups Y1 - 1996 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Goldmann, Daniela A1 - Dietel, Reinhard A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Sheet-shaped mesogens based on 1,3,5-Triazines : variation of columnar mesophases through intermolecular hydrogen bonding Y1 - 1998 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Festag, R. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Tsukruk, V. V. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Interfacial behaviour and thermal properties of triazine modified triphenylene oligomers Y1 - 1995 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tiscareno, Matthew S. A1 - Mitchell, Colin J. A1 - Murray, Carl D. A1 - Di Nino, Daiana A1 - Hedman, Matthew M. A1 - Schmidt, Jürgen A1 - Burns, Joseph A. A1 - Cuzzi, Jeffrey N. A1 - Porco, Carolyn C. A1 - Beurle, Kevin A1 - Evans, Michael W. T1 - Observations of Ejecta clouds produced by impacts onto Saturn's rings JF - Science N2 - We report observations of dusty clouds in Saturn's rings, which we interpret as resulting from impacts onto the rings that occurred between 1 and 50 hours before the clouds were observed. The largest of these clouds was observed twice; its brightness and cant angle evolved in a manner consistent with this hypothesis. Several arguments suggest that these clouds cannot be due to the primary impact of one solid meteoroid onto the rings, but rather are due to the impact of a compact stream of Saturn-orbiting material derived from previous breakup of a meteoroid. The responsible interplanetary meteoroids were initially between 1 centimeter and several meters in size, and their influx rate is consistent with the sparse prior knowledge of smaller meteoroids in the outer solar system. Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1233524 SN - 0036-8075 VL - 340 IS - 6131 SP - 460 EP - 464 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Festag, R. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz A1 - Janietz, Dietmar T1 - Structure and dynamics of new triazine based polymers with discotic side groups Y1 - 1995 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Festag, R. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Supramolecular assemblies of new amphotropic oligomers with disc-shaped side groups Y1 - 1995 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cuzzi, Jeff N. A1 - Burns, Joseph A. A1 - Charnoz, Sébastien A1 - Clark, Roger N. A1 - Colwell, Josh E. A1 - Dones, Luke A1 - Esposito, Larry W. A1 - Filacchione, Gianrico A1 - French, Richard G. A1 - Hedman, Matthew M. A1 - Kempf, Sascha A1 - Marouf, Essam A. A1 - Murray, Carl D. A1 - Nicholson, Phillip D. A1 - Porco, Carolyn C. A1 - Schmidt, Jürgen A1 - Showalter, Mark R. A1 - Spilker, Linda J. A1 - Spitale, Joseph N. A1 - Srama, Ralf A1 - Sremcević, Miodrag A1 - Tiscareno, Matthew Steven A1 - Weiss, John T1 - An evolving view of Saturn's dynamic rings N2 - We review our understanding of Saturn's rings after nearly 6 years of observations by the Cassini spacecraft. Saturn's rings are composed mostly of water ice but also contain an undetermined reddish contaminant. The rings exhibit a range of structure across many spatial scales; some of this involves the interplay of the fluid nature and the self-gravity of innumerable orbiting centimeter- to meter-sized particles, and the effects of several peripheral and embedded moonlets, but much remains unexplained. A few aspects of ring structure change on time scales as short as days. It remains unclear whether the vigorous evolutionary processes to which the rings are subject imply a much younger age than that of the solar system. Processes on view at Saturn have parallels in circumstellar disks. Y1 - 2010 UR - http://www.sciencemag.org/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1179118 SN - 0036-8075 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Könnecke, Rene A1 - Follath, R. A1 - Pontius, N. A1 - Schlappa, J. A1 - Eggenstein, F. A1 - Zeschke, T. A1 - Bischoff, P. A1 - Schmidt, J. -S. A1 - Noll, T. A1 - Trabant, C. A1 - Schreck, S. A1 - Wernet, Ph. A1 - Eisebitt, S. A1 - Senf, F. A1 - Schuessler-Langeheine, Christian A1 - Erko, A. A1 - Föhlisch, Alexander T1 - The confocal plane grating spectrometer at BESSY II JF - Journal of electron spectroscopy and related phenomena : the international journal on theoretical and experimental aspects of electron spectroscopy N2 - At BESSY II a confocal plane grating spectrometer for resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) is currently under commissioning. The new endstation operates with a source size of 4 x 1 mu m(2) provided by its dedicated beamline. The RIXS-spectrometer covers an energy range from 50 eV to 1000 eV, providing a resolving power E/Delta E of 5000-15,000. The beamline allows full polarization control and gives a photon flux of up to 7 x 10(14) photons/s/0.1 A/0.1%bandwidth by offering a resolving power E/Delta E of 4000-12,000. KW - Resonant inelastic X-ray scattering KW - Soft X-ray monochromator KW - High transmission micro focus beamline KW - Plane grating emission spectrometer Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.elspec.2012.11.003 SN - 0368-2048 VL - 188 SP - 133 EP - 139 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Klein, Eckart A1 - Kimms, Frank A1 - Schmidt, E. A1 - Zacker, C. A1 - Haratsch, Andreas T1 - Artikel 130 r - 130 t; Art. 130 u - 130 y; Art. B und C; Art. E Y1 - 1998 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Janietz, Dietmar A1 - Festag, R. A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Wendorff, Joachim Heinz T1 - Self-organization of new oligomers containing disc-shaped side groups Y1 - 1994 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gruber, W. A1 - Chakravarty, S. A1 - Baehtz, C. A1 - Leitenberger, Wolfram A1 - Bruns, M. A1 - Kobler, A. A1 - Kübel, Christian A1 - Schmidt, H. T1 - Strain relaxation and vacancy creation in thin platinum films JF - Physical review letters N2 - Synchrotron based combined in situ x-ray diffractometry and reflectometry is used to investigate the role of vacancies for the relaxation of residual stress in thin metallic Pt films. From the experimentally determined relative changes of the lattice parameter a and of the film thickness L the modification of vacancy concentration and residual strain was derived as a function of annealing time at 130 degrees C. The results indicate that relaxation of strain resulting from compressive stress is accompanied by the creation of vacancies at the free film surface. This proves experimentally the postulated dominant role of vacancies for stress relaxation in thin metal films close to room temperature. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.265501 SN - 0031-9007 VL - 107 IS - 26 PB - American Physical Society CY - College Park ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sachse, Dirk A1 - Billault, Isabelle A1 - Bowen, Gabriel J. A1 - Chikaraishi, Yoshito A1 - Dawson, Todd E. A1 - Feakins, Sarah J. A1 - Freeman, Katherine H. A1 - Magill, Clayton R. A1 - McInerney, Francesca A. A1 - van der Meer, Marcel T. J. A1 - Polissar, Pratigya A1 - Robins, Richard J. A1 - Sachs, Julian P. A1 - Schmidt, Hanns-Ludwig A1 - Sessions, Alex L. A1 - White, James W. C. A1 - West, Jason B. A1 - Kahmen, Ansgar ED - Jeanloz, R T1 - Molecular Paleohydrology interpreting the Hydrogen- Isotopic Composition of Lipid Biomarkers from Photosynthesizing Organisms JF - Annual review of earth and planetary sciences JF - Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences N2 - Hydrogen-isotopic abundances of lipid biomarkers are emerging as important proxies in the study of ancient environments and ecosystems. A decade ago, pioneering studies made use of new analytical methods and demonstrated that the hydrogen-isotopic composition of individual lipids from aquatic and terrestrial organisms can be related to the composition of their growth (i.e., environmental) water. Subsequently, compound-specific deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) ratios of sedimentary biomarkers have been increasingly used as paleohydrological proxies over a range of geological timescales. Isotopic fractionation observed between hydrogen in environmental water and hydrogen in lipids, however, is sensitive to biochemical, physiological, and environmental influences on the composition of hydrogen available for biosynthesis in cells. Here we review the factors and processes that are known to influence the hydrogen-isotopic compositions of lipids-especially n-alkanes-from photosynthesizing organisms, and we provide a framework for interpreting their D/H ratios from ancient sediments and identify future research opportunities. KW - paleoclimate KW - paleoclimate proxy KW - deuterium KW - organic geochemistry Y1 - 