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Nathan Bourne

Researcher at University of Edinburgh

Publications -  132
Citations -  7552

Nathan Bourne is an academic researcher from University of Edinburgh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Redshift. The author has an hindex of 49, co-authored 132 publications receiving 6588 citations. Previous affiliations of Nathan Bourne include UK Astronomy Technology Centre & University of Nottingham.

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Herschel-ATLAS: rapid evolution of dust in galaxies over the last 5 billion years

TL;DR: The first direct and unbiased measurement of the evolution of the dust mass function of galaxies over the past 5 billion years of cosmic history using data from the Science Demonstration Phase of the Herschel-Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (Herschel-ATLAS) is presented in this paper.
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Gravitational Lens Models Based on Submillimeter Array Imaging of Herschel-selected Strongly Lensed Sub-millimeter Galaxies at z > 1.5

R. S. Bussmann, +55 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a high-spatial resolution imaging and Gemini-South and multiple mirror telescope optical spectroscopy of strong lens candidates discovered in the two widest extragalactic surveys conducted by the Herschel Space Observatory.
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Herschel-ATLAS: A Binary HyLIRG Pinpointing a Cluster of Starbursting Protoellipticals

Rob Ivison, +55 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured accurate gas and star formation surface densities using subarcsecond interferometric imaging of the best candidate hyperluminous infrared galaxies from the widest Herschel extragalactic imaging survey, which led to the discovery of at least four intrinsically luminous z = 2.41 galaxies across an {ap}100 kpc region of starbursting protoellipticals.
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Galaxy And Mass Assembly: The G02 field, Herschel-ATLAS target selection and data release 3

Ivan K. Baldry, +45 more
TL;DR: The Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey as discussed by the authors is a spectroscopic redshift and multiwavelength photometric survey in three equatorial regions each of 60.0, G12, and G15.