Institution
Australian National University
Education•Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia•
About: Australian National University is a education organization based out in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Galaxy. The organization has 34419 authors who have published 109261 publications receiving 4315448 citations. The organization is also known as: The Australian National University & ANU.
Topics: Population, Galaxy, Context (language use), Politics, Stars
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, an inverse solution for the sea-level data are sought that include both ice- and earth-model parameters as unknowns, and both global (northwestern Europe as a whole) and regional (subsets of the data) solutions have been made for earth model parameters and ice height scaling parameters.
Abstract: Northwestern Europe remains a key region for testing models of glacial isostasy because of the good geological record of crustal response to the glacial unloading since the time of the Last Glacial Maximum. Models for this rebound and associated sea-level change require a detailed knowledge of the ice-sheet geometry, including the ice thickness through time. Existing ice-sheet reconstructions are strongly model-dependent, and inversions of sea-level data for the mantle response may be a function of the model assumptions. Thus inverse solutions for the sea-level data are sought that include both ice- and earth-model parameters as unknowns. Sea-level data from Fennoscandia, the North Sea, the British Isles and the Atlantic and English Channel coasts have been evaluated and incorporated into the solutions. The starting ice sheet for Fennoscandia is based on a reconstruction of a model by Denton & Hughes (1981) that is characterized by quasi-parabolic cross-sections and symmetry about the load centre. Both global (northwestern Europe as a whole) and regional (subsets of the data) solutions have been made for earth-model parameters and ice-height scaling parameters. The key results are as follows. (1) The response of the upper mantle to the changing ice and water loads is spatially relatively homogenous across Scandinavia, the North Sea and the British Isles. (2) This response can be adequately modelled by an effective elastic lithosphere of thickness 65–85 km and by an effective upper-mantle viscosity (from the base of the lithosphere to the 670 km depth seismic discontinuity) of about 3–4×1020 Pa s. The effective lower-mantle viscosity is at least an order of magnitude greater. (3) The ice thickness over Scandinavia at the time of maximum glaciation was only about 2000 m, much less than the 3400 m assumed in the Denton & Hughes model. (4) The ice profiles are asymmetric about the centre of the ice sheet with those over the western part being consistent with quasi-parabolic functions whereas the ice heights over the eastern and southern regions increase much more slowly with distance inwards from the ice margin.
587 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of globalization on welfare state effort in the OECD countries is assessed in terms of total trade, imports from low wage economies, foreign direct investment, and financial market integration.
Abstract: This article assesses the impact of globalization on welfare state effort in the OECD countries. Globalization is defined in terms of total trade, imports from low wage economies, foreign direct investment, and financial market integration. Welfare effort is analyzed in terms both of public spending (and separately on social service provision and income transfer programs) and taxation (effective rates of capital taxation and the ratio of capital to labor and consumption taxes). Year-to-year increases in total trade and international financial openness in the past three decades have been associated with less government spending. In contrast, integration into global markets has not been associated either with reductions in capital tax rates, or with shifts in the burden of taxation from capital to consumption and labor income. Moreover, countries with greater inflows and outflows of foreigndirect investment tend to tax capital more heavily.
585 citations
••
TL;DR: The coherence time observed here is long enough that nuclear spins travelling at 9 kilometres per hour in a crystal would have a lower decoherence with distance than light in an optical fibre, enabling some very early approaches to entanglement distribution to be revisited, in particular those in which the spins are transported rather than the light.
Abstract: This work was supported by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Quantum Computation and Communication Technology (CE110001027), and M.J.S. was supported by an Australian Research Council Future
Fellowship (FT110100919). J.J.L. was supported by the Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand (contract UOO1221).
584 citations
••
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the processing of the Gaia DR2 data, and describe the criteria used to select the sample published in Gaia DR 2, and explore the data set to assess its quality.
Abstract: Context. The Gaia spacecraft of the European Space Agency (ESA) has been securing observations of solar system objects (SSOs) since the beginning of its operations. Data Release 2 (DR2) contains the observations of a selected sample of 14,099 SSOs. These asteroids have been already identified and have been numbered by the Minor Planet Center repository. Positions are provided for each Gaia observation at CCD level. As additional information, complementary to astrometry, the apparent brightness of SSOs in the unfiltered G band is also provided for selected observations.Aims. We explain the processing of SSO data, and describe the criteria we used to select the sample published in Gaia DR2. We then explore the data set to assess its quality.Methods. To exploit the main data product for the solar system in Gaia DR2, which is the epoch astrometry of asteroids, it is necessary to take into account the unusual properties of the uncertainty, as the position information is nearly one-dimensional. When this aspect is handled appropriately, an orbit fit can be obtained with post-fit residuals that are overall consistent with the a-priori error model that was used to define individual values of the astrometric uncertainty. The role of both random and systematic errors is described. The distribution of residuals allowed us to identify possible contaminants in the data set (such as stars). Photometry in the G band was compared to computed values from reference asteroid shapes and to the flux registered at the corresponding epochs by the red and blue photometers (RP and BP).Results. The overall astrometric performance is close to the expectations, with an optimal range of brightness G ~ 12 − 17. In this range, the typical transit-level accuracy is well below 1 mas. For fainter asteroids, the growing photon noise deteriorates the performance. Asteroids brighter than G ~ 12 are affected by a lower performance of the processing of their signals. The dramatic improvement brought by Gaia DR2 astrometry of SSOs is demonstrated by comparisons to the archive data and by preliminary tests on the detection of subtle non-gravitational effects.
584 citations
••
University of Pittsburgh1, J. Craig Venter Institute2, Imperial College London3, University of Dundee4, New England Biolabs5, University of Edinburgh6, Lyon College7, Australian National University8, University of Toledo9, University of California, Davis10, Smith College11, Washington University in St. Louis12, New York Blood Center13, National Institutes of Health14, University of Göttingen15, University of Alabama at Birmingham16, Johns Hopkins University17
TL;DR: In this article, the authors sequenced the ∼90 megabase (Mb) genome of the human filarial parasite Brugia malayi and predicted ∼11,500 protein coding genes in 71 Mb of robustly assembled sequence.
Abstract: Parasitic nematodes that cause elephantiasis and river blindness threaten hundreds of millions of people in the developing world. We have sequenced the ∼90 megabase (Mb) genome of the human filarial parasite Brugia malayi and predict ∼11,500 protein coding genes in 71 Mb of robustly assembled sequence. Comparative analysis with the free-living, model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans revealed that, despite these genes having maintained little conservation of local synteny during ∼350 million years of evolution, they largely remain in linkage on chromosomal units. More than 100 conserved operons were identified. Analysis of the predicted proteome provides evidence for adaptations of B. malayi to niches in its human and vector hosts and insights into the molecular basis of a mutualistic relationship with its Wolbachia endosymbiont. These findings offer a foundation for rational drug design.
583 citations
Authors
Showing all 34925 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Cyrus Cooper | 204 | 1869 | 206782 |
Nicholas G. Martin | 192 | 1770 | 161952 |
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
Anton M. Koekemoer | 168 | 1127 | 106796 |
Robert G. Webster | 158 | 843 | 90776 |
Ashok Kumar | 151 | 5654 | 164086 |
Andrew White | 149 | 1494 | 113874 |
Bernhard Schölkopf | 148 | 1092 | 149492 |
Paul Mitchell | 146 | 1378 | 95659 |
Liming Dai | 141 | 781 | 82937 |
Thomas J. Smith | 140 | 1775 | 113919 |
Michael J. Keating | 140 | 1169 | 76353 |
Joss Bland-Hawthorn | 136 | 1114 | 77593 |
Harold A. Mooney | 135 | 450 | 100404 |