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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
A. Abramowski, Fabio Acero, Felix Aharonian1, Felix Aharonian2  +205 moreInstitutions (21)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors obtained upper limits on line-like emission in the energy range between ~500 GeV and ~25 TeV for the central part of the Milky Way halo and for extragalactic observations, complementing recent limits obtained with the Fermi-LAT instrument at lower energies.
Abstract: Gamma-ray line signatures can be expected in the very-high-energy (VHE; E_\gamma > 100 GeV) domain due to self-annihilation or decay of dark matter (DM) particles in space. Such a signal would be readily distinguishable from astrophysical \gamma-ray sources that in most cases produce continuous spectra which span over several orders of magnitude in energy. Using data collected with the H.E.S.S. \gamma-ray instrument, upper limits on line-like emission are obtained in the energy range between ~500 GeV and ~25 TeV for the central part of the Milky Way halo and for extragalactic observations, complementing recent limits obtained with the Fermi-LAT instrument at lower energies. No statistically significant signal could be found. For monochromatic \gamma-ray line emission, flux limits of (2x10^-7 - 2x10^-5) m^-2 s^-1 sr^-1 and (1x10^-8 - 2x10^-6) m^-2 s^-1 sr^-1 are obtained for the central part of the Milky Way halo and extragalactic observations, respectively. For a DM particle mass of 1 TeV, limits on the velocity-averaged DM annihilation cross section (\chi\chi -> \gamma\gamma) reach ~10^-27 cm^3 s^-1, based on the Einasto parametrization of the Galactic DM halo density profile.

295 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Dae-Kyum Kim1, Jaewook Lee1, Sae Rom Kim1, Dong-Sic Choi1, Yae Jin Yoon1, Ji-Hyun Kim1, Gyeongyun Go1, Dinh Nhung1, Kahye Hong1, Su Chul Jang1, Si-Hyun Kim1, Kyong-Su Park1, Oh Youn Kim1, Hyun Taek Park1, Ji-Hye Seo1, Elena Aikawa2, Monika Baj-Krzyworzeka3, Bas W.M. van Balkom4, Mattias Belting5, Lionel Blanc6, Vincent C. Bond7, Antonella Bongiovanni8, Francesc E. Borràs9, Luc Buée10, Edit I. Buzás11, Lesley Cheng12, Aled Clayton13, Emanuele Cocucci2, Charles S. Dela Cruz14, Dominic M. Desiderio15, Dolores Di Vizio16, Karin M. Ekström17, Juan M. Falcón-Pérez, Chris Gardiner18, Bernd Giebel19, David W. Greening20, Julia Christina Gross21, Dwijendra K. Gupta, An Hendrix22, Andrew F. Hill12, Michelle M. Hill23, Esther N. M. Nolte-‘t Hoen4, Do Won Hwang24, Jameel M. Inal25, Medicharla V. Jagannadham26, Muthuvel Jayachandran27, Young Koo Jee28, Malene Rytter Jørgensen29, Kwang Pyo Kim30, Yoon Keun Kim31, Thomas Kislinger32, Cecilia Lässer17, Dong Soo Lee24, Hakmo Lee24, Johannes P.T.M. van Leeuwen33, Thomas Lener, Ming-Lin Liu34, Ming-Lin Liu35, Jan Lötvall17, Antonio Marcilla36, Suresh Mathivanan20, Andreas Möller37, Jess Morhayim33, François Mullier38, Irina Nazarenko39, Rienk Nieuwland40, Diana N. Nunes, Ken C Pang12, Ken C Pang41, Jaesung Park1, Tushar Patel27, Gabriella Pocsfalvi8, Hernando A. del Portillo, Ulrich Putz12, Marcel I. Ramirez42, Marcio L. Rodrigues43, Marcio L. Rodrigues42, Tae-Young Roh1, Felix Royo, Susmita Sahoo44, Raymond M. Schiffelers4, Shivani Sharma45, Pia Siljander46, Richard J. Simpson20, Carolina Soekmadji47, Philip D. Stahl48, Allan Stensballe29, Ewa Stępień3, Hidetoshi Tahara49, Arne Trummer50, Hadi Valadi17, Laura J Vella12, Sun Nyunt Wai51, Kenneth W. Witwer52, María Yáñez-Mó, Hyewon Youn24, Reinhard Zeidler53, Yong Song Gho1 
Pohang University of Science and Technology1, Harvard University2, Jagiellonian University3, Utrecht University4, Lund University5, North Shore-LIJ Health System6, Morehouse School of Medicine7, National Research Council8, Autonomous University of Barcelona9, French Institute of Health and Medical Research10, Semmelweis University11, University of Melbourne12, Cardiff University13, Yale University14, University of Tennessee Health Science Center15, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center16, University of Gothenburg17, University of Oxford18, University of Duisburg-Essen19, La Trobe University20, German Cancer Research Center21, Ghent University22, University of Queensland23, Seoul National University24, London Metropolitan University25, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research26, Mayo Clinic27, Dankook University28, Aalborg University29, Kyung Hee University30, Ewha Womans University31, University of Toronto32, Erasmus University Rotterdam33, University of Pennsylvania34, Temple University35, University of Valencia36, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute37, Université catholique de Louvain38, University of Freiburg39, University of Amsterdam40, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research41, Oswaldo Cruz Foundation42, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro43, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai44, University of California, Los Angeles45, University of Helsinki46, Queensland University of Technology47, Washington University in St. Louis48, Hiroshima University49, Hannover Medical School50, Umeå University51, Johns Hopkins University52, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich53
TL;DR: An improved version of EVpedia, a public database for EVs research, is presented, which contains a database of publications and vesicular components, identification of orthologous vesicle components, bioinformatic tools and a personalized function.
Abstract: Motivation: Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are spherical bilayered proteolipids, harboring various bioactive molecules. Due to the complexity of the vesicular nomenclatures and components, online searches for EV-related publications and vesicular components are currently challenging. Results: We present an improved version of EVpedia, a public database for EVs research. This community web portal contains a database of publications and vesicular components, identification of orthologous vesicular components, bioinformatic tools and a personalized function. EVpedia includes 6879 publications, 172 080 vesicular components from 263 high-throughput datasets, and has been accessed more than 65 000 times from more than 750 cities. In addition, about 350 members from 73 international research groups have participated in developing EVpedia. This free web-based database might serve as a useful resource to stimulate the emerging field of EV research. Availability and implementation: The web site was implemented in PHP, Java, MySQL and Apache, and is freely available at http://evpedia.info.

