@article{11509,
  abstract     = {We present Keck/LRIS follow-up spectroscopy for 13 photometric candidates of extremely metal-poor galaxies (EMPGs) selected by a machine-learning technique applied to the deep (∼26 AB mag) optical and wide-area (∼500 deg2) Subaru imaging data in the EMPRESS survey. Nine out of the 13 candidates are EMPGs with an oxygen abundance (O/H) less than ∼10% solar value (O/H)⊙, and four sources are contaminants of moderately metal-rich galaxies or no emission-line objects. Notably, two out of the nine EMPGs have extremely low stellar masses and oxygen abundances of 5 × 10⁴x–7 × -10⁵ M⊙ and 2%–3% (O/H)⊙, respectively. With a sample of five EMPGs with (Fe/O) measurements, two (three) of which are taken from this study (the literature), we confirm that two EMPGs with the lowest (O/H) ratios of ∼2% (O/H)⊙ show high (Fe/O) ratios of ∼0.1, close to the solar abundance ratio. Comparing galaxy chemical enrichment models, we find that the two EMPGs cannot be explained by a scenario of metal-poor gas accretion/episodic star formation history due to their low (N/O) ratios. We conclude that the two EMPGs can be reproduced by the inclusion of bright hypernovae and/or hypothetical pair-instability supernovae (SNe) preferentially produced in a metal-poor environment. This conclusion implies that primordial galaxies at z ∼ 10 could have a high abundance of Fe that did not originate from Type Ia SNe with delays and that Fe may not serve as a cosmic clock for primordial galaxies.},
  author       = {Isobe, Yuki and Ouchi, Masami and Suzuki, Akihiro and Moriya, Takashi J. and Nakajima, Kimihiko and Nomoto, Ken’ichi and Rauch, Michael and Harikane, Yuichi and Kojima, Takashi and Ono, Yoshiaki and Fujimoto, Seiji and Inoue, Akio K. and Kim, Ji Hoon and Komiyama, Yutaka and Kusakabe, Haruka and Lee, Chien-Hsiu and Maseda, Michael and Matthee, Jorryt J and Michel-Dansac, Leo and Nagao, Tohru and Nanayakkara, Themiya and Nishigaki, Moka and Onodera, Masato and Sugahara, Yuma and Xu, Yi},
  issn         = {1538-4357},
  journal      = {The Astrophysical Journal},
  keywords     = {Space and Planetary Science, Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{EMPRESS. IV. Extremely metal-poor galaxies including very low-mass primordial systems with M∗= 10⁴-10⁵⊙ and 2%–3% (O/H): High (Fe/O) suggestive of metal enrichment by hypernovae/pair-instability supernovae}},
  doi          = {10.3847/1538-4357/ac3509},
  volume       = {925},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11510,
  abstract     = {Galaxy evolution is driven by a variety of physical processes that are predicted to proceed at different rates for different dark matter haloes and environments across cosmic times. A record of this evolution is preserved in galaxy stellar populations, which we can access using absorption-line spectroscopy. Here we explore the large LEGA-C survey (DR3) to investigate the role of the environment and stellar mass on stellar populations at z ∼ 0.6–1 in the COSMOS field. Leveraging the statistical power and depth of LEGA-C, we reveal significant gradients in Dn4000 and Hδ equivalent widths (EWs) distributions over the stellar mass versus environment 2D spaces for the massive galaxy population (M > 1010 M⊙) at z ∼ 0.6–1.0. Dn4000 and Hδ EWs primarily depend on stellar mass, but they also depend on environment at fixed stellar mass. By splitting the sample into centrals and satellites, and in terms of star-forming galaxies and quiescent galaxies, we reveal that the significant environmental trends of Dn4000 and Hδ EW, when controlling for stellar mass, are driven by quiescent galaxies. Regardless of being centrals or satellites, star-forming galaxies reveal Dn4000 and Hδ EWs, which depend strongly on their stellar mass and are completely independent of the environment at 0.6 < z < 1.0. The environmental trends seen for satellite galaxies are fully driven by the trends that hold only for quiescent galaxies, combined with the strong environmental dependency of the quiescent fraction at fixed stellar mass. Our results are consistent with recent predictions from simulations that point toward massive galaxies forming first in overdensities or the most compact dark matter haloes.},
  author       = {Sobral, David and van der Wel, Arjen and Bezanson, Rachel and Bell, Eric and Muzzin, Adam and D’Eugenio, Francesco and Darvish, Behnam and Gallazzi, Anna and Wu, Po-Feng and Maseda, Michael and Matthee, Jorryt J and Paulino-Afonso, Ana and Straatman, Caroline and van Dokkum, Pieter G.},
  issn         = {1538-4357},
  journal      = {The Astrophysical Journal},
