T
Tomoo Nagahama
Researcher at Nagoya University
Publications - 50
Citations - 1096
Tomoo Nagahama is an academic researcher from Nagoya University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radiometer & Molecular cloud. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 47 publications receiving 925 citations. Previous affiliations of Tomoo Nagahama include National Institute for Environmental Studies.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Overall Distribution of Dense Molecular Gas and Star Formation in the Taurus Cloud Complex
Journal ArticleDOI
Overview and early results of the Superconducting Submillimeter‐Wave Limb‐Emission Sounder (SMILES)
Kenichi Kikuchi,Toshiyuki Nishibori,Satoshi Ochiai,Hiroyuki Ozeki,Yoshihisa Irimajiri,Yasuko Kasai,Makoto Koike,Takeshi Manabe,Kazuo Mizukoshi,Yasuhiro Murayama,Tomoo Nagahama,Takuki Sano,Ryota Sato,Masumichi Seta,Chikako Takahashi,Chikako Takahashi,Masahiro Takayanagi,Harunobu Masuko,Junji Inatani,Makoto Suzuki,Masato Shiotani +20 more
TL;DR: The Superconducting Submillimeter-Wave Limb-Emission Sounder (SMILES) was successfully launched and attached to the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM) on the International Space Station (ISS) on 25 September 2009 as discussed by the authors.
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A Spatially Complete 13CO J = 1-0 Survey of the Orion A Cloud
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the results of new 13CO J = 1-0 observations of the Orion A molecular cloud made with two 4 m telescopes at Nagoya University and provided the first complete coverage of the cloud in 13CO with a reasonably high angular resolution relative to the cloud's size.
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Effects of atmospheric light scattering on spectroscopic observations of greenhouse gases from space: Validation of PPDF‐based CO2 retrievals from GOSAT
Sergey Oshchepkov,Andrey Bril,Tatsuya Yokota,Isamu Morino,Yukio Yoshida,Tsuneo Matsunaga,Dmitry Belikov,Debra Wunch,Paul O. Wennberg,Geoffrey C. Toon,Christopher W. O'Dell,André Butz,S. Guerlet,Austin Cogan,Hartmut Boesch,Nawo Eguchi,Nicholas M. Deutscher,Nicholas M. Deutscher,David W. T. Griffith,R. Macatangay,Justus Notholt,Ralf Sussmann,Markus Rettinger,Vanessa Sherlock,John Robinson,Esko Kyrö,Pauli Heikkinen,Dietrich G. Feist,Tomoo Nagahama,Nikolay Kadygrov,Shamil Maksyutov,Osamu Uchino,Hiroshi Watanabe +32 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the photon path length probability density function method was applied to validate XCO2retrievals from Greenhouse gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT) data obtained during 22 months starting from June 2009.