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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.


Papers
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Proceedings ArticleDOI
Keith C. Gendreau1, Zaven Arzoumanian1, Phillip Adkins1, Cheryl L. Albert, John F. Anders, Andrew T. Aylward1, Charles Baker1, Erin Balsamo2, William A. Bamford, Suyog S. Benegalrao1, Daniel L. Berry1, Shiraz Bhalwani1, J. Kevin Black, Carl Blaurock, Ginger Bronke, Gary L. Brown1, Jason Budinoff1, Jeffrey D. Cantwell, Thoniel Cazeau1, Philip T. Chen1, Thomas G. Clement, Andrew T. Colangelo, Jerry S. Coleman, Jonathan D. Coopersmith3, William E. Dehaven3, John P. Doty, Mark Egan4, Teruaki Enoto5, Terry W.-M. Fan1, Deneen M. Ferro, R. Foster4, Nicholas M. Galassi, Luis D. Gallo1, Christopher M. Green1, Dave Grosh6, Kong Q. Ha1, Monther A. Hasouneh1, Kristofer B. Heefner3, Phyllis Hestnes1, Lisa J. Hoge1, Tawanda M. Jacobs1, John Leif Jørgensen7, Michael A. Kaiser, James W. Kellogg1, Steven Kenyon1, Richard Koenecke, Robert Kozon1, Beverly LaMarr4, Mike D. Lambertson, Anne M. Larson, Steven Lentine8, Jesse Lewis1, Michael G. Lilly, Kuochia Alice Liu1, Andrew Malonis4, Sridhar S. Manthripragada1, Craig B. Markwardt1, Bryan D. Matonak1, Isaac E. Mcginnis1, Roger L. Miller1, Alissa L. Mitchell1, Jason W. Mitchell1, Jelila S. Mohammed1, Charles Monroe1, K Garcia1, Peter Mule1, Louis T. Nagao, Son N. Ngo1, Eric D. Norris, Dwight A. Norwood1, Joseph Novotka, Takashi Okajima1, L. Olsen1, Chimaobi O. Onyeachu1, Henry Y. Orosco, Jacqualine R. Peterson1, Kristina N. Pevear, Karen K. Pham1, Sue E. Pollard1, John S. Pope3, Daniel Powers1, Charles E. Powers1, Samuel R. Price1, Gregory Y. Prigozhin4, Julian B. Ramirez1, Winston J. Reid, Ronald A. Remillard4, Eric M. Rogstad1, Glenn P. Rosecrans, John N. Rowe3, Jennifer A. Sager3, Claude A. Sanders3, Bruce Savadkin1, Maxine R. Saylor3, Alexander F. Schaeffer, Nancy S. Schweiss1, Sean R. Semper1, Peter J. Serlemitsos1, Larry V. Shackelford, Yang Soong1, Jonathan Struebel, Michael Vezie4, Joel Villasenor4, Luke Winternitz1, George I. Wofford, Michael R. Wright1, Mike Y. Yang1, Wayne H. Yu1 
TL;DR: The Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) mission is scheduled for launch in early 2017 on the Commercial Resupply Services SpaceX-11 flight.
Abstract: During 2014 and 2015, NASA's Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) mission proceeded successfully through Phase C, Design and Development. An X-ray (0.2{12 keV) astrophysics payload destined for the International Space Station, NICER is manifested for launch in early 2017 on the Commercial Resupply Services SpaceX-11 flight. Its scientific objectives are to investigate the internal structure, dynamics, and energetics of neutron stars, the densest objects in the universe. During Phase C, flight components including optics, detectors, the optical bench, pointing actuators, electronics, and others were subjected to environmental testing and integrated to form the flight payload. A custom-built facility was used to co-align and integrate the X-ray \concentrator" optics and silicon-drift detectors. Ground calibration provided robust performance measures of the optical (at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center) and detector (at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) subsystems, while comprehensive functional tests prior to payload-level environmental testing met all instrument performance requirements. We describe here the implementation of NICER's major subsystems, summarize their performance and calibration, and outline the component-level testing that was successfully applied.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using satellite-supported best-track data from 1965 to 2003, the authors showed that over the past four decades the two prevailing typhoon tracks in the western North Pacific (WNP) have shifted westward significantly; the typhoon activity over the South China Sea has considerably decreased; and East Asia has experienced increasing typhoon influence.
Abstract: Numerical model studies have suggested that the ongoing global warming will likely affect tropical cyclone activity. But so far little observed evidence has been detected to support the projected future changes. Using satellite-supported best-track data from 1965 to 2003, we show for the first time that over the past four decades the two prevailing typhoon tracks in the western North Pacific (WNP) have shifted westward significantly; the typhoon activity over the South China Sea has considerably decreased; and East Asia has experienced increasing typhoon influence. Our trajectory model simulation indicates that the long-term shifts in the typhoon tracks result primarily from the changes in the mean translation velocity of typhoons or the large-scale steering flow, which is associated with the westward expansion and strengthening of the WNP subtropical high.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: NACP+QADM+NAg nanocomposite was strongly antibacterial and greatly reduced the titer counts, metabolic activity, and acid production of S. mutans biofilms, while possessing mechanical properties similar to commercial composites.

298 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a model study of carbon monoxide for 1988-1997 using the GEOS-Chem 3-D model driven by assimilated meteorological data, with time-varying emissions from biomass burning and from fossil fuel and industry, overhead ozone columns, and methane.
Abstract: [1] We present a model study of carbon monoxide for 1988–1997 using the GEOS-Chem 3-D model driven by assimilated meteorological data, with time-varying emissions from biomass burning and from fossil fuel and industry, overhead ozone columns, and methane. The hydroxyl radical is calculated interactively using a chemical parameterization to capture chemical feedbacks. We document the inventory for fossil fuels/industry and discuss major uncertainties and the causes of differences with other inventories that give significantly lower emissions. We find that emissions hardly change from 1988 to 1997, as increases in Asia are offset by decreases elsewhere. The model reproduces the 20% decrease in CO at high northern latitudes and the 10% decrease in the North Pacific, caused primarily by the decrease in European emissions. The model compares well with observations at sites impacted by fossil fuel emissions from North America, Europe, and east Asia suggesting that the emissions from this source are reliable to 25%, and we argue that bottom-up emission estimates are likely to be too low rather than too high. The model is too low at the seasonal maximum in spring in the southern tropics, except for locations in the Atlantic Ocean. This problem may be caused by an overestimate of the frequency of tropical deep convection, a common problem in models that use assimilated meteorological data. We argue that the yield of CO from methane oxidation is near unity, contrary to some other studies, based on removal rates of intermediate species.

297 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present study used general growth mixture modeling to identify pathways of antisocial behavior development within an epidemiological sample of urban, primarily African American boys and differentiated boys with increasing aggression from boys with stable low aggression.
Abstract: The present study used general growth mixture modeling to identify pathways of antisocial behavior development within an epidemiological sample of urban, primarily African American boys. Teacher-rated aggression, measured longitudinally from 1st to 7th grade, was used to define growth trajectories. Three high-risk trajectories (chronic high, moderate, and increasing aggression) and one low-risk trajectory (stable low aggression) were found. Boys with chronic high and increasing trajectories were at increased risk for conduct disorder, juvenile and adult arrest, and antisocial personality disorder. Concentration problems were highest among boys with a chronic high trajectory and also differentiated boys with increasing aggression from boys with stable low aggression. Peer rejection was highest among boys with chronic high aggression. Interventions with boys with distinct patterns of aggression are discussed.

297 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