  keywords     = {Space and Planetary Science, Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{The LEGA-C of nature and nurture in stellar populations at z ∼ 0.6–1.0: Dn4000 and Hδ reveal different assembly histories for quiescent galaxies in different environments}},
  doi          = {10.3847/1538-4357/ac4419},
  volume       = {926},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11511,
  abstract     = {The ratio of α-elements to iron in galaxies holds valuable information about the star formation history (SFH) since their enrichment occurs on different timescales. The fossil record of stars in galaxies has mostly been excavated for passive galaxies, since the light of star-forming galaxies is dominated by young stars, which have much weaker atmospheric absorption features. Here we use the largest reference cosmological simulation of the EAGLE project to investigate the origin of variations in stellar α-enhancement among star-forming galaxies at z = 0, and their impact on integrated spectra. The definition of α-enhancement in a composite stellar population is ambiguous. We elucidate two definitions—termed “mean” and “galactic” α-enhancement—in more detail. While a star-forming galaxy has a high “mean” α-enhancement when its stars formed rapidly, a galaxy with a large “galactic” α-enhancement generally had a delayed SFH. We find that absorption-line strengths of Mg and Fe correlate with variations in α-enhancement. These correlations are strongest for the “galactic” α-enhancement. However, we show that these are mostly caused by other effects that are cross-correlated with α-enhancement, such as variations in the light-weighted age. This severely complicates the retrieval of α-enhancements in star-forming galaxies. The ambiguity is not severe for passive galaxies, and we confirm that spectral variations in these galaxies are caused by measurable variations in α-enhancements. We suggest that this more complex coupling between α-enhancement and SFHs can guide the interpretation of new observations of star-forming galaxies.},
  author       = {Gebek, Andrea and Matthee, Jorryt J},
  issn         = {1538-4357},
  journal      = {The Astrophysical Journal},
  keywords     = {Space and Planetary Science, Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{On the variation in stellar α-enhancements of star-forming galaxies in the EAGLE simulation}},
  doi          = {10.3847/1538-4357/ac350b},
  volume       = {924},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11521,
  abstract     = {The cosmic ionizing emissivity from star-forming galaxies has long been anchored to UV luminosity functions. Here, we introduce an emissivity framework based on Lyα emitters (LAEs), which naturally hones in on the subset of galaxies responsible for the ionizing background due to the intimate connection between production and escape of Lyα and LyC photons. Using constraints on the escape fractions of bright LAEs (LLyα > 0.2L*) at z ≈ 2 obtained from resolved Lyα profiles, and arguing for their redshift-invariance, we show that: (i) quasars and LAEs together reproduce the relatively flat emissivity at z ≈ 2–6, which is non-trivial given the strong evolution in both the star formation density and quasar number density at these epochs and (ii) LAEs produce late and rapid reionization between z ≈ 6−9 under plausible assumptions. Within this framework, the >10 × rise in the UV population-averaged fesc between z ≈ 3–7 naturally arises due to the same phenomena that drive the growing LAE fraction with redshift. Generally, a LAE dominated emissivity yields a peak in the distribution of the ionizing budget with UV luminosity as reported in latest simulations. Using our adopted parameters (⁠fesc=50 per cent⁠, ξion = 1025.9 Hz erg−1 for half the bright LAEs), a highly ionizing minority of galaxies with MUV < −17 accounts for the entire ionizing budget from star-forming galaxies. Rapid flashes of LyC from such rare galaxies produce a ‘disco’ ionizing background. We conclude proposing tests to further develop our suggested Lyα-anchored formalism.},
  author       = {Matthee, Jorryt J and Naidu, Rohan P. and Pezzulli, Gabriele and Gronke, Max and Sobral, David and Oesch, Pascal A. and Hayes, Matthew and Erb, Dawn and Schaerer, Daniel and Amorín, Ricardo and Tacchella, Sandro and Ana Paulino-Afonso, Ana Paulino-Afonso and Llerena, Mario and Calhau, João and Röttgering, Huub},
  issn         = {1365-2966},
  journal      = {Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society},
  keywords     = {galaxies: high-redshift, intergalactic medium, cosmology: observations, dark ages, reionization, first stars, ultraviolet: galaxies},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {5960--5977},
  publisher    = {Oxford University Press},
