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Institution

Jagiellonian University

EducationKrakow, Poland
About: Jagiellonian University is a education organization based out in Krakow, Poland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Catalysis. The organization has 17438 authors who have published 44092 publications receiving 862633 citations. The organization is also known as: Academia Cracoviensis & Akademia Krakowska.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a new calibration scheme, which is called facet calibration, is presented to obtain deep high-resolution LOFAR High Band Antenna images using the Dutch part of the array.
Abstract: LOFAR, the Low-Frequency Array, is a powerful new radio telescope operating between 10 and 240 MHz. LOFAR allows detailed sensitive high-resolution studies of the low-frequency radio sky. At the same time LOFAR also provides excellent short baseline coverage to map diffuse extended emission. However, producing highquality deep images is challenging due to the presence of direction-dependent calibration errors, caused by imperfect knowledge of the station beam shapes and the ionosphere. Furthermore, the large data volume and presence of station clock errors present additional difficulties. In this paper we present a new calibration scheme, which we name facet calibration, to obtain deep high-resolution LOFAR High Band Antenna images using the Dutch part of the array. This scheme solves and corrects the direction-dependent errors in a number of facets that cover the observed field of view. Facet calibration provides close to thermal noise limited images for a typical 8 hr observing run at similar to 5. resolution, meeting the specifications of the LOFAR Tier-1 northern survey.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patterns of sequence variation within clades suggested long‐term demographic stability in the southern groups, moderate and relatively old demographic growth in the populations inhabiting central Europe, and high growth in some of the groups that colonized northern parts of Europe after the last glacial maximum.
Abstract: The newts Triturus vulgaris and Triturus montandoni are sister species that exhibit contrasting levels of intraspecific morphological variation. Triturus vulgaris has a broad Eurasiatic distribution encompassing both formerly glaciated and unglaciated areas and shows substantial morphological differentiation in the southern part of its range, while T. montandoni , confined to the Carpathians, is morphologically uniform. We analysed sequence variation of two mtDNA fragments of the total length of c . 1850 bp in 285 individuals of both species collected from 103 localities. Phylogenetic analysis of 200 unique haplotypes defined 12 major clades, their age estimated at c . 4.5–1.0 million years (Myr). Most of the older clades were found in the southern part of the range, and also in central Europe, mainly in Romania. The distribution of mtDNA clades points to the existence of several glacial refugia, located in the Caucasus region, Anatolia, the Balkan Peninsula, Italy, and more to the north in central Europe. The concordance between mtDNA based phylogeny and the distribution of T. vulgaris subspecies was weak. Triturus montandoni haplotypes did not form a monophyletic group. Instead they were found in six clades, in five of them mixed with T. vulgaris haplotypes, most likely as a result of past or ongoing hybridization and multiple introgression of mtDNA from T. vulgaris to T. montandoni . Patterns of sequence variation within clades suggested long-term demographic stability in the southern groups, moderate and relatively old demographic growth in the populations inhabiting central Europe, and high growth in some of the groups that colonized northern parts of Europe after the last glacial maximum.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a wavelet decomposition of the turbulent velocity field into Alfven, slow, and fast modes is presented, which is an extension of the Cho & Lazarian decomposition approach based on Fourier transforms.
Abstract: We study compressible magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, which holds the key to many astrophysical processes, including star formation and cosmic-ray propagation. To account for the variations of the magnetic field in the strongly turbulent fluid, we use wavelet decomposition of the turbulent velocity field into Alfven, slow, and fast modes, which presents an extension of the Cho & Lazarian decomposition approach based on Fourier transforms. The wavelets allow us to follow the variations of the local direction of the magnetic field and therefore improve the quality of the decomposition compared to the Fourier transforms, which are done in the mean field reference frame. For each resulting component, we calculate the spectra and two-point statistics such as longitudinal and transverse structure functions as well as higher order intermittency statistics. In addition, we perform a Helmholtz- Hodge decomposition of the velocity field into incompressible and compressible parts and analyze these components. We find that the turbulence intermittency is different for different components, and we show that the intermittency statistics depend on whether the phenomenon was studied in the global reference frame related to the mean magnetic field or in the frame defined by the local magnetic field. The dependencies of the measures we obtained are different for different components of the velocity; for instance, we show that while the Alfven mode intermittency changes marginally with the Mach number, the intermittency of the fast mode is substantially affected by the change.

204 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: A critical examination of the literature reveals that HMs react with the photosynthetic apparatus at various levels of organization and architecture i.e. accumulation of metals in leaf, partitioning in leaf tissues like stomata, mesophyll and bundle sheath, metal interaction with cytosolic enzymes and organics, alteration of the functions of chloroplast membranes; supramolecular level action, particularly on PS II, PS I, membrane acyl lipids, and carrier proteins in vascular tissues; molecular level interactions, particularly with photosyntynthetic carbon reduction cycle enzymes, x
Abstract: Use of phytotoxicity of metallic compounds dates back to 1896, when the French farmers applied Bordeaux mixture (copper sulphate, lime and water) to control fungal pests (Martin and Woodcock 1983). Currently, global heavy metal (HM) pollution is a serious environmental concern. Photosynthetic functions have been invariably affected either directly or indirectly by HMs (Baszynski and Tukendorf 1984; Clijsters and Van Assche 1985; Baszytniski 1986; Sheoran et al. 1990; Greger and Ogren 1991; Krupa and Baszynski 1985, 1995; Prasad 1995a, 1997). A critical examination of the literature reveals that HMs react with the photosynthetic apparatus at various levels of organization and architecture i.e. accumulation of metals in leaf (main photosynthetic organ); partitioning in leaf tissues like stomata, mesophyll and bundle sheath; metal interaction with cytosolic enzymes and organics; alteration of the functions of chloroplast membranes; supramolecular level action, particularly on PS II, PS I, membrane acyl lipids, and carrier proteins in vascular tissues; molecular level interactions, particularly with photosynthetic carbon reduction cycle enzymes, xanthophyll cycle and adenylates.

204 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the essential oils obtained from various plant species (genera: Origanum, Satureja, Salvia, Sideritis, Thymus, Calamintha, Lavandula, Ziziphora and Thymbra) collected in Turkey were studied by two complementary methods, ATR/FT-IR and NIR-FT-Raman spectroscopy.

204 citations


Authors

Showing all 17729 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Roxana Mehran141137899398
Brad Abbott137156698604
M. Morii1341664102074
M. Franklin134158195304
John Huth131108785341
Wladyslaw Dabrowski12999079728
Rostislav Konoplich12881173790
Michel Vetterli12890176064
Francois Corriveau128102275729
Christoph Falk Anders12673468828
Tomasz Bulik12169886211
Elzbieta Richter-Was11879369127
S. H. Robertson116131158582
S. J. Chen116155962804
David M. Stern10727147461
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023162
2022510
20212,769
20202,777
20192,736
20182,735