2012 SN - 978-0-8243-2040-9 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-earth-042711-105535 SN - 0084-6597 VL - 40 IS - 1 SP - 221 EP - 249 PB - Annual Reviews CY - Palo Alto ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Reznichenko, Alexander L. A1 - Emge, Thomas J. A1 - Audoersch, Stephan A1 - Klauber, Eric G. A1 - Hultzsch, Kai C. A1 - Schmidt, Bernd T1 - Group 5 metal binaphtholate complexes for catalytic asymmetric hydroaminoalkylation and hydroamination/cyclization JF - Organometallics N2 - 3,3'-Silylated binaphtholate tantalum and niobium complexes were shown to be efficient catalysts for the asymmetric hydroaminoalkylation of N-methylaniline derivatives and N-benzylmethylamine with simple alkenes in enantioselectivities of up to 80% ee. No hydroaminoalkylation was observed with aminoalkenes; rather, exclusive asymmetric hydroamination/cyclization took place in up to 81% ee. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1021/om1011006 SN - 0276-7333 VL - 30 IS - 5 SP - 921 EP - 924 PB - American Chemical Society CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Tobie, G. A1 - Teanby, N. A. A1 - Coustenis, A. A1 - Jaumann, Ralf A1 - Raulin, E. A1 - Schmidt, J. A1 - Carrasco, N. A1 - Coates, Andrew J. A1 - Cordier, D. A1 - De Kok, R. A1 - Geppert, W. D. A1 - Lebreton, J. -P. A1 - Lefevre, A. A1 - Livengood, T. A. A1 - Mandt, K. E. A1 - Mitri, G. A1 - Nimmo, F. A1 - Nixon, C. A. A1 - Norman, L. A1 - Pappalardo, R. T. A1 - Postberg, F. A1 - Rodriguez, S. A1 - SchuizeMakuch, D. A1 - Soderblom, J. M. A1 - Solomonidou, A. A1 - Stephan, K. A1 - Stofan, E. R. A1 - Turtle, E. P. A1 - Wagner, R. J. A1 - West, R. A. A1 - Westlake, J. H. T1 - Science goals and mission concept for the future exploration of Titan and Enceladus JF - Planetary and space science KW - Titan KW - Enceladus KW - Atmosphere KW - Surface KW - Ocean KW - Interior KW - Missions Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pss.2014.10.002 SN - 0032-0633 VL - 104 SP - 59 EP - 77 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zebger-Gong, Hong A1 - Mueller, Dominik A1 - Diercke, Michaela A1 - Haffner, Dieter A1 - Hocher, Berthold A1 - Verberckmoes, Steven A1 - Schmidt, Sven A1 - D'Haese, Patrick C. A1 - Querfeld, Uwe T1 - 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D-3-induced aortic calcifications in experimental uremia: up-regulation of osteoblast markers, calcium-transporting proteins and osterix JF - Journal of hypertension N2 - Background and objective Whether treatment with vitamin D receptor activators contributes to cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic kidney disease is a matter of debate. We studied mechanisms involved in vitamin D-related vascular calcifications in vivo and in vitro. Methods Aortic calcifications were induced in subtotally nephrectomized (SNX) rats by treatment with a high dose (0.25 mu g/kg per day) of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D-3 (calcitriol) given for 6 weeks. Likewise, primary rat vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) were incubated with calcitriol at concentrations ranging from 10(-11) to 10(-7) mol/l. Immunohistochemistry revealed that the aortic expression of osteopontin, osteocalcin and bone sialoprotein was significantly increased in calcitriol-treated SNX rats compared to untreated SNX controls. In addition, aortic expression of the transient receptor potential vanilloid calcium channel 6 (TRPV6) and calbindin D9k was significantly up-regulated by treatment with calcitriol. Furthermore, calcitriol significantly increased expression of the osteogenic transcription factor osterix. In-vitro studies showed similar results, confirming that these effects could be attributed to treatment with calcitriol. Conclusions High-dose calcitriol treatment induces an osteoblastic phenotype in VSMC both in SNX rats and in vitro, associated with up-regulation of proteins regulating mineralization and calcium transport, and of the osteogenic transcription factor osterix. KW - calbindin D9k KW - calcitriol KW - calcium transport KW - osteoblast KW - osterix KW - TRPV5 KW - TRPV6 KW - vascular calcification Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1097/HJH.0b013e328340aa30 SN - 0263-6352 VL - 29 IS - 2 SP - 339 EP - 348 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schröder, Rolf A1 - VanDerVen, Peter F. M. A1 - Warlo, Irene A1 - Schumann, H. A1 - Fürst, Dieter Oswald A1 - Blümke, Ingmar A1 - Goebel, Hans H. A1 - Schmidt, M. C. A1 - Hatzfeld, Mechthild T1 - A member of the armadillo multigene family, is a constituent of sarcomeric I-bands in human skeletal muscle Y1 - 2000 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schwarz, W. H. Eugen A1 - Andrae, Dirk A1 - Arnold, S. R. A1 - Heidberg, Joachim A1 - Hellmann jr., H. A1 - Hinze, J. A1 - Karachalios, A. A1 - Kovner, M. A. A1 - Schmidt, P. C. A1 - Zülicke, Lutz T1 - Hans G. Hellmann (1903 - 1938) : ein deutscher Pionier der Quantenchemie in Moskau Y1 - 1999 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schwarz, W. H. Eugen A1 - Andrae, Dirk A1 - Arnold, S. R. A1 - Heidberg, Joachim A1 - Hellmann jr., H. A1 - Hinze, J. A1 - Karachalios, A. A1 - Kovner, M. A. A1 - Schmidt, P. C. A1 - Zülicke, Lutz T1 - Hans G. Hellmann (1903 - 1938) : ein Pionier der Quantenchemie Y1 - 1999 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Becker, Dirk A1 - Geiger, D. A1 - Dunkel, M. A1 - Roller, A. A1 - Bertl, Adam A1 - Latz, A. A1 - Carpaneto, Armando A1 - Dietrich, Peter A1 - Roelfsema, M. R. G. A1 - Voelker, C. A1 - Schmidt, D. A1 - Müller-Röber, Bernd A1 - Czempinski, Katrin A1 - Hedrich, R. T1 - AtTPK4, an Arabidopsis tandem-pore K+ channel, poised to control the pollen membrane voltage in a pH- and Ca2+- dependent manner N2 - The Arabidopsis tandem-pore K+ (TPK) channels displaying four transmembrane domains and two pore regions share structural homologies with their animal counterparts of the KCNK family. In contrast to the Shaker-like Arabidopsis channels (six transmembrane domains/one pore region), the functional properties and the biological role of plant TPK channels have not been elucidated yet. Here, we show that AtTPK4 (KCO4) localizes to the plasma membrane and is predominantly expressed in pollen. AtTPK4 (KCO4) resembles the electrical properties of a voltage-independent K+ channel after expression in Xenopus oocytes and yeast. Hyperpolarizing as well as depolarizing membrane voltages elicited instantaneous K+ currents, which were blocked by extracellular calcium and cytoplasmic protons. Functional complementation assays using a K+ transport-deficient yeast confirmed the biophysical and pharmacological properties of the AtTPK4 channel. The features of AtTPK4 point toward a role in potassium homeostasis and membrane voltage control of the growing pollen tube. Thus, AtTPK4 represents a member of plant tandem-pore-K+ channels, resembling the characteristics of its animal counterparts as well as plant-specific features with respect to modulation of channel activity by acidosis and calcium Y1 - 2004 SN - 0027-8424 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Farges, Francois A1 - Djanarthany, S A1 - de Wispelaere, S A1 - Munoz, Manuel A1 - Magassouba, B A1 - Haddi, A A1 - Wilke, Max A1 - Schmidt, C. A1 - Borchert, Manuela A1 - Trocellier, P A1 - Crichton, W A1 - Simionovici, Alexandre A1 - Petit, Pierre-Emanuel A1 - Mezouar, Mohamed A1 - Etcheverry, M. P. A1 - Pallot-Frossard, I A1 - Bargar, John Reeder A1 - Brown, G. E. A1 - Grolimund, D A1 - Scheidegger, A T1 - Water in silicate glasses and melts of environmental interest : from volcanoes to cathedrals N2 - In silicate glasses and melts, water acts according to two main processes. First, it can be dissolved in high temperature/high pressure melts. Second, it constitutes a weathering agent on the glass surface. A number of in-situ x- ray absorption fine structure (XAFS) studies for Fe, Ni, Zr, Th and U show that the more charged cations (Zr, Nb, Mo, Ta, Sn, Th and U) are little affected by the presence of dissolved water in the melt. In contrast, divalent iron and nickel are highly sensitive to the presence of water, which enhance nucleation processes, for example, of phyllosilicates at the angstrom-scale. Such information provides additional constraints on the role of water deep in the Earth, particularly in magmatology. By contrast, the weathering of glass surfaces by water can be studied from a durability perspective. Experimental weathering experiments Of nuclear waste glasses performed in the laboratory show a variety of surface enrichments (carbon, chlorine, alkalis, iron) after exposure to atmospheric fluids and moisture. Mn-, and Fe-surface enrichments of analogous glasses of the XIVth century are related to the formation of Mn and Fe oxy/ hydroxides