  title        = {{(Re)Solving reionization with Lyα: How bright Lyα emitters account for the z ≈ 2 − 8 cosmic ionizing background}},
  doi          = {10.1093/mnras/stac801},
  volume       = {512},
  year         = {2022},
}

@misc{11542,
  author       = {Schulz, Rouven},
  publisher    = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria},
  title        = {{Source Data (Chimeric GPCRs mimic distinct signaling pathways and modulate microglia responses)}},
  doi          = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:11542},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11545,
  abstract     = {We classify contravariant pairings between standard Whittaker modules and Verma modules over a complex semisimple Lie algebra. These contravariant pairings are useful in extending several classical techniques for category O to the Miličić–Soergel category N . We introduce a class of costandard modules which generalize dual Verma modules, and describe canonical maps from standard to costandard modules in terms of contravariant pairings.
We show that costandard modules have unique irreducible submodules and share the same composition factors as the corresponding standard Whittaker modules. We show that costandard modules give an algebraic characterization of the global sections of costandard twisted Harish-Chandra sheaves on the associated flag variety, which are defined using holonomic duality of D-modules. We prove that with these costandard modules, blocks of category
N have the structure of highest weight categories and we establish a BGG reciprocity theorem for N .},
  author       = {Brown, Adam and Romanov, Anna},
  issn         = {0021-8693},
  journal      = {Journal of Algebra},
  keywords     = {Algebra and Number Theory},
  number       = {11},
  pages        = {145--179},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Contravariant pairings between standard Whittaker modules and Verma modules}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.jalgebra.2022.06.017},
  volume       = {609},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11546,
  abstract     = {Local adaptation leads to differences between populations within a species. In many systems, similar environmental contrasts occur repeatedly, sometimes driving parallel phenotypic evolution. Understanding the genomic basis of local adaptation and parallel evolution is a major goal of evolutionary genomics. It is now known that by preventing the break-up of favourable combinations of alleles across multiple loci, genetic architectures that reduce recombination, like chromosomal inversions, can make an important contribution to local adaptation. However, little is known about whether inversions also contribute disproportionately to parallel evolution. Our aim here is to highlight this knowledge gap, to showcase existing studies, and to illustrate the differences between genomic architectures with and without inversions using simple models. We predict that by generating stronger effective selection, inversions can sometimes speed up the parallel adaptive process or enable parallel adaptation where it would be impossible otherwise, but this is highly dependent on the spatial setting. We highlight that further empirical work is needed, in particular to cover a broader taxonomic range and to understand the relative importance of inversions compared to genomic regions without inversions.},
  author       = {Westram, Anja M and Faria, Rui and Johannesson, Kerstin and Butlin, Roger and Barton, Nicholas H},
  issn         = {1471-2970},
  journal      = {Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences},
  keywords     = {General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology},
  number       = {1856},
  publisher    = {Royal Society of London},
  title        = {{Inversions and parallel evolution}},
  doi          = {10.1098/rstb.2021.0203},
  volume       = {377},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11551,
  abstract     = {Imbalanced mitochondrial dNTP pools are known players in the pathogenesis of multiple human diseases. Here we show that, even under physiological conditions, dGTP is largely overrepresented among other dNTPs in mitochondria of mouse tissues and human cultured cells. In addition, a vast majority of mitochondrial dGTP is tightly bound to NDUFA10, an accessory subunit of complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. NDUFA10 shares a deoxyribonucleoside kinase (dNK) domain with deoxyribonucleoside kinases in the nucleotide salvage pathway, though no specific function beyond stabilizing the complex I holoenzyme has been described for this subunit. We mutated the dNK domain of NDUFA10 in human HEK-293T cells while preserving complex I assembly and activity. The NDUFA10E160A/R161A shows reduced dGTP binding capacity in vitro and leads to a 50% reduction in mitochondrial dGTP content, proving that most dGTP is directly bound to the dNK domain of NDUFA10. This interaction may represent a hitherto unknown mechanism regulating mitochondrial dNTP availability and linking oxidative metabolism to DNA maintenance.},
  author       = {Molina-Granada, David and González-Vioque, Emiliano and Dibley, Marris G. and Cabrera-Pérez, Raquel and Vallbona-Garcia, Antoni and Torres-Torronteras, Javier and Sazanov, Leonid A and Ryan, Michael T. and Cámara, Yolanda and Martí, Ramon},
  issn         = {23993642},
  journal      = {Communications Biology},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Most mitochondrial dGTP is tightly bound to respiratory complex I through the NDUFA10 subunit}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s42003-022-03568-6},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11552,
  abstract     = {Rotational dynamics of D2 molecules inside helium nanodroplets is induced by a moderately intense femtosecond pump pulse and measured as a function of time by recording the yield of HeD+ ions, created through strong-field dissociative ionization with a delayed femtosecond probe pulse. The yield oscillates with a period of 185 fs, reflecting field-free rotational wave packet dynamics, and the oscillation persists for more than 500 periods. Within the experimental uncertainty, the rotational constant BHe of the in-droplet D2 molecule, determined by Fourier analysis, is the same as Bgas for an isolated D2 molecule. Our observations show that the D2 molecules inside helium nanodroplets essentially rotate as free D2 molecules.},
  author       = {Qiang, Junjie and Zhou, Lianrong and Lu, Peifen and Lin, Kang and Ma, Yongzhe and Pan, Shengzhe and Lu, Chenxu and Jiang, Wenyu and Sun, Fenghao and Zhang, Wenbin and Li, Hui and Gong, Xiaochun and Averbukh, Ilya Sh and Prior, Yehiam and Schouder, Constant A. and Stapelfeldt, Henrik and Cherepanov, Igor and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Jäger, Wolfgang and Wu, Jian},
  issn         = {10797114},
  journal      = {Physical Review Letters},
  number       = {24},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Femtosecond rotational dynamics of D2 molecules in superfluid helium nanodroplets}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.243201},
  volume       = {128},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11553,
  abstract     = {In holomorphic dynamics, complex box mappings arise as first return maps to wellchosen domains. They are a generalization of polynomial-like mapping, where the domain of the return map can have infinitely many components. They turned out to be extremely useful in tackling diverse problems. The purpose of this paper is:
• To illustrate some pathologies that can occur when a complex box mapping is not induced by a globally defined map and when its domain has infinitely many components, and to give conditions to avoid these issues.
• To show that once one has a box mapping for a rational map, these conditions can be assumed to hold in a very natural setting. Thus, we call such complex box mappings dynamically natural. Having such box mappings is the first step in tackling many problems in one-dimensional dynamics.
• Many results in holomorphic dynamics rely on an interplay between combinatorial and analytic techniques. In this setting, some of these tools are:
  • the Enhanced Nest (a nest of puzzle pieces around critical points) from Kozlovski, Shen, van Strien (AnnMath 165:749–841, 2007), referred to below as KSS;
  • the Covering Lemma (which controls the moduli of pullbacks of annuli) from Kahn and Lyubich (Ann Math 169(2):561–593, 2009);
   • the QC-Criterion and the Spreading Principle from KSS.
The purpose of this paper is to make these tools more accessible so that they can be used as a ‘black box’, so one does not have to redo the proofs in new settings.
• To give an intuitive, but also rather detailed, outline of the proof from KSS and Kozlovski and van Strien (Proc Lond Math Soc (3) 99:275–296, 2009) of the following results for non-renormalizable dynamically natural complex box mappings:
   • puzzle pieces shrink to points,
   • (under some assumptions) topologically conjugate non-renormalizable polynomials and box mappings are quasiconformally conjugate.
• We prove the fundamental ergodic properties for dynamically natural box mappings. This leads to some necessary conditions for when such a box mapping supports a measurable invariant line field on its filled Julia set. These mappings
are the analogues of Lattès maps in this setting.
• We prove a version of Mañé’s Theorem for complex box mappings concerning expansion along orbits of points that avoid a neighborhood of the set of critical points.},
  author       = {Clark, Trevor and Drach, Kostiantyn and Kozlovski, Oleg and Strien, Sebastian Van},
  issn         = {2199-6806},
  journal      = {Arnold Mathematical Journal},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {319--410},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The dynamics of complex box mappings}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s40598-022-00200-7},
  volume       = {8},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11556,
  abstract     = {We revisit two basic Direct Simulation Monte Carlo Methods to model aggregation kinetics and extend them for aggregation processes with collisional fragmentation (shattering). We test the performance and accuracy of the extended methods and compare their performance with efficient deterministic finite-difference method applied to the same model. We validate the stochastic methods on the test problems and apply them to verify the existence of oscillating regimes in the aggregation-fragmentation kinetics recently detected in deterministic simulations. We confirm the emergence of steady oscillations of densities in such systems and prove the stability of the
oscillations with respect to fluctuations and noise.},
  author       = {Kalinov, Aleksei and Osinskiy, A.I. and Matveev, S.A. and Otieno, W. and Brilliantov, N.V.},
  issn         = {0021-9991},
  journal      = {Journal of Computational Physics},
  keywords     = {Computer Science Applications, Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous), Applied Mathematics, Computational Mathematics, Modeling and Simulation, Numerical Analysis},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{Direct simulation Monte Carlo for new regimes in aggregation-fragmentation kinetics}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.jcp.2022.111439},
  volume       = {467},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11587,
  abstract     = {Background: Accurate and comprehensive annotation of transcript sequences is essential for transcript quantification and differential gene and transcript expression analysis. Single-molecule long-read sequencing technologies provide improved integrity of transcript structures including alternative splicing, and transcription start and polyadenylation sites. However, accuracy is significantly affected by sequencing errors, mRNA degradation, or incomplete cDNA synthesis.
Results: We present a new and comprehensive Arabidopsis thaliana Reference Transcript Dataset 3 (AtRTD3). AtRTD3 contains over 169,000 transcripts—twice that of the best current Arabidopsis transcriptome and including over 1500 novel genes. Seventy-eight percent of transcripts are from Iso-seq with accurately defined splice junctions and transcription start and end sites. We develop novel methods to determine splice junctions and transcription start and end sites accurately. Mismatch profiles around splice junctions provide a powerful feature to distinguish correct splice junctions and remove false splice junctions. Stratified approaches identify high-confidence transcription start and end sites and remove fragmentary transcripts due to degradation. AtRTD3 is a major improvement over existing transcriptomes as demonstrated by analysis of an Arabidopsis cold response RNA-seq time-series. AtRTD3 provides higher resolution of transcript expression profiling and identifies cold-induced differential transcription start and polyadenylation site usage.
Conclusions: AtRTD3 is the most comprehensive Arabidopsis transcriptome currently. It improves the precision of differential gene and transcript expression, differential alternative splicing, and transcription start/end site usage analysis from RNA-seq data. The novel methods for identifying accurate splice junctions and transcription start/end sites are widely applicable and will improve single-molecule sequencing analysis from any species.},
  author       = {Zhang, Runxuan and Kuo, Richard and Coulter, Max and Calixto, Cristiane P.G. and Entizne, Juan Carlos and Guo, Wenbin and Marquez, Yamile and Milne, Linda and Riegler, Stefan and Matsui, Akihiro and Tanaka, Maho and Harvey, Sarah and Gao, Yubang and Wießner-Kroh, Theresa and Paniagua, Alejandro and Crespi, Martin and Denby, Katherine and Hur, Asa Ben and Huq, Enamul and Jantsch, Michael and Jarmolowski, Artur and Koester, Tino and Laubinger, Sascha and Li, Qingshun Quinn and Gu, Lianfeng and Seki, Motoaki and Staiger, Dorothee and Sunkar, Ramanjulu and Szweykowska-Kulinska, Zofia and Tu, Shih Long and Wachter, Andreas and Waugh, Robbie and Xiong, Liming and Zhang, Xiao Ning and Conesa, Ana and Reddy, Anireddy S.N. and Barta, Andrea and Kalