A new fitting methodology applied to UV absorption data recovers radial trends in galactic wind velocities and mass-loading factors by constraining initial hot and cool phase parameters in a multiphase model.
Title resolution pending
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
representative citing papers
Forecasts that golden and silver dark sirens with HETDEX VIRUS follow-up can constrain H0 to a few percent using one year of LIGO-A# observations for z < 0.2 events.
Detailed photometric, spectroscopic, and modeling study of a low-redshift GRB-SN yielding nickel mass 0.4-0.5 solar masses, ejected mass 4-6 solar masses, and evidence for large-offset explosion in sub-solar metallicity gas.
Joint radial-velocity analysis revises GJ 3378b's period to 21.45 days and minimum mass to 2.3 Earth masses, placing the habitable-zone planet near the cosmic shoreline.
citing papers explorer
-
Resolving the Unresolved Galactic Winds in Multi-phase Models. I. Methodology and Application
A new fitting methodology applied to UV absorption data recovers radial trends in galactic wind velocities and mass-loading factors by constraining initial hot and cool phase parameters in a multiphase model.
-
Golden and Silver Dark Sirens for precise H0 measurement with HETDEX
Forecasts that golden and silver dark sirens with HETDEX VIRUS follow-up can constrain H0 to a few percent using one year of LIGO-A# observations for z < 0.2 events.
-
GRB 260310A/SN 2026fgk: Photometric and Spectroscopic Evolution of a Nearby GRB-Supernova and an Exceptionally Bright Afterglow at z=0.153
Detailed photometric, spectroscopic, and modeling study of a low-redshift GRB-SN yielding nickel mass 0.4-0.5 solar masses, ejected mass 4-6 solar masses, and evidence for large-offset explosion in sub-solar metallicity gas.
-
A Revised Mass and Period for the Habitable Zone super-Earth GJ 3378b: A Planet Straddling the Cosmic Shoreline
Joint radial-velocity analysis revises GJ 3378b's period to 21.45 days and minimum mass to 2.3 Earth masses, placing the habitable-zone planet near the cosmic shoreline.