on the surface. The impact on the glass darkening is considered in terms of urban pollution and mass tourism Y1 - 2005 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Qiu, Xunlin A1 - Benjamin, Aravindan Joseph A1 - Raman Venkatesan, Thulasinath A1 - Schmidt, Georg C. A1 - Soler, Ricardo Alonso Quintana A1 - Panicker, Pramul Muraleedhara A1 - Gerhard, Reimund A1 - Hübler, Arved Carl T1 - Dielectric and electroacoustic assessment of screen-printed piezoelectric polymer layers as flexible transducers BT - influence of the electrode material JF - IEEE transactions on dielectrics and electrical insulation N2 - Here, piezoelectric transducers consisting of a P(VDF-TrFE) layer with either silver or PEDOT:PSS screen-printed electrodes are studied. The influence of electrodes on the dielectric and electroacoustic properties are studied in dielectric-spectroscopy and ferroelectric-hysteresis measurements. Only when both the bottom and the top electrodes are made of silver, the typical dielectric relaxation of the P(VDF-TrFE) layer is clearly observed. When one or two of the electrodes are of PEDOT:PSS, a Debye-like relaxation is present. Compared with silver electrodes, PEDOT:PSS electrodes allow for moderate self-healing. Consequently, samples with bottom and top PEDOT:PSS electrodes can be poled to saturation, while samples with silver electrodes can hardly be poled to saturation due to destructive electric breakdown. Acoustic transducer measurements show that silver electrodes facilitate higher and broader frequency operation, while PEDOT:PSS electrodes bring slightly lower total harmonic distortion. Overall, the acoustic performance shows no significant deviations between differently electroded samples so that silver electrodes do not offer any advantages for the transducers studied here due to their much higher tendency for destructive electric breakdown. KW - poly(vinylidenefluoride-trifluoroethylene) P(VDF-TrFE) KW - dielectric KW - spectroscopy KW - ferroelectricity and piezoelectricity in polymers KW - screen KW - printing KW - printed electroacoustic thin-film transducers Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1109/TDEI.2020.008864 SN - 1070-9878 SN - 1558-4135 SN - 0018-9367 VL - 27 IS - 5 SP - 1683 EP - 1690 PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers CY - New York, NY ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wisotzki, Lutz A1 - Bacon, R. A1 - Brinchmann, J. A1 - Cantalupo, S. A1 - Richter, Philipp A1 - Schaye, J. A1 - Schmidt, Kasper Borello A1 - Urrutia, Tanya A1 - Weilbacher, Peter Michael A1 - Akhlaghi, M. A1 - Bouche, N. A1 - Contini, T. A1 - Guiderdoni, B. A1 - Herenz, E. C. A1 - Inami, H. A1 - Kerutt, Josephine Victoria A1 - Leclercq, F. A1 - Marino, R. A. A1 - Maseda, M. A1 - Monreal-Ibero, A. A1 - Nanayakkara, T. A1 - Richard, J. A1 - Saust, R. A1 - Steinmetz, Matthias A1 - Wendt, Martin T1 - Nearly all the sky is covered by Lyman-alpha emission around high-redshift galaxies JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science N2 - Galaxies are surrounded by large reservoirs of gas, mostly hydrogen, that are fed by inflows from the intergalactic medium and by outflows from galactic winds. Absorption-line measurements along the lines of sight to bright and rare background quasars indicate that this circumgalactic medium extends far beyond the starlight seen in galaxies, but very little is known about its spatial distribution. The Lyman-alpha transition of atomic hydrogen at a wavelength of 121.6 nanometres is an important tracer of warm (about 104 kelvin) gas in and around galaxies, especially at cosmological redshifts greater than about 1.6 at which the spectral line becomes observable from the ground. Tracing cosmic hydrogen through its Lyman-a emission has been a long-standing goal of observational astrophysics(1-3), but the extremely low surface brightness of the spatially extended emission is a formidable obstacle. A new window into circumgalactic environments was recently opened by the discovery of ubiquitous extended Lyman-alpha emission from hydrogen around high-redshift galaxies(4,5). Such measurements were previously limited to especially favourable systems(6-8) or to the use of massive statistical averaging(9,10) because of the faintness of this emission. Here we report observations of low-surface-brightness Lyman-alpha emission surrounding faint galaxies at redshifts between 3 and 6. We find that the projected sky coverage approaches 100 per cent. The corresponding rate of incidence (the mean number of Lyman-alpha emitters penetrated by any arbitrary line of sight) is well above unity and similar to the incidence rate of high-column-density absorbers frequently detected in the spectra of distant quasars(11-14). This similarity suggests that most circumgalactic atomic hydrogen at these redshifts has now been detected in emission. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0564-6 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 562 IS - 7726 SP - 229 EP - 232 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Munz, Matthias A1 - Oswald, Sascha A1 - Schmidt, C. T1 - Sand box experiments to evaluate the influence of subsurface temperature probe design on temperature based water flux calculation JF - Hydrology and earth system sciences : HESS N2 - Quantification of subsurface water fluxes based on the one dimensional solution to the heat transport equation depends on the accuracy of measured subsurface temperatures. The influence of temperature probe setup on the accuracy of vertical water flux calculation was systematically evaluated in this experimental study. Four temperature probe setups were installed into a sand box experiment to measure temporal highly resolved vertical temperature profiles under controlled water fluxes in the range of +/- 1.3 md(-1). Pass band filtering provided amplitude differences and phase shifts of the diurnal temperature signal varying with depth depending on water flux. Amplitude ratios of setups directly installed into the saturated sediment significantly varied with sand box hydraulic gradients. Amplitude ratios provided an accurate basis for the analytical calculation of water flow velocities, which matched measured flow velocities. Calculated flow velocities were sensitive to thermal properties of saturated sediment and to temperature sensor spacing, but insensitive to thermal dispersivity equal to solute dispersivity. Amplitude ratios of temperature probe setups indirectly installed into piezometer pipes were influenced by thermal exchange processes within the pipes and significantly varied with water flux direction only. Temperature time lags of small sensor distances of all setups were found to be insensitive to vertical water flux. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-15-3495-2011 SN - 1027-5606 VL - 15 IS - 11 SP - 3495 EP - 3510 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rothwell, Joseph A. A1 - Murphy, Neil A1 - Aleksandrova, Krasimira A1 - Schulze, Matthias Bernd A1 - Bešević, Jelena A1 - Kliemann, Nathalie A1 - Jenab, Mazda A1 - Ferrari, Pietro A1 - Achaintre, David A1 - Gicquiau, Audrey A1 - Vozar, Béatrice A1 - Scalbert, Augustin A1 - Huybrechts, Inge A1 - Freisling, Heinz A1 - Prehn, Cornelia A1 - Adamski, Jerzy A1 - Cross, Amanda J. A1 - Pala, Valeria Maria A1 - Boutron-Ruault, Marie-Christine A1 - Dahm, Christina C. A1 - Overvad, Kim A1 - Gram, Inger Torhild A1 - Sandanger, Torkjel M. A1 - Skeie, Guri A1 - Jakszyn, Paula A1 - Tsilidis, Kostas K. A1 - Hughes, David J. A1 - van Guelpen, Bethany A1 - Bodén, Stina A1 - Sánchez, Maria-José A1 - Schmidt, Julie A. A1 - Katzke, Verena A1 - Kühn, Tilman A1 - Colorado-Yohar, Sandra A1 - Tumino, Rosario A1 - Bueno-de-Mesquita, Bas A1 - Vineis, Paolo A1 - Masala, Giovanna A1 - Panico, Salvatore A1 - Eriksen, Anne Kirstine A1 - Tjønneland, Anne A1 - Aune, Dagfinn A1 - Weiderpass, Elisabete A1 - Severi, Gianluca A1 - Chajès, Véronique A1 - Gunter, Marc J. T1 - Metabolic signatures of healthy lifestyle patterns and colorectal cancer risk in a European cohort JF - Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology N2 - BACKGROUND & AIMS: Colorectal cancer risk can be lowered by adherence to the World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research (WCRF/AICR) guidelines. We derived metabolic signatures of adherence to these guidelines and tested their associations with colorectal cancer risk in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition cohort. METHODS: Scores reflecting adherence to the WCRF/AICR recommendations (scale, 1-5) were calculated from participant data on weight maintenance, physical activity, diet, and alcohol among a discovery set of 5738 cancer-free European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition participants with