Institution
Moscow State University
Education•Moscow, Russia•
About: Moscow State University is a education organization based out in Moscow, Russia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Laser. The organization has 66747 authors who have published 123358 publications receiving 1753995 citations. The organization is also known as: MSU & Lomonosov Moscow State University.
Topics: Catalysis, Laser, Population, Magnetic field, Crystal structure
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a search for the electroweak production of charginos and sleptons decaying into final states with two electrons or muons is presented, based on 139.fb$^{-1}$ of proton-proton collisions recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider at
Abstract: A search for the electroweak production of charginos and sleptons decaying into final states with two electrons or muons is presented. The analysis is based on 139 fb$^{-1}$ of proton–proton collisions recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider at $\sqrt{s}=13$ $\text {TeV}$. Three R-parity-conserving scenarios where the lightest neutralino is the lightest supersymmetric particle are considered: the production of chargino pairs with decays via either W bosons or sleptons, and the direct production of slepton pairs. The analysis is optimised for the first of these scenarios, but the results are also interpreted in the others. No significant deviations from the Standard Model expectations are observed and limits at 95% confidence level are set on the masses of relevant supersymmetric particles in each of the scenarios. For a massless lightest neutralino, masses up to 420 $\text {Ge}\text {V}$ are excluded for the production of the lightest-chargino pairs assuming W-boson-mediated decays and up to 1 $\text {TeV}$ for slepton-mediated decays, whereas for slepton-pair production masses up to 700 $\text {Ge}\text {V}$ are excluded assuming three generations of mass-degenerate sleptons.
272 citations
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TL;DR: The final results of processing the data from the balloon-born experiment ATIC-2 (Antarctica, 2002-2003) for the energy spectra of protons and He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe nuclei, the spectrum of all particles, and the mean logarithm of primary cosmic rays as a function of energy are presented in this article.
Abstract: The final results of processing the data from the balloon-born experiment ATIC-2 (Antarctica, 2002–2003) for the energy spectra of protons and He, C, O, Ne, Mg, Si, and Fe nuclei, the spectrum of all particles, and the mean logarithm of atomic weight of primary cosmic rays as a function of energy are presented. The final results are based on improvement of the methods used earlier, in particular, considerably increased resolution of the charge spectrum. The preliminary conclusions on the significant difference in the spectra of protons and helium nuclei (the proton spectrum is steeper) and the non-power character of the spectra of protons and heavier nuclei (flattening of carbon spectrum at energies above 10 TeV) are confirmed. A complex structure of the energy dependence of the mean logarithm of atomic weight is found.
272 citations
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Duke University1, Quintiles2, Clemson University3, University of Duisburg-Essen4, St. Vincent's Health System5, Khon Kaen University6, University of Birmingham7, University of Barcelona8, Favaloro University9, Moscow State University10, Royal Melbourne Hospital11, Alfred Hospital12, University of Gothenburg13
TL;DR: Early surgery for NVE is associated with an in-hospital mortality benefit compared with medical therapy alone and characteristics of patients who are most likely to benefit from early surgery are identified.
Abstract: Background—The impact of early surgery on mortality in patients with native valve endocarditis (NVE) is unresolved. This study sought to evaluate valve surgery compared with medical therapy for NVE and to identify characteristics of patients who are most likely to benefit from early surgery. Methods and Results—Using a prospective, multinational cohort of patients with definite NVE, the effect of early surgery on in-hospital mortality was assessed by propensity-based matching adjustment for survivor bias and by instrumental variable analysis. Patients were stratified by propensity quintile, paravalvular complications, valve perforation, systemic embolization, stroke, Staphylococcus aureus infection, and congestive heart failure. Of the 1552 patients with NVE, 720 (46%) underwent early surgery and 832 (54%) were treated with medical therapy. Compared with medical therapy, early surgery was associated with a significant reduction in mortality in the overall cohort (12.1% [87/720] versus 20.7% [172/832]) and after propensity-based matching and adjustment for survivor bias (absolute risk reduction [ARR] 5.9%, P0.001). With a combined instrument, the instrumental-variable–adjusted ARR in mortality associated with early surgery was 11.2% (P0.001). In subgroup analysis, surgery was found to confer a survival benefit compared with medical therapy among patients with a higher propensity for surgery (ARR 10.9% for quintiles 4 and 5, P0.002) and those with paravalvular complications (ARR 17.3%, P0.001), systemic embolization (ARR 12.9%, P0.002), S aureus NVE (ARR 20.1%, P0.001), and stroke (ARR 13%, P0.02) but not those with valve perforation or congestive heart failure. Conclusions—Early surgery for NVE is associated with an in-hospital mortality benefit compared with medical therapy alone. (Circulation. 2010;121:1005-1013.)
