Simulations indicate the Balmer decrement can serve as a diagnostic to identify inflowing gas in front of face-on galaxies, showing a mean front-back offset of approximately -0.14 despite scatter from clumpy dust.
Title resolution pending
7 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 7verdicts
UNVERDICTED 7roles
method 1polarities
use method 1representative citing papers
Metallicity-dependent explodability prescriptions for massive stars reproduce observed galactic abundance trends when used in chemical evolution models and permit a simplified form that alleviates the red supergiant problem without violating those trends, provided net outflows are negligible and the
NEFERTITI simulations show that the Milky Way's most metal-poor stars largely come from a handful of accreted massive dwarf galaxies, while reproducing the JWST Hebe galaxy at z~11 as a pure Population III system.
The paper outlines the goals for the SKA-Mid Galactic Plane survey at 10-15 GHz to deliver the first uniform high-resolution view of ionized structures and feedback in the Milky Way.
Polarization observations reveal scale-dependent differences in magnetic field morphology between molecular clouds and clumps, a velocity-dispersion correlation, and unreliable field-strength estimates that contradict flux conservation.
Spectra of the western eROSITA bubbles reveal two uniform components at 0.60 keV and 0.21 keV with sub-solar abundances, plus a geometrical model constraining horizontal size to ~6 kpc but leaving vertical extent uncertain.
Applying Indigenous methods to the Drake Equation produces a dramatically different understanding of life in the Milky Way than conventional scientific approaches.
citing papers explorer
-
Identifying signatures of inflow onto face-on galaxies using the Balmer decrement
Simulations indicate the Balmer decrement can serve as a diagnostic to identify inflowing gas in front of face-on galaxies, showing a mean front-back offset of approximately -0.14 despite scatter from clumpy dust.
-
Constraints on the Metallicity-dependent Explodability of Massive Stars from Galactic Chemical Evolution: Toward Alleviating the Red Supergiant Problem
Metallicity-dependent explodability prescriptions for massive stars reproduce observed galactic abundance trends when used in chemical evolution models and permit a simplified form that alleviates the red supergiant problem without violating those trends, provided net outflows are negligible and the
-
NEFERTITI: Linking early galaxy formation to the assembly of the Milky Way
NEFERTITI simulations show that the Milky Way's most metal-poor stars largely come from a handful of accreted massive dwarf galaxies, while reproducing the JWST Hebe galaxy at z~11 as a pure Population III system.
-
The 10-15 GHz radio continuum survey of the Galactic Plane with SKAO
The paper outlines the goals for the SKA-Mid Galactic Plane survey at 10-15 GHz to deliver the first uniform high-resolution view of ionized structures and feedback in the Milky Way.
-
Characterising magnetic fields at the onset of star cluster formation: From giant molecular clouds to infrared dark clumps
Polarization observations reveal scale-dependent differences in magnetic field morphology between molecular clouds and clumps, a velocity-dispersion correlation, and unreliable field-strength estimates that contradict flux conservation.
-
The SRG/eROSITA diffuse soft X-ray background II. spectra and morphology of the eROSITA bubbles in the western Galactic hemisphere
Spectra of the western eROSITA bubbles reveal two uniform components at 0.60 keV and 0.21 keV with sub-solar abundances, plus a geometrical model constraining horizontal size to ~6 kpc but leaving vertical extent uncertain.
-
Indigenizing the Drake Equation: how Indigenous methods can help us understand life in the Milky Way Galaxy
Applying Indigenous methods to the Drake Equation produces a dramatically different understanding of life in the Milky Way than conventional scientific approaches.