E
Edward L. Wright
Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles
Publications - 662
Citations - 137397
Edward L. Wright is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cosmic microwave background & Galaxy. The author has an hindex of 119, co-authored 649 publications receiving 128250 citations. Previous affiliations of Edward L. Wright include Princeton University & University of California, Berkeley.
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WHO collaborative study to assess the suitability of an interim standard for antibodies to Ebola virus
Dianna E. Wilkinson,Mark Page,Neil Almond,Robert F. Anderson,Neil G. Berry,Thomas Dougall,Stacey Efstathiou,Mark Hassall,Giada Mattiuzzo,Rigsby Peter,Nicola J. Rose,Silke Schepelmann,Lindsay Stone,Philip D. Minor,Beatrice Labrosse,Christophe Leculier,Delphine Pannetier,Thomas Strecker,Verena Krähling,Barbara S. Schnierle,Maria Rosaria Capobianchi,Concetta Castilletti,Derek Gatherer,Lisa A. Bishop,Katharina Hartman,Robert M. Lauder,Edward L. Wright,Richard S. Tedder,Dhan Samuel,Steve Dicks,Thomas L. Rudge,Graham Simmons,Gerardo Kaplan,Surender Khuran,Carol D. Weiss,Wayne Hogrefe,Nicole Rodriguez,Allen Hsu,Anna N. Honko,Richard S. Bennett,Jamie Pettitt,Krisztina Janosko,Jonathan Marchand,Elena Postnikova,Hua Wu,Anthony Griffiths,Jay W. Hooper +46 more
TL;DR: This report describes the development and worldwide collaborative study evaluation of a panel of candidate Ebola antibody preparations for the selection of the most appropriate candidate to serve as the interim WHO standard for Ebola antibody assays.
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Source Counts in the Chronometric Cosmology
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the chronometric model cannot explain the steep number versus flux law for quasars or extragalactic radio sources, and that the observed N(S) law is steeper than the steepest possible chronometric prediction.
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The mission operations system for Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
TL;DR: The challenges to manage a high data rate, cryogenic, low earth-orbit mission; maintaining safe on-orbit operations, fast anomaly recoveries, production and dissemination of high quality science products, given the constraints imposed by funding profiles for small space missions are described.
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Nearby M, L, and T Dwarfs Discovered by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE)
Maggie A. Thompson,J. Davy Kirkpatrick,Gregory N. Mace,Gregory N. Mace,Michael C. Cushing,Christopher R. Gelino,Roger L. Griffith,Michael F. Skrutskie,Peter R. Eisenhardt,Edward L. Wright,Kenneth A. Marsh,Katholeen Mix,Charles A. Beichman,Jacqueline K. Faherty,Odette Toloza,Jocelyn Ferrara,Brian Apodaca,Ian S. McLean,Joshua S. Bloom +18 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented spectra, photometry, proper motions, and distance estimates for forty-two low-mass star and brown dwarf candidates discovered by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE).
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Observed asteroid surface area in the thermal infrared
C. R. Nugent,Amy Mainzer,Joseph Masiero,Edward L. Wright,James M. Bauer,Tommy Grav,Emily Kramer,Sarah Sonnett +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider what fraction of an asteroid's surface area contributes the bulk of the emitted thermal flux for two model asteroids of different shapes over a range of thermal parameters.