TY - JOUR A1 - Acero, F. A1 - Aloisio, R. A1 - Amans, J. A1 - Amato, Elena A1 - Antonelli, L. A. A1 - Aramo, C. A1 - Armstrong, T. A1 - Arqueros, F. A1 - Asano, Katsuaki A1 - Ashley, M. A1 - Backes, M. A1 - Balazs, C. A1 - Balzer, A. A1 - Bamba, Aya A1 - Barkov, Maxim A1 - Barrio, J. A. A1 - Benbow, Wystan A1 - Bernloehr, K. A1 - Beshley, V. A1 - Bigongiari, C. A1 - Biland, A. A1 - Bilinsky, A. A1 - Bissaldi, Elisabetta A1 - Biteau, J. A1 - Blanch, O. A1 - Blasi, P. A1 - Blazek, J. A1 - Boisson, C. A1 - Bonanno, G. A1 - Bonardi, A. A1 - Bonavolonta, C. A1 - Bonnoli, G. A1 - Braiding, C. A1 - Brau-Nogue, S. A1 - Bregeon, J. A1 - Brown, A. M. A1 - Bugaev, V. A1 - Bulgarelli, A. A1 - Bulik, T. A1 - Burton, Michael A1 - Burtovoi, A. A1 - Busetto, G. A1 - Bottcher, M. A1 - Cameron, R. A1 - Capalbi, M. A1 - Caproni, Anderson A1 - Caraveo, P. A1 - Carosi, R. A1 - Cascone, E. A1 - Cerruti, M. A1 - Chaty, Sylvain A1 - Chen, A. A1 - Chen, X. A1 - Chernyakova, M. A1 - Chikawa, M. A1 - Chudoba, J. A1 - Cohen-Tanugi, J. A1 - Colafrancesco, S. A1 - Conforti, V. A1 - Contreras, J. L. A1 - Costa, A. A1 - Cotter, G. A1 - Covino, Stefano A1 - Covone, G. A1 - Cumani, P. A1 - Cusumano, G. A1 - Daniel, M. A1 - Dazzi, F. A1 - De Angelis, A. A1 - De Cesare, G. A1 - De Franco, A. A1 - De Frondat, F. A1 - Dal Pino, E. M. de Gouveia A1 - De Lisio, C. A1 - Lopez, R. de los Reyes A1 - De Lotto, B. A1 - de Naurois, M. A1 - De Palma, F. A1 - Del Santo, M. A1 - Delgado, C. A1 - della Volpe, D. A1 - Di Girolamo, T. A1 - Di Giulio, C. A1 - Di Pierro, F. A1 - Di Venere, L. A1 - Doro, M. A1 - Dournaux, J. A1 - Dumas, D. A1 - Dwarkadas, Vikram V. A1 - Diaz, C. A1 - Ebr, J. A1 - Egberts, Kathrin A1 - Einecke, S. A1 - Elsaesser, D. A1 - Eschbach, S. A1 - Falceta-Goncalves, D. A1 - Fasola, G. A1 - Fedorova, E. A1 - Fernandez-Barral, A. A1 - Ferrand, Gilles A1 - Fesquet, M. A1 - Fiandrini, E. A1 - Fiasson, A. A1 - Filipovic, Miroslav D. A1 - Fioretti, V. A1 - Font, L. A1 - Fontaine, Gilles A1 - Franco, F. J. A1 - Freixas Coromina, L. A1 - Fujita, Yutaka A1 - Fukui, Y. A1 - Funk, S. A1 - Forster, A. A1 - Gadola, A. A1 - Lopez, R. Garcia A1 - Garczarczyk, M. A1 - Giglietto, N. A1 - Giordano, F. A1 - Giuliani, A. A1 - Glicenstein, J. A1 - Gnatyk, R. A1 - Goldoni, P. A1 - Grabarczyk, T. A1 - Graciani, R. A1 - Graham, J. A1 - Grandi, P. A1 - Granot, Jonathan A1 - Green, A. J. A1 - Griffiths, S. A1 - Gunji, S. A1 - Hakobyan, H. A1 - Hara, S. A1 - Hassan, T. A1 - Hayashida, M. A1 - Heller, M. A1 - Helo, J. C. A1 - Hinton, J. A1 - Hnatyk, B. A1 - Huet, J. A1 - Huetten, M. A1 - Humensky, T. B. A1 - Hussein, M. A1 - Horandel, J. A1 - Ikeno, Y. A1 - Inada, T. A1 - Inome, Y. A1 - Inoue, S. A1 - Inoue, T. A1 - Inoue, Y. A1 - Ioka, K. A1 - Iori, Maurizio A1 - Jacquemier, J. A1 - Janecek, P. A1 - Jankowsky, D. A1 - Jung, I. A1 - Kaaret, P. A1 - Katagiri, H. A1 - Kimeswenger, S. A1 - Kimura, Shigeo S. A1 - Knodlseder, J. A1 - Koch, B. A1 - Kocot, J. A1 - Kohri, K. A1 - Komin, N. A1 - Konno, Y. A1 - Kosack, K. A1 - Koyama, S. A1 - Kraus, Michaela A1 - Kubo, Hidetoshi A1 - Mezek, G. Kukec A1 - Kushida, J. A1 - La Palombara, N. A1 - Lalik, K. A1 - Lamanna, G. A1 - Landt, H. A1 - Lapington, J. A1 - Laporte, P. A1 - Lee, S. A1 - Lees, J. A1 - Lefaucheur, J. A1 - Lenain, J. -P. A1 - Leto, Giuseppe A1 - Lindfors, E. A1 - Lohse, T. A1 - Lombardi, S. A1 - Longo, F. A1 - Lopez, M. A1 - Lucarelli, F. A1 - Luque-Escamilla, Pedro Luis A1 - Lopez-Coto, R. A1 - Maccarone, M. C. A1 - Maier, G. A1 - Malaguti, G. A1 - Mandat, D. A1 - Maneva, G. A1 - Mangano, S. A1 - Marcowith, Alexandre A1 - Marti, J. A1 - Martinez, M. A1 - Martinez, G. A1 - Masuda, S. A1 - Maurin, G. A1 - Maxted, N. A1 - Melioli, Claudio A1 - Mineo, T. A1 - Mirabal, N. A1 - Mizuno, T. A1 - Moderski, R. A1 - Mohammed, M. A1 - Montaruli, T. A1 - Moralejo, A. A1 - Mori, K. A1 - Morlino, G. A1 - Morselli, A. A1 - Moulin, Emmanuel A1 - Mukherjee, R. A1 - Mundell, C. A1 - Muraishi, H. A1 - Murase, Kohta A1 - Nagataki, Shigehiro A1 - Nagayoshi, T. A1 - Naito, T. A1 - Nakajima, D. A1 - Nakamori, T. A1 - Nemmen, R. A1 - Niemiec, Jacek A1 - Nieto, D. A1 - Nievas-Rosillo, M. A1 - Nikolajuk, M. A1 - Nishijima, K. A1 - Noda, K. A1 - Nogues, L. A1 - Nosek, D. A1 - Novosyadlyj, B. A1 - Nozaki, S. A1 - Ohira, Yutaka A1 - Ohishi, M. A1 - Ohm, S. A1 - Okumura, A. A1 - Ong, R. A. A1 - Orito, R. A1 - Orlati, A. A1 - Ostrowski, M. A1 - Oya, I. A1 - Padovani, Marco A1 - Palacio, J. A1 - Palatka, M. A1 - Paredes, Josep M. A1 - Pavy, S. A1 - Persic, M. A1 - Petrucci, P. A1 - Petruk, Oleh A1 - Pisarski, A. A1 - Pohl, Martin A1 - Porcelli, A. A1 - Prandini, E. A1 - Prast, J. A1 - Principe, G. A1 - Prouza, M. A1 - Pueschel, Elisa A1 - Puelhofer, G. A1 - Quirrenbach, A. A1 - Rameez, M. A1 - Reimer, O. A1 - Renaud, M. A1 - Ribo, M. A1 - Rico, J. A1 - Rizi, V. A1 - Rodriguez, J. A1 - Fernandez, G. Rodriguez A1 - Rodriguez Vazquez, J. J. A1 - Romano, Patrizia A1 - Romeo, G. A1 - Rosado, J. A1 - Rousselle, J. A1 - Rowell, G. A1 - Rudak, B. A1 - Sadeh, I. A1 - Safi-Harb, S. A1 - Saito, T. A1 - Sakaki, N. A1 - Sanchez, D. A1 - Sangiorgi, P. A1 - Sano, H. A1 - Santander, M. A1 - Sarkar, S. A1 - Sawada, M. A1 - Schioppa, E. J. A1 - Schoorlemmer, H. A1 - Schovanek, P. A1 - Schussler, F. A1 - Sergijenko, O. A1 - Servillat, M. A1 - Shalchi, A. A1 - Shellard, R. C. A1 - Siejkowski, H. A1 - Sillanpaa, A. A1 - Simone, D. A1 - Sliusar, V. A1 - Sol, H. A1 - Stanic, S. A1 - Starling, R. A1 - Stawarz, L. A1 - Stefanik, S. A1 - Stephan, M. A1 - Stolarczyk, T. A1 - Szanecki, M. A1 - Szepieniec, T. A1 - Tagliaferri, G. A1 - Tajima, H. A1 - Takahashi, M. A1 - Takeda, J. A1 - Tanaka, M. A1 - Tanaka, S. A1 - Tejedor, L. A. A1 - Telezhinsky, Igor O. A1 - Temnikov, P. A1 - Terada, Y. A1 - Tescaro, D. A1 - Teshima, M. A1 - Testa, V. A1 - Thoudam, S. A1 - Tokanai, F. A1 - Torres, D. F. A1 - Torresi, E. A1 - Tosti, G. A1 - Townsley, C. A1 - Travnicek, P. A1 - Trichard, C. A1 - Trifoglio, M. A1 - Tsujimoto, S. A1 - Vagelli, V. A1 - Vallania, P. A1 - Valore, L. A1 - van Driel, W. A1 - van Eldik, C. A1 - Vandenbroucke, Justin A1 - Vassiliev, V. A1 - Vecchi, M. A1 - Vercellone, Stefano A1 - Vergani, S. A1 - Vigorito, C. A1 - Vorobiov, S. A1 - Vrastil, M. A1 - Vazquez Acosta, M. L. A1 - Wagner, S. J. A1 - Wagner, R. A1 - Wakely, S. P. A1 - Walter, R. A1 - Ward, J. E. A1 - Watson, J. J. A1 - Weinstein, A. A1 - White, M. A1 - White, R. A1 - Wierzcholska, A. A1 - Wilcox, P. A1 - Williams, D. A. A1 - Wischnewski, R. A1 - Wojcik, P. A1 - Yamamoto, T. A1 - Yamamoto, H. A1 - Yamazaki, Ryo A1 - Yanagita, S. A1 - Yang, L. A1 - Yoshida, T. A1 - Yoshida, M. A1 - Yoshiike, S. A1 - Yoshikoshi, T. A1 - Zacharias, M. A1 - Zampieri, L. A1 - Zanin, R. A1 - Zavrtanik, M. A1 - Zavrtanik, D. A1 - Zdziarski, A. A1 - Zech, Alraune A1 - Zechlin, Hannes A1 - Zhdanov, V. A1 - Ziegler, A. A1 - Zorn, J. T1 - Prospects for Cherenkov Telescope Array Observations of the Young Supernova Remnant RX J1713.7-3946 JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We perform simulations for future Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) observations of RX J1713.7-3946, a young supernova remnant (SNR) and one of the brightest sources ever discovered in very high energy (VHE) gamma rays. Special attention is paid to exploring possible spatial (anti) correlations of gamma rays with emission at other wavelengths, in particular X-rays and CO/H I emission. We present a series of simulated images of RX J1713.7-3946 for CTA based on a set of observationally motivated models for the gamma-ray emission. In these models, VHE gamma rays produced by high-energy electrons are assumed to trace the nonthermal X-ray emission observed by XMM-Newton, whereas those originating from relativistic protons delineate the local gas distributions. The local atomic and molecular gas distributions are deduced by the NANTEN team from CO and H I observations. Our primary goal is to show how one can distinguish the emission mechanism(s) of the gamma rays (i.e., hadronic versus leptonic, or a mixture of the two) through information provided by their spatial distribution, spectra, and time variation. This work is the first attempt to quantitatively evaluate the capabilities of CTA to achieve various proposed scientific goals by observing this important cosmic particle accelerator. KW - cosmic rays KW - gamma rays: ISM KW - ISM: individual objects (RX J1713.7-3946, G347.3-0.5) Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa6d67 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 840 IS - 2 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol 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 - 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 - 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 - Jeltsch, Florian A1 - Stephan, T. A1 - Wiegand, T. A1 - Weber, G. E. T1 - Arid rangeland management supported by dynamic spatially-explicit simulation models Y1 - 2001 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 - JOUR A1 - Gerber, Markus A1 - Ehrbar, Janine A1 - Brand, Ralf A1 - Antoniewicz, Franziska A1 - Brand, Serge A1 - Colledge, Flora A1 - Donath, Lars A1 - Egger, Stephan T. A1 - Hatzinger, Martin A1 - Holsboer-Trachsler, Edith A1 - Imboden, Christian A1 - Schweinfurth, Nina A1 - Vetter, Stefan A1 - Ludyga, Sebastian T1 - Implicit attitudes towards exercise and physical activity behaviour among in-patients with psychiatric disorders JF - Mental Health and Physical Activity N2 - The current body of evidence suggests that in healthy participants, implicit attitudes towards physical activity explain variance in exercise behaviour beyond explicit cognitive processes. However, such relationships have not been examined in psychiatric patients, although this may contribute to a better understanding of the motivational and volitional resources needed to self-regulate their exercise behaviour. Therefore, the present cross-sectional study aimed to assess implicit attitudes towards exercise among psychiatric in-patients, and to correlate these implicit attitudes with their physical activity levels. Patients (N = 101) showing a psychiatric disorder, but no severe cognitive impairment, were directly recruited from psychiatric clinics. Their physical activity levels were assessed using both accelerometers and self-reports. Additionally, patients reported psychiatric symptoms and performed a single-target implicit association test (ST-IAT) with exercise employed as the target category. Of all patients, 39% showed a preference for exercise, whereas 13% showed an aversion towards exercise. The implicit attitudes of the remaining participants were equally strong for both concepts. Based on correlational analysis (correcting for age, sex, psychiatric symptoms severity, and ST-IAT sequence), no association was found between ST-IAT score, or self-reported and objectively assessed physical activity. Consequently, the link between exercise behaviour and implicit attitudes towards physical activity found in healthy participants could not be observed in psychiatric patients. KW - Accelerometry KW - Automatic evaluation KW - Dual mode theory KW - Physical