294 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Since 1992 the mouse has become an excellent model for experimental atherosclerosis research, and of the genetically engineered models, the apoE -- deficient model is the only one that develops extensive atherosclerotic lesions on a chow diet.
Abstract: Since 1992 the mouse has become an excellent model for experimental atherosclerosis research. Until 1992, the diet -- induced atherosclerosis mouse model has been used effectively, but the lesions tended to be small and were limited to early fatty-streak stage. This model was also criticized because of the toxicity and inflammatory responses due to the diet. In 1992 the first line of gene targeted animal models, namely apolipoprotein E -- knockout mice was developed. Of the genetically engineered models, the apoE -- deficient model is the only one that develops extensive atherosclerotic lesions on a chow diet. It is also the model in which the lesions have been characterized most thoroughly. The lesions develop into fibrous plaques; however, there is no evidence that plaque rupture occurs in this model. The LDL receptor - deficient model has elevated LDL levels, but no lesions, or only very small lesions, form on the chow diet, however, robust lesions do form on the western-type diet. The creation of apoE -- knockout mice has changed the face of atherosclerosis research.

294 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For both σ-donation and π-back-bonding, the resulting orders of ligands are in a qualitative agreement with those commonly accepted as mentioned in this paper, however, it was also demonstrated that the influence of the metal-containing fragment can be substantial, changing the relative donor-acceptor characteristics of different ligands.

293 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of different soil chemical properties on structure and diversity of microbial communities in soils polluted with different levels of heavy metals was assessed using PLFA analysis and the structure of soil bacterial communities using pyrosequencing of 16S rRNA genes.

292 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
20202,776
20192,736
20182,735