272 citations
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TL;DR: A newly discovered Paleolithic site on the Yana River, Siberia, lies well above the Arctic circle and dates to 27,000 radiocarbon years before present, during glacial times, which is twice that of other known human occupations in any Arctic region.
Abstract: A newly discovered Paleolithic site on the Yana River, Siberia, at 71°N, lies well above the Arctic circle and dates to 27,000 radiocarbon years before present, during glacial times. This age is twice that of other known human occupations in any Arctic region. Artifacts at the site include a rare rhinoceros foreshaft, other mammoth foreshafts, and a wide variety of tools and flakes. This site shows that people adapted to this harsh, high-latitude, Late Pleistocene environment much earlier than previously thought.
271 citations
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TL;DR: Observational evidence is provided that in the mid-latitude North Atlantic and on timescales longer than 10 years, surface turbulent heat fluxes are indeed driven by the ocean and may force the atmosphere, whereas on shorter timescale the converse is true, thereby confirming the Bjerknes conjecture.
Abstract: Nearly 50 years ago Bjerknes1 suggested that the character of large-scale air–sea interaction over the mid-latitude North Atlantic Ocean differs with timescales: the atmosphere was thought to drive directly most short-term—interannual—sea surface temperature (SST) variability, and the ocean to contribute significantly to long-term—multidecadal—SST and potentially atmospheric variability. Although the conjecture for short timescales is well accepted, understanding Atlantic multidecadal variability (AMV) of SST2, 3 remains a challenge as a result of limited ocean observations. AMV is nonetheless of major socio-economic importance because it is linked to important climate phenomena such as Atlantic hurricane activity and Sahel rainfall, and it hinders the detection of anthropogenic signals in the North Atlantic sector4, 5, 6. Direct evidence of the oceanic influence of AMV can only be provided by surface heat fluxes, the language of ocean–atmosphere communication. Here we provide observational evidence that in the mid-latitude North Atlantic and on timescales longer than 10 years, surface turbulent heat fluxes are indeed driven by the ocean and may force the atmosphere, whereas on shorter timescales the converse is true, thereby confirming the Bjerknes conjecture. This result, although strongest in boreal winter, is found in all seasons. Our findings suggest that the predictability of mid-latitude North Atlantic air–sea interaction could extend beyond the ocean to the climate of surrounding continents.
271 citations
Authors
Showing all 68238 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski | 169 | 1431 | 128585 |
A. Gomes | 150 | 1862 | 113951 |
Robert J. Sternberg | 149 | 1066 | 89193 |
James M. Tour | 143 | 859 | 91364 |
Alexander Belyaev | 142 | 1895 | 100796 |
Rainer Wallny | 141 | 1661 | 105387 |
I. V. Gorelov | 139 | 1916 | 103133 |
António Amorim | 136 | 1477 | 96519 |
Halina Abramowicz | 134 | 1192 | 89294 |
Grigory Safronov | 133 | 1358 | 94610 |
Elizaveta Shabalina | 133 | 1421 | 92273 |
Alexander Zhokin | 132 | 1323 | 86842 |
Eric Conte | 132 | 1206 | 84593 |
Igor V. Moskalenko | 132 | 542 | 58182 |
M. Davier | 132 | 1449 | 107642 |