activity Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mhpa.2018.08.001 SN - 1755-2966 VL - 15 SP - 71 EP - 77 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - da Silva, Filipe Ferreira A1 - Varella, Marcio T. do N. A1 - Jones, Nykola C. A1 - Hoffmann, Soren Vronning A1 - Denifl, Stephan A1 - Bald, Ilko A1 - Kopyra, Janina T1 - Electron-Induced Reactions in 3-Bromopyruvic Acid JF - Chemistry - a European journal N2 - 3-Bromopyruvic acid (3BP) is a potential anticancer drug, the action of which on cellular metabolism is not yet entirely clear. The presence of a bromine atom suggests that it is also reactive towards low-energy electrons, which are produced in large quantities during tumour radiation therapy. Detailed knowledge of the interaction of 3BP with secondary electrons is a prerequisite to gain a complete picture of the effects of 3BP in different forms of cancer therapy. Herein, dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to 3BP in the gas phase has been studied both experimentally by using a crossed-beam setup and theoretically through scattering and quantum chemical calculations. These results are complemented by a vacuum ultraviolet absorption spectrum. The main fragmentation channel is the formation of Br- close to 0 eV and within several resonant features at 1.9 and 3-8 eV. At low electron energies, Br- formation proceeds through sigma* and pi* shape resonances, and at higher energies through core-excited resonances. It is found that the electron-capture cross-section is clearly increased compared with that of non-brominated pyruvic acid, but, at the same time, fragmentation reactions through DEA are significantly altered as well. The 3BP transient negative ion is subject to a lower number of fragmentation reactions than those of pyruvic acid, which indicates that 3BP could indeed act by modifying the electron-transport chains within oxidative phosphorylation. It could also act as a radio-sensitiser. KW - density functional calculations KW - dissociative electron attachment KW - drug discovery KW - gas-phase reactions KW - sensitizers Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201806132 SN - 0947-6539 SN - 1521-3765 VL - 25 IS - 21 SP - 5498 EP - 5506 PB - Wiley-VCH CY - Weinheim ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Cosco, Theodore D. A1 - Brehme, David F. A1 - Grigoruta, Nora A1 - Kaufmann, Lisa-Katrin A1 - Lemsalu, Liis A1 - Meex, Ruth A1 - Schuurmans, Angela A. T. A1 - Sener, Neslihan A1 - Stephan, Blossom C. M. A1 - Brayne, Carol T1 - Cross-cultural Perspectives of Successful Aging: Young Turks and Europeans JF - Educational gerontology : EDGE ; an international quarterly N2 - Successful aging (SA) has been conceptualized in a number of ways. Despite increasing research into how laypersons define SA, few studies capturing lay perspectives of SA in younger cohorts and in non-English speaking countries have been undertaken. The current study examines cross-cultural perspectives of SA in young (aged 18-35), lay adults from a variety of continental European countries and Turkey. Participants were recruited via snowball sampling from social network sites and invited to participate in an online survey. Persons between 18-35 years from Belgium, Estonia, Germany, Netherlands, Romania, Switzerland, or Turkey were included. Respondents (total: 390; Belgian: 32; Estonian: 96; German: 76; Romanian: 47; Swiss: 39; Dutch: 30; Turkish: 70), were primarily women (56.4%) and students (66.2%), with an average age of 24.1 years (SD 3.7). Personal resources, social and active engagement all emerged as dominant themes across countries, but were articulated in subtly different ways in the participant countries. Positive perspectives, desirable attributes and satisfaction themes were intertwined within themes of acceptance and engagement. The current study provides a first step in the inclusion of geographic and cultural diversity into the SA literature. These results suggest that layperson conceptualizations of SA have broad-sweeping similarities, but further research is required to articulate the nuance of cultural influences on SA. Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/03601277.2015.1050899 SN - 0360-1277 SN - 1521-0472 VL - 41 IS - 11 SP - 800 EP - 813 PB - Taylor & Francis Group CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - GEN A1 - Cosco, Theodore D. A1 - Lemsalu, Liis A1 - Brehme, David F. A1 - Grigoruta, Nora A1 - Kaufmann, Lisa-Katrin A1 - Meex, Ruth A1 - Schuurmans, Angela A. T. A1 - Sener, Neslihan A1 - Stephan, Blossom C. M. A1 - Brayne, Carol T1 - Younger europeans' conceptualizations of successful aging T2 - Journal of the American Geriatrics Society Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.13307 SN - 0002-8614 SN - 1532-5415 VL - 63 IS - 3 SP - 609 EP - 611 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Yuan, X. H A1 - Sobolev, Stephan Vladimir A1 - Kind, Rainer A1 - Oncken, Onno A1 - Bock, Günter A1 - Asch, Günter A1 - Schurr, B. A1 - Gräber, F. A1 - Rudloff, Alexander A1 - Hanka, W. A1 - Wylegalla, Kurt A1 - Tibi, R. A1 - Haberland, Christian A1 - Rietbrock, Andreas A1 - Giese, Peter A1 - Wigger, Peter A1 - Rower, P. A1 - Zandt, G. A1 - Beck, S. A1 - Wallace, T. A1 - Pardo, M. A1 - Comte, D. T1 - Subduction and collision processes in the Central Andes constrained by converted seismic phases Y1 - 2000 ER - TY - GEN A1 - ten Freyhaus, Henrik A1 - Huntgeburth, Michael A1 - Winger, Kirstin A1 - Bäumer, Anselm T. A1 - Vantler, Marius A1 - Bekhite, Mohamed M. A1 - Wartenberg, Maria A1 - Sauer, Heinrich A1 - Sparwel, Jan A1 - Rosenkranz, Stephan T1 - Inhibition of ROS liberation attenuates PDGF-Dependent chemotaxis, but not proliferation in vascular smooth muscle cells - Critical role of Src kinase T2 - Circulation : an American Heart Association journal Y1 - 2006 SN - 0009-7322 VL - 114 SP - 296 EP - 297 PB - Lippincott Williams & Wilkins CY - Philadelphia ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Read, Betsy A. A1 - Kegel, Jessica A1 - Klute, Mary J. A1 - Kuo, Alan A1 - Lefebvre, Stephane C. A1 - Maumus, Florian A1 - Mayer, Christoph A1 - Miller, John A1 - Monier, Adam A1 - Salamov, Asaf A1 - Young, Jeremy A1 - Aguilar, Maria A1 - Claverie, Jean-Michel A1 - Frickenhaus, Stephan A1 - Gonzalez, Karina A1 - Herman, Emily K. A1 - Lin, Yao-Cheng A1 - Napier, Johnathan A1 - Ogata, Hiroyuki A1 - Sarno, Analissa F. A1 - Shmutz, Jeremy A1 - Schroeder, Declan A1 - de Vargas, Colomban A1 - Verret, Frederic A1 - von Dassow, Peter A1 - Valentin, Klaus A1 - Van de Peer, Yves A1 - Wheeler, Glen A1 - Dacks, Joel B. A1 - Delwiche, Charles F. A1 - Dyhrman, Sonya T. A1 - Glöckner, Gernot A1 - John, Uwe A1 - Richards, Thomas A1 - Worden, Alexandra Z. A1 - Zhang, Xiaoyu A1 - Grigoriev, Igor V. A1 - Allen, Andrew E. A1 - Bidle, Kay A1 - Borodovsky, M. A1 - Bowler, C. A1 - Brownlee, Colin A1 - Cock, J. Mark A1 - Elias, Marek A1 - Gladyshev, Vadim N. A1 - Groth, Marco A1 - Guda, Chittibabu A1 - Hadaegh, Ahmad A1 - Iglesias-Rodriguez, Maria Debora A1 - Jenkins, J. A1 - Jones, Bethan M. A1 - Lawson, Tracy A1 - Leese, Florian A1 - Lindquist, Erika A1 - Lobanov, Alexei A1 - Lomsadze, Alexandre A1 - Malik, Shehre-Banoo A1 - Marsh, Mary E. A1 - Mackinder, Luke A1 - Mock, Thomas A1 - Müller-Röber, Bernd A1 - Pagarete, Antonio A1 - Parker, Micaela A1 - Probert, Ian A1 - Quesneville, Hadi A1 - Raines, Christine A1 - Rensing, Stefan A. A1 - Riano-Pachon, Diego Mauricio A1 - Richier, Sophie A1 - Rokitta, Sebastian A1 - Shiraiwa, Yoshihiro A1 - Soanes, Darren M. A1 - van der Giezen, Mark A1 - Wahlund, Thomas M. A1 - Williams, Bryony A1 - Wilson, Willie A1 - Wolfe, Gordon A1 - Wurch, Louie L. T1 - Pan genome of the phytoplankton Emiliania underpins its global distribution JF - Nature : the international weekly journal of science N2 - Coccolithophores have influenced the global climate for over 200 million years(1). These marine phytoplankton can account for 20 per cent of total carbon fixation in some systems(2). They form blooms that can occupy hundreds of thousands of square kilometres and are distinguished by their elegantly sculpted calcium carbonate exoskeletons (coccoliths), rendering them visible from space(3). Although coccolithophores export carbon in the form of organic matter and calcite to the sea floor, they also release CO2 in the calcification process. Hence, they have a complex influence on the carbon cycle, driving either CO2 production or uptake, sequestration and export to the deep ocean(4). Here we report the first haptophyte reference genome, from the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi strain CCMP1516, and sequences from 13 additional isolates. Our analyses reveal a pan genome (core genes plus genes distributed variably between strains) probably supported by an atypical complement of repetitive sequence in the genome. Comparisons across strains demonstrate that E. huxleyi, which has long been considered a single species, harbours extensive genome variability reflected in different metabolic repertoires. Genome variability within this species complex seems to underpin its capacity both to thrive in habitats ranging from the equator to the subarctic and to form large-scale episodic blooms under a wide variety of environmental conditions. Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12221 SN - 0028-0836 SN - 1476-4687 VL - 499 IS - 7457 SP - 209 EP - 213 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Foerster, Verena A1 - Asrat, Asfawossen A1 - Ramsey, Christopher Bronk A1 - Brown, Erik T. A1 - Chapot, Melissa S. A1 - Deino, Alan A1 - Düsing, Walter A1 - Grove, Matthew A1 - Hahn, Annette A1 - Junginger, Annett A1 - Kaboth-Bahr, Stefanie A1 - Lane, Christine S. A1 - Opitz, Stephan A1 - Noren, Anders A1 - Roberts, Helen M. A1 - Stockhecke, Mona A1 - Tiedemann, Ralph A1 - Vidal, Celine M. A1 - Vogelsang, Ralf A1 - Cohen, Andrew S. A1 - Lamb, Henry F. A1 - Schaebitz, Frank A1 - Trauth, Martin H. T1 - Pleistocene climate variability in eastern Africa influenced hominin evolution JF - Nature geoscience N2 - Despite more than half a century of hominin fossil discoveries in eastern Africa, the regional environmental context of hominin evolution and dispersal is not well established due to the lack of continuous palaeoenvironmental records from one of the proven habitats of early human populations, particularly for the Pleistocene epoch. Here we present a 620,000-year environmental record from Chew Bahir, southern Ethiopia, which is proximal to key fossil sites. Our record documents the potential influence of different episodes of climatic variability on hominin biological and cultural transformation. The appearance of high anatomical diversity in hominin groups coincides with long-lasting and relatively stable humid conditions from similar to 620,000 to 275,000 years bp (episodes 1-6), interrupted by several abrupt and extreme hydroclimate perturbations. A pattern of pronounced climatic cyclicity transformed habitats during episodes 7-9 (similar to 275,000-60,000 years bp), a crucial phase encompassing the gradual transition from Acheulean to Middle Stone Age technologies, the emergence of Homo sapiens in eastern Africa and key human social and cultural innovations. Those accumulative innovations plus the alignment of humid pulses between northeastern Africa and the eastern Mediterranean during high-frequency climate oscillations of episodes 10-12 (similar to 60,000-10,000 years bp) could have facilitated the global dispersal of H. sapiens. KW - Evolutionary ecology KW - Limnology KW - Palaeoclimate Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-022-01032-y SN - 1752-0894 SN - 1752-0908 VL - 15 IS - 10 SP - 805 EP - 811 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Raddi, Roberto A1 - Hollands, M. A. A1 - Koester, D. A1 - Hermes, J. J. A1 - Gansicke, B. T. A1 - Heber, Ulrich A1 - Shen, Ken J. A1 - Townsley, D. M. A1 - Pala, Anna Francesca A1 - Reding, J. S. A1 - Toloza, O. F. A1 - Pelisoli, Ingrid Domingos A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Fusillo, Nicola Pietro Gentile A1 - Munari, Ullisse A1 - Strader, J. T1 - Partly burnt runaway stellar remnants from peculiar thermonuclear supernovae JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - We report the discovery of three stars that, along with the prototype LP 40-365, form a distinct class of chemically peculiar runaway stars that are the survivors of thermonuclear explosions. Spectroscopy of the four confirmed LP 40-365 stars finds ONe-dominated atmospheres enriched with remarkably similar amounts of nuclear ashes of partial O- and Si-burning. Kinematic evidence is consistent with ejection from a binary supernova progenitor; at least two stars have rest-frame velocities indicating they are unbound to the Galaxy. With masses and radii ranging between 0.20 and 0.28M(circle dot) and between 0.16 and 0.60 R-circle dot, respectively, we speculate these inflated white dwarfs are the partly burnt remnants of either peculiar Type Iax or electron-capture supernovae. Adopting supernova rates from the literature, we estimate that similar to 20 LP 40-365 stars brighter than 19 mag should be detectable within 2 kpc from the Sun at the end of the Gaia mission. We suggest that as they cool, these stars will evolve in their spectroscopic appearance, and eventually become peculiar O-rich white dwarfs. Finally, we stress that the discovery of new LP 40-365 stars will be useful to further constrain their evolution, supplying key boundary conditions to the modelling of explosion mechanisms, supernova rates, and nucleosynthetic yields of peculiar thermonuclear explosions. KW - stars: individual: LP 40-365 KW - subdwarfs KW - supernovae: general KW - white dwarfs KW - Galaxy: kinematics and dynamics Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz1618 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 489 IS - 2 SP - 1489 EP - 1508 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schaffenroth, Veronika A1 - Barlow, Brad N. A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Vuckovic, Maja A1 - Kilkenny, D. A1 - Wolz, M. A1 - Kupfer, Thomas A1 - Heber, Ulrich A1 - Drechsel, H. A1 - Kimeswenger, S. A1 - Marsh, T. A1 - Wolf, M. A1 - Pelisoli, Ingrid Domingos A1 - Freudenthal, Joseph A1 - Dreizler, S. A1 - Kreuzer, S. A1 - Ziegerer, E. T1 - The EREBOS project: Investigating the effect of substellar and low-mass stellar companions on late stellar evolution Survey, target selection, and atmospheric parameters JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - Eclipsing post-common-envelope binaries are highly important for resolving the poorly understood, very short-lived common-envelope phase of stellar evolution. Most hot subdwarfs (sdO/Bs) are the bare helium-burning cores of red giants that have lost almost all of their hydrogen envelope. This mass loss is often triggered by common-envelope interactions with close stellar or even substellar companions. Cool companions to hot subdwarf stars such as late-type stars and brown dwarfs are detectable from characteristic light-curve variations - reflection effects and often eclipses. In the recently published catalog of eclipsing binaries in the Galactic Bulge and in the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) survey, we discovered 125 new eclipsing systems showing a reflection effect seen by visual inspection of the light curves and using a machine-learning algorithm, in addition to the 36 systems previously discovered by the Optical Gravitational Lesing Experiment (OGLE) team. The Eclipsing Reflection Effect Binaries from Optical Surveys (EREBOS) project aims at analyzing all newly discovered eclipsing binaries of the HW Vir type (hot subdwarf + close, cool companion) based on a spectroscopic and photometric follow up to derive the mass distribution of the companions, constrain the fraction of substellar companions, and determine the minimum mass needed to strip off the red-giant envelope. To constrain the nature of the primary we derived the absolute magnitude and the reduced proper motion of all our targets with the help of the parallaxes and proper motions measured by the Gaia mission and compared those to the Gaia white-dwarf candidate catalog. It was possible to derive the nature of a subset of our targets, for which observed spectra are available, by measuring the atmospheric parameter of the primary, confirming that less than 10% of our systems are not sdO/Bs with cool companions but are white dwarfs or central stars of planetary nebula. This large sample of eclipsing hot subdwarfs with cool companions allowed us to derive a significant period distribution for hot subdwarfs with cool companions