metabolomics data. Partial least-squares regression was used to derive fatty acid and endogenous metabolite signatures of the WCRF/AICR score in this group. In an independent set of 1608 colorectal cancer cases and matched controls, odds ratios (ORs) and 95% CIs were calculated for colorectal cancer risk per unit increase in WCRF/AICR score and per the corresponding change in metabolic signatures using multivariable conditional logistic regression. RESULTS: Higher WCRF/AICR scores were characterized by metabolic signatures of increased odd-chain fatty acids, serine, glycine, and specific phosphatidylcholines. Signatures were inversely associated more strongly with colorectal cancer risk (fatty acids: OR, 0.51 per unit increase; 95% CI, 0.29-0.90; endogenous metabolites: OR, 0.62 per unit change; 95% CI, 0.50-0.78) than the WCRF/AICR score (OR, 0.93 per unit change; 95% CI, 0.86-1.00) overall. Signature associations were stronger in male compared with female participants. CONCLUSIONS: Metabolite profiles reflecting adherence to WCRF/AICR guidelines and additional lifestyle or biological risk factors were associated with colorectal cancer. Measuring a specific panel of metabolites representative of a healthy or unhealthy lifestyle may identify strata of the population at higher risk of colorectal cancer. KW - colorectal neoplasm KW - risk factors KW - World Cancer Research Fund/American Institute for Cancer Research Recommendations KW - targeted metabolomics Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cgh.2020.11.045 SN - 1542-3565 SN - 1542-7714 VL - 20 SP - E1061 EP - E1082 PB - Elsevier CY - New York, NY ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spallanzani, Roberta A1 - Koga, Kenneth T. A1 - Cichy, Sarah B. A1 - Wiedenbeck, Michael A1 - Schmidt, Burkhard C. A1 - Oelze, Marcus A1 - Wilke, Max T1 - Lithium and boron diffusivity and isotopic fractionation in hydrated rhyolitic melts JF - Contributions to mineralogy and petrology N2 - Lithium and boron are trace components of magmas, released during exsolution of a gas phase during volcanic activity. In this study, we determine the diffusivity and isotopic fractionation of Li and B in hydrous silicate melts. Two glasses were synthesized with the same rhyolitic composition (4.2 wt% water), having different Li and B contents; these were studied in diffusion-couple experiments that were performed using an internally heated pressure vessel, operated at 300 MPa in the temperature range 700-1250 degrees C for durations from 0 s to 24 h. From this we determined activation energies for Li and B diffusion of 57 +/- 4 kJ/mol and 152 +/- 15 kJ/mol with pre-exponential factors of 1.53 x 10(-7) m(2)/s and 3.80 x 10(-8) m(2)/s, respectively. Lithium isotopic fractionation during diffusion gave beta values between 0.15 and 0.20, whereas B showed no clear isotopic fractionation. Our Li diffusivities and isotopic fractionation results differ somewhat from earlier published values, but overall confirm that Li diffusivity increases with water content. Our results on B diffusion show that similarly to Li, B mobility increases in the presence of water. By applying the Eyring relation, we confirm that B diffusivity is limited by viscous flow in silicate melts. Our results on Li and B diffusion present a new tool for understanding degassing-related processes, offering a potential geospeedometer to measure volcanic ascent rates. KW - stable isotopes KW - diffusion KW - isotopic fractionation KW - hydrated silicate KW - melts Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-022-01937-2 SN - 0010-7999 SN - 1432-0967 VL - 177 IS - 8 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - BOOK A1 - Rana, Kaushik A1 - Mohapatra, Durga Prasad A1 - Sidorova, Julia A1 - Lundberg, Lars A1 - Sköld, Lars A1 - Lopes Grim, Luís Fernando A1 - Sampaio Gradvohl, André Leon A1 - Cremerius, Jonas A1 - Siegert, Simon A1 - Weltzien, Anton von A1 - Baldi, Annika A1 - Klessascheck, Finn A1 - Kalancha, Svitlana A1 - Lichtenstein, Tom A1 - Shaabani, Nuhad A1 - Meinel, Christoph A1 - Friedrich, Tobias A1 - Lenzner, Pascal A1 - Schumann, David A1 - Wiese, Ingmar A1 - Sarna, Nicole A1 - Wiese, Lena A1 - Tashkandi, Araek Sami A1 - van der Walt, Estée A1 - Eloff, Jan H. P. A1 - Schmidt, Christopher A1 - Hügle, Johannes A1 - Horschig, Siegfried A1 - Uflacker, Matthias A1 - Najafi, Pejman A1 - Sapegin, Andrey A1 - Cheng, Feng A1 - Stojanovic, Dragan A1 - Stojnev Ilić, Aleksandra A1 - Djordjevic, Igor A1 - Stojanovic, Natalija A1 - Predic, Bratislav A1 - González-Jiménez, Mario A1 - de Lara, Juan A1 - Mischkewitz, Sven A1 - Kainz, Bernhard A1 - van Hoorn, André A1 - Ferme, Vincenzo A1 - Schulz, Henning A1 - Knigge, Marlene A1 - Hecht, Sonja A1 - Prifti, Loina A1 - Krcmar, Helmut A1 - Fabian, Benjamin A1 - Ermakova, Tatiana A1 - Kelkel, Stefan A1 - Baumann, Annika A1 - Morgenstern, Laura A1 - Plauth, Max A1 - Eberhard, Felix A1 - Wolff, Felix A1 - Polze, Andreas A1 - Cech, Tim A1 - Danz, Noel A1 - Noack, Nele Sina A1 - Pirl, Lukas A1 - Beilharz, Jossekin Jakob A1 - De Oliveira, Roberto C. L. A1 - Soares, Fábio Mendes A1 - Juiz, Carlos A1 - Bermejo, Belen A1 - Mühle, Alexander A1 - Grüner, Andreas A1 - Saxena, Vageesh A1 - Gayvoronskaya, Tatiana A1 - Weyand, Christopher A1 - Krause, Mirko A1 - Frank, Markus A1 - Bischoff, Sebastian A1 - Behrens, Freya A1 - Rückin, Julius A1 - Ziegler, Adrian A1 - Vogel, Thomas A1 - Tran, Chinh A1 - Moser, Irene A1 - Grunske, Lars A1 - Szárnyas, Gábor A1 - Marton, József A1 - Maginecz, János A1 - Varró, Dániel A1 - Antal, János Benjamin ED - Meinel, Christoph ED - Polze, Andreas ED - Beins, Karsten ED - Strotmann, Rolf ED - Seibold, Ulrich ED - Rödszus, Kurt ED - Müller, Jürgen T1 - HPI Future SOC Lab – Proceedings 2018 N2 - The “HPI Future SOC Lab” is a cooperation of the Hasso Plattner Institute (HPI) and industry partners. Its mission is to enable and promote exchange and interaction between the research community and the industry partners. The HPI Future SOC Lab provides researchers with free of charge access to a complete infrastructure of state of the art hard and software. This infrastructure includes components, which might be too expensive for an ordinary research environment, such as servers with up to 64 cores and 2 TB main memory. The offerings address researchers particularly from but not limited to the areas of computer science and business information systems. Main areas of research include cloud computing, parallelization, and In-Memory technologies. This technical report presents results of research projects executed in 2018. Selected projects have presented their results on April 17th and November 14th 2017 at the Future SOC Lab Day events. N2 - Das Future SOC Lab am HPI ist eine Kooperation des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts mit verschiedenen Industriepartnern. Seine Aufgabe ist die Ermöglichung und Förderung des Austausches zwischen Forschungsgemeinschaft und Industrie. Am Lab wird interessierten Wissenschaftler:innen eine Infrastruktur von neuester Hard- und Software kostenfrei für Forschungszwecke zur Verfügung gestellt. Dazu zählen Systeme, die im normalen Hochschulbereich in der Regel nicht zu finanzieren wären, bspw. Server mit bis zu 64 Cores und 2 TB Hauptspeicher. Diese Angebote richten sich insbesondere an Wissenschaftler:innen in den Gebieten Informatik und Wirtschaftsinformatik. Einige der Schwerpunkte sind Cloud Computing, Parallelisierung und In-Memory Technologien. In diesem Technischen Bericht werden die Ergebnisse der Forschungsprojekte des Jahres 2018 vorgestellt. Ausgewählte Projekte stellten ihre Ergebnisse am 17. April und 14. November 2018 im Rahmen des Future SOC Lab Tags vor. T3 - Technische Berichte des Hasso-Plattner-Instituts für Digital Engineering an der Universität Potsdam - 151 KW - Future SOC Lab KW - research projects KW - multicore architectures KW - in-memory technology KW - cloud computing KW - machine learning KW - artifical intelligence KW - Future SOC Lab KW - Forschungsprojekte KW - Multicore Architekturen KW - In-Memory Technologie KW - Cloud Computing KW - maschinelles Lernen KW - künstliche Intelligenz Y1 - 2022 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-563712 SN - 978-3-86956-547-7 SN - 1613-5652 SN - 2191-1665 IS - 151 PB - Universitätsverlag Potsdam CY - Potsdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vatova, Mariyana A1 - Rubin, Conrad A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Goncalves, Susana C. A1 - Schmidt, Susanne I. A1 - Jarić, Ivan T1 - Aquatic fungi: largely neglected targets for conservation JF - Frontiers in ecology and the environment Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2495 SN - 1540-9295 SN - 1540-9309 VL - 20 IS - 4 SP - 207 EP - 209 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER -