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Institution

University of Maryland, Baltimore County

EducationBaltimore, Maryland, United States
About: University of Maryland, Baltimore County is a education organization based out in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Aerosol. The organization has 8749 authors who have published 20843 publications receiving 795706 citations. The organization is also known as: UMBC.


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Journal ArticleDOI
Lennart Lindegren1, Sergei A. Klioner2, Jose M Hernandez3, Alex Bombrun3, M. Ramos-Lerate3, H. Steidelmüller2, Ulrich Bastian4, M. Biermann4, A. de Torres3, E. Gerlach2, R. Geyer2, Thomas Hilger2, David Hobbs1, U. Lammers3, Paul J. McMillan1, C.A. Stephenson3, J. Castañeda5, Michael Davidson6, C. Fabricius5, G. Gracia-Abril4, Jordi Portell5, Nicholas Rowell6, David Teyssier3, F. Torra5, S. Bartolomé5, M. Clotet5, N. Garralda5, J.J. González-Vidal5, J. Torra5, U. Abbas7, Martin Altmann8, Martin Altmann4, E. Anglada Varela3, L. Balaguer-Núñez5, Zoltan Balog4, Zoltan Balog9, C. Barache8, Ugo Becciani7, M. Bernet5, Stefano Bertone7, Stefano Bertone10, Stefano Bertone11, Luciana Bianchi, S. Bouquillon8, Anthony G. A. Brown12, Beatrice Bucciarelli7, D. Busonero7, A. G. Butkevich7, R. Buzzi7, Rossella Cancelliere13, T. Carlucci8, Patrick Charlot14, Maria-Rosa L. Cioni15, Mariateresa Crosta7, C. Crowley3, E. F. del Peloso4, E. del Pozo3, Ronald Drimmel7, P. Esquej3, Agnes Fienga14, Agnes Fienga8, E. Fraile3, Mario Gai7, M. Garcia-Reinaldos3, Raphael Guerra3, Nigel Hambly6, M. Hauser9, K. Janßen15, Stefan Jordan4, Z. Kostrzewa-Rutkowska16, Z. Kostrzewa-Rutkowska12, Massimiliano Lattanzi13, Massimiliano Lattanzi7, S. Liao7, E. Licata7, Tim Lister17, W. Löffler4, Jon Marchant18, A. Masip5, Francois Mignard14, Alexey Mints15, D. Molina5, Alcione Mora3, Roberto Morbidelli7, C. P. Murphy3, C. Pagani19, Pasquale Panuzzo8, X. Peñalosa Esteller5, E. Poggio7, P. Re Fiorentin7, Alberto Riva7, A. Sagristà Sellés4, V. Sanchez Gimenez5, M. Sarasso7, Eva Sciacca7, H. I. Siddiqui20, Richard L. Smart7, D. Souami21, D. Souami8, Alessandro Spagna7, Iain A. Steele18, F. Taris8, E. Utrilla3, W. van Reeven3, Alberto Vecchiato7 
TL;DR: Gaia Early Data Release 3 (Gaia EDR3) as discussed by the authors contains results for 1.812 billion sources in the magnitude range G = 3 to 21 based on observations collected by the European Space Agency Gaia satellite during the first 34 months of its operational phase.
Abstract: Gaia Early Data Release 3 (Gaia EDR3) contains results for 1.812 billion sources in the magnitude range G = 3 to 21 based on observations collected by the European Space Agency Gaia satellite during the first 34 months of its operational phase. We describe the input data, the models, and the processing used for the astrometric content of Gaia EDR3, as well as the validation of these results performed within the astrometry task. The processing broadly followed the same procedures as for Gaia DR2, but with significant improvements to the modelling of observations. For the first time in the Gaia data processing, colour-dependent calibrations of the line- and point-spread functions have been used for sources with well-determined colours from DR2. In the astrometric processing these sources obtained five-parameter solutions, whereas other sources were processed using a special calibration that allowed a pseudocolour to be estimated as the sixth astrometric parameter. Compared with DR2, the astrometric calibration models have been extended, and the spin-related distortion model includes a self-consistent determination of basic-angle variations, improving the global parallax zero point. Gaia EDR3 gives full astrometric data (positions at epoch J2016.0, parallaxes, and proper motions) for 1.468 billion sources (585 million with five-parameter solutions, 882 million with six parameters), and mean positions at J2016.0 for an additional 344 million. Solutions with five parameters are generally more accurate than six-parameter solutions, and are available for 93% of the sources brighter than G = 17 mag. The median uncertainty in parallax and annual proper motion is 0.02-0.03 mas at magnitude G = 9 to 14, and around 0.5 mas at G = 20. Extensive characterisation of the statistical properties of the solutions is provided, including the estimated angular power spectrum of parallax bias from the quasars.