for the first time showing that the period distribution is much broader than previously thought and is ideally suited to finding the lowest-mass companions to hot subdwarf stars. The comparison with related binary populations shows that the period distribution of HW Vir systems is very similar to WD+dM systems and central stars of planetary nebula with cool companions. In the future, several new photometric surveys will be carried out, which will further increase the sample of this project, providing the potential to test many aspects of common-envelope theory and binary evolution. KW - binaries: eclipsing KW - brown dwarfs KW - binaries: spectroscopic KW - binaries: close KW - subdwarfs KW - surveys Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201936019 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 630 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ratzloff, Jeffrey K. A1 - Barlow, Brad N. A1 - Kupfer, Thomas A1 - Corcoran, Kyle A. A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Bauer, Evan A1 - Corbett, Henry T. A1 - Howard, Ward S. A1 - Glazier, Amy A1 - Law, Nicholas M. T1 - EVR-CB-001: An Evolving, Progenitor, White Dwarf Compact Binary Discovered with the Evryscope JF - The astrophysical journal : an international review of spectroscopy and astronomical physics N2 - We present EVR-CB-001, the discovery of a compact binary with an extremely low-mass (0.21 +/- 0.05M(circle dot)) helium core white dwarf progenitor (pre-He WD) and an unseen low-mass (0.32 +/- 0.06M(circle dot)) helium white dwarf (He WD) companion. He WDs are thought to evolve from the remnant helium-rich core of a main-sequence star stripped during the giant phase by a close companion. Low-mass He WDs are exotic objects (only about 0.2% of WDs are thought to be less than 0.3 M-circle dot), and are expected to be found in compact binaries. Pre-He WDs are even rarer, and occupy the intermediate phase after the core is stripped, but before the star becomes a fully degenerate WD and with a larger radius (approximate to 0.2R(circle dot)) than a typical WD. The primary component of EVR-CB-001 (the pre-He WD) was originally thought to be a hot subdwarf (sdB) star from its blue color and under-luminous magnitude, characteristic of sdBs. The mass, temperature (T-eff = 18,500 +/- 500 K), and surface gravity (log(g) = 4.96 +/- 0.04) solutions from this work are lower than values for typical hot subdwarfs. The primary is likely to be a post-red-giant branch, pre-He WD contracting into a He WD, and at a stage that places it nearest to sdBs on color-magnitude and T-eff-log(g) diagrams. EVR-CB-001 is expected to evolve into a fully double degenerate, compact system that should spin down and potentially evolve into a single hot subdwarf star. Single hot subdwarfs are observed, but progenitor systems have been elusive. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab3727 SN - 0004-637X SN - 1538-4357 VL - 883 IS - 1 PB - IOP Publ. Ltd. CY - Bristol ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fusillo, Nicola Pietro Gentile A1 - Tremblay, Pier-Emmanuel A1 - Gänsicke, Boris T. A1 - Manser, Christopher J. A1 - Cunningham, Tim A1 - Cukanovaite, Elena A1 - Hollands, Mark A1 - Marsh, Thomas A1 - Raddi, Roberto A1 - Jordan, Stefan A1 - Toonen, Silvia A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Barstow, Martin A1 - Cummings, Jeffrey D. T1 - A Gaia Data Release 2 catalogue of white dwarfs and a comparison with SDSS JF - Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society N2 - We present a catalogue of white dwarf candidates selected from the second data release of Gaia (DR2). We used a sample of spectroscopically confirmed white dwarfs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to map the entire space spanned by these objects in the Gaia Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. We then defined a set of cuts in absolute magnitude, colour, and a number of Gaia quality flags to remove the majority of contaminating objects. Finally, we adopt a method analogous to the one presented in our earlier SDSS photometric catalogues to calculate a probability of being a white dwarf (PWD) for all Gaia sources that passed the initial selection. The final catalogue is composed of 486641 stars with calculated PWD from which it is possible to select a sample of ≃260000 high-confidence white dwarf candidates in the magnitude range 8 < G < 21. By comparing this catalogue with a sample of SDSS white dwarf candidates, we estimate an upper limit in completeness of 85 per cent for white dwarfs with G ≤ 20 mag and Teff >7000 K, at high Galactic latitudes (|b| > 20°). However, the completeness drops at low Galactic latitudes, and the magnitude limit of the catalogue varies significantly across the sky as a function of Gaia’s scanning law. We also provide the list of objects within our sample with available SDSS spectroscopy. We use this spectroscopic sample to characterize the observed structure of the white dwarf distribution in the H–R diagram. KW - catalogues KW - surveys KW - white dwarfs Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty3016 SN - 0035-8711 SN - 1365-2966 VL - 482 IS - 4 SP - 4570 EP - 4591 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Geier, Stephan A1 - Raddi, Roberto A1 - Fusillo, Nicola Pietro Gentile A1 - Marsh, T. R. T1 - The population of hot subdwarf stars studied with Gaia BT - II. The Gaia DR2 catalogue of hot subluminous stars JF - Astronomy and astrophysics : an international weekly journal N2 - Based on data from the ESA Gaia Data Release 2 (DR2) and several ground-based, multi-band photometry surveys we have compiled an all-sky catalogue of 39 800 hot subluminous star candidates selected in Gaia DR2 by means of colour, absolute magnitude, and reduced proper motion cuts. We expect the majority of the candidates to be hot subdwarf stars of spectral type B and O, followed by blue horizontal branch stars of late B-type (HBB), hot post-AGB stars, and central stars of planetary nebulae. The contamination by cooler stars should be about 10%. The catalogue is magnitude limited to Gaia G < 19 mag and covers the whole sky. Except within the Galactic plane and LMC/SMC regions, we expect the catalogue to be almost complete up to about 1.5 kpc. The main purpose of this catalogue is to serve as input target list for the large-scale photometric and spectroscopic surveys which are ongoing or scheduled to start in the coming years. In the long run, securing a statistically significant sample of spectroscopically confirmed hot subluminous stars is key to advance towards a more detailed understanding of the latest stages of stellar evolution for single and binary stars. KW - subdwarfs KW - stars: horizontal-branch KW - catalogs Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201834236 SN - 0004-6361 SN - 1432-0746 VL - 621 PB - EDP Sciences CY - Les Ulis ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Leach, Taylor H. A1 - Beisner, Beatrix E. A1 - Carey, Cayelan C. A1 - Pernica, Patricia A1 - Rose, Kevin C. A1 - Huot, Yannick A1 - Brentrup, Jennifer A. A1 - Domaizon, Isabelle A1 - Grossart, Hans-Peter A1 - Ibelings, Bastiaan W. A1 - Jacquet, Stephan A1 - Kelly, Patrick T. A1 - Rusak, James A. A1 - Stockwell, Jason D. A1 - Straile, Dietmar A1 - Verburg, Piet T1 - Patterns and drivers of deep chlorophyll maxima structure in 100 lakes BT - the relative importance of light and thermal stratification JF - Limnology and oceanography N2 - The vertical distribution of chlorophyll in stratified lakes and reservoirs frequently exhibits a maximum peak deep in the water column, referred to as the deep chlorophyll maximum (DCM). DCMs are ecologically important hot spots of primary production and nutrient cycling, and their location can determine vertical habitat gradients for primary consumers. Consequently, the drivers of DCM structure regulate many characteristics of aquatic food webs and biogeochemistry. Previous studies have identified light and thermal stratification as important drivers of summer DCM depth, but their relative importance across a broad range of lakes is not well resolved. We analyzed profiles of chlorophyll fluorescence, temperature, and light during summer stratification from 100 lakes in the Global Lake Ecological Observatory Network (GLEON) and quantified two characteristics of DCM structure: depth and thickness. While DCMs do form in oligotrophic lakes, we found that they can also form in eutrophic to dystrophic lakes. Using a random forest algorithm, we assessed the relative importance of variables associated with light attenuation vs. thermal stratification for predicting DCM structure in lakes that spanned broad gradients of morphometry and transparency. Our analyses revealed that light attenuation was a more important predictor of DCM depth than thermal stratification and that DCMs deepen with increasing lake clarity. DCM thickness was best predicted by lake size with larger lakes having thicker DCMs. Additionally, our analysis demonstrates that the relative importance of light and thermal stratification on DCM structure is not uniform across a diversity of lake types. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.10656 SN - 0024-3590 SN - 1939-5590 VL - 63 IS - 2 SP - 628 EP - 646 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - GEN A1 - Mooij, Wolf M. A1 - Trolle, Dennis A1 - Jeppesen, Erik A1 - Arhonditsis, George B. A1 - Belolipetsky, Pavel V. A1 - Chitamwebwa, Deonatus B. R. A1 - Degermendzhy, Andrey G. A1 - DeAngelis, Donald L. A1 - Domis, Lisette Nicole de Senerpont A1 - Downing, Andrea S. A1 - Elliott, J. Alex A1 - Fragoso Jr., Carlos Ruberto A1 - Gaedke, Ursula A1 - Genova, Svetlana N. A1 - Gulati, Ramesh D. A1 - Håkanson, Lars A1 - Hamilton, David P. A1 - Hipsey, Matthew R. A1 - ‘t Hoen, Jochem A1 - Hülsmann, Stephan A1 - Los, F. Hans A1 - Makler-Pick, Vardit A1 - Petzoldt, Thomas A1 - Prokopkin, Igor G. A1 - Rinke, Karsten A1 - Schep, Sebastiaan A. A1 - Tominaga, Koji A1 - Van Dam, Anne A. A1 - Van Nes, Egbert H. A1 - Wells, Scott A. A1 - Janse, Jan H. T1 - Challenges and opportunities for integrating lake ecosystem modelling approaches T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - A large number and wide variety of lake ecosystem models have been developed and published during the past four decades. We identify two challenges for making further progress in this field. One such challenge is to avoid developing more models largely following the concept of others ('reinventing the wheel'). The other challenge is to avoid focusing on only one type of model, while ignoring new and diverse approaches that have become available ('having tunnel vision'). In this paper, we aim at improving the awareness of existing models and knowledge of concurrent approaches in lake ecosystem modelling, without covering all possible model tools and avenues. First, we present a broad variety of modelling approaches. To illustrate these approaches, we give brief descriptions of rather arbitrarily selected sets of specific models. We deal with static models (steady state and regression models), complex dynamic models (CAEDYM, CE-QUAL-W2, Delft 3D-ECO, LakeMab, LakeWeb, MyLake, PCLake, PROTECH, SALMO), structurally dynamic models and minimal dynamic models. We also discuss a group of approaches that could all be classified as individual based: super-individual models (Piscator, Charisma), physiologically structured models, stage-structured models and traitbased models. We briefly mention genetic algorithms, neural networks, Kalman filters and fuzzy logic. Thereafter, we zoom in, as an in-depth example, on the multi-decadal development and application of the lake ecosystem model PCLake and related models (PCLake Metamodel, Lake Shira Model, IPH-TRIM3D-PCLake). In the discussion, we argue that while the historical development of each approach and model is understandable given its 'leading principle', there are many opportunities for combining approaches. We take the point of view that a single 'right' approach does not exist and should not be strived for. Instead, multiple modelling approaches, applied concurrently to a given problem, can help develop an integrative view on the functioning of lake ecosystems. We end with a set of specific recommendations that may be of help in the further development of lake ecosystem models. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1326 KW - aquatic KW - food web dynamics KW - plankton KW - nutrients KW - spatial KW - lake KW - freshwater KW - marine KW - community KW - population KW - hydrology KW - eutrophication KW - global change KW - climate warming KW - fisheries KW - biodiversity KW - management KW - mitigation KW - adaptive processes KW - non-linear dynamics KW - analysis KW - bifurcation KW - understanding KW - prediction KW - model limitations KW - model integration Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-429839 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1326 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mooij, Wolf M. A1 - Trolle, Dennis A1 - Jeppesen, Erik A1 - Arhonditsis, George B. A1 - Belolipetsky, Pavel V. A1 - Chitamwebwa, Deonatus B. R. A1 - Degermendzhy, Andrey G. A1 - DeAngelis, Donald L. A1 - Domis, Lisette Nicole de Senerpont A1 - Downing, Andrea S. A1 - Elliott, J. Alex A1 - Fragoso Jr, Carlos Ruberto A1 - Gaedke, Ursula A1 - Genova, Svetlana N. A1 - Gulati, Ramesh D. A1 - Håkanson, Lars A1 - Hamilton, David P. A1 - Hipsey, Matthew R. A1 - ‘t Hoen, Jochem A1 - Hülsmann, Stephan A1 - Los, F. Hans A1 - Makler-Pick, Vardit A1 - Petzoldt, Thomas A1 - Prokopkin, Igor G. A1 - Rinke, Karsten A1 - Schep, Sebastiaan A. A1 - Tominaga, Koji A1 - Van Dam, Anne A. A1 - Van Nes, Egbert H. A1 - Wells, Scott A. A1 - Janse, Jan H. T1 - Challenges and opportunities for integrating lake ecosystem modelling approaches JF - Aquatic ecology N2 - A large number and wide variety of lake ecosystem models have been developed and published during the past four decades. We identify two challenges for making further progress in this field. One such challenge is to avoid developing more models largely following the concept of others ('reinventing the wheel'). The other challenge is to avoid focusing on only one type of model, while ignoring new and diverse approaches that have become available ('having tunnel vision'). In this paper, we aim at improving the awareness of existing models and knowledge of concurrent approaches in lake ecosystem modelling, without covering all possible model tools and avenues. First, we present a broad variety of modelling approaches. To illustrate these approaches, we give brief descriptions of rather arbitrarily selected sets of specific models. We deal with static models (steady state and regression models), complex dynamic models (CAEDYM, CE-QUAL-W2, Delft 3D-ECO, LakeMab, LakeWeb, MyLake, PCLake, PROTECH, SALMO), structurally dynamic models and minimal dynamic models. We also discuss a group of approaches that could all be classified as individual based: super-individual models (Piscator, Charisma), physiologically structured models, stage-structured models and traitbased models. We briefly mention genetic algorithms, neural networks, Kalman filters and fuzzy logic. Thereafter, we zoom in, as an in-depth example, on the multi-decadal development and application of the lake ecosystem model PCLake and related models (PCLake Metamodel, Lake Shira Model, IPH-TRIM3D-PCLake). In the discussion, we argue that while the historical development of each approach and model is understandable given its 'leading principle', there are many opportunities for combining approaches. We take the point of view that a single 'right' approach does not exist and should not be strived for. Instead, multiple modelling approaches, applied concurrently to a given problem, can help develop an integrative view on the functioning of lake ecosystems. We end with a set of specific recommendations that may be of help in the further development of lake ecosystem models. KW - aquatic KW - food web dynamics KW - plankton KW - nutrients KW - spatial KW - lake KW - freshwater KW - marine KW - community KW - population KW - hydrology KW - eutrophication KW - global change KW - climate warming KW - fisheries KW - biodiversity KW - management KW - mitigation KW - adaptive processes KW - non-linear dynamics KW - analysis KW - bifurcation KW - understanding KW - prediction KW - model limitations KW - model integration Y1 - 2010 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s10452-010-9339-3 SN - 1573-5125 SN - 1386-2588 VL - 44 SP - 633 EP - 667 PB - Springer Science + Business Media B.V. CY - Dordrecht ER -