428 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, images and the radial profiles of the temperature, abundance, and brightness for 70 clusters of galaxies observed by XMM-Newton are presented along with a detailed discussion of the data reduction and analysis methods, including background modeling, which were used in the processing.
Abstract: Images and the radial profiles of the temperature, abundance, and brightness for 70 clusters of galaxies observed by XMM-Newton are presented along with a detailed discussion of the data reduction and analysis methods, including background modeling, which were used in the processing. Proper consideration of the various background components is vital to extend the reliable determination of cluster parameters to the largest possible cluster radii. The various components of the background including the quiescent particle background, cosmic diffuse emission, soft proton contamination, and solar wind charge exchange emission are discussed along with suggested means of their identification, filtering, and/or their modeling and subtraction. Every component is spectrally variable, sometimes significantly so, and all components except the cosmic background are temporally variable as well. The distributions of the events over the FOV vary between the components, and some distributions vary with energy. The scientific results from observations of low surface brightness objects and the diffuse background itself can be strongly affected by these background components and therefore great care should be taken in their consideration.

426 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors identified three sources of homogeneity in student friendship groups: conformity pressures, disproportionate group-leaving by deviates, and homophilic membership selection, and concluded that the magnitude of peer influence has been overestimated in the status-attainment literature.
Abstract: Conformity pressures, disproportionate group-leaving by deviates, and homophilic membership selection are identified as three sources of homogeneity in student friendship groups. Fortynine high school friendship groups are tested to determine which of these three mechanisms contributes most to their homogeneity. Homophilic selection accountedfor much of the groups' homogeneity, conformity pressures made a small contribution, and group-leaving contributed nothing to homogeneity. It is suggested that the magnitude of peer influence on aspirations has been overestimated in the status-attainment literature.

426 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the temporal change in a Tasseled-cap "disturbance index" calculated from the early (~1990) and later (~2000) images was calculated.

423 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper presents a decomposition method for solving convex minimization problems that preserves the good features of the proximal method of multipliers, with the additional advantage that it leads to a decoupling of the constraints, and is thus suitable for parallel implementation.
Abstract: This paper presents a decomposition method for solving convex minimization problems. At each iteration, the algorithm computes two proximal steps in the dual variables and one proximal step in the primal variables. We derive this algorithm from Rockafellar's proximal method of multipliers, which involves an augmented Lagrangian with an additional quadratic proximal term. The algorithm preserves the good features of the proximal method of multipliers, with the additional advantage that it leads to a decoupling of the constraints, and is thus suitable for parallel implementation. We allow for computing approximately the proximal minimization steps and we prove that under mild assumptions on the problem's data, the method is globally convergent and at a linear rate. The method is compared with alternating direction type methods and applied to the particular case of minimizing a convex function over a finite intersection of closed convex sets.

420 citations


Authors

Showing all 8862 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert C. Gallo14582568212
Paul T. Costa13340688454
Igor V. Moskalenko13254258182
James Chiang12930860268
Alex K.-Y. Jen12892161811
Alan R. Shuldiner12055771737
Richard N. Zare120120167880
Vince D. Calhoun117123462205
Rita R. Colwell11578155229
Kendall N. Houk11299754877
Elliot K. Fishman112133549298
Yoram J. Kaufman11126359238
Paulo Artaxo10745444346
Braxton D. Mitchell10255849599
Sushil Jajodia10166435556
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202371
2022165
20211,065
20201,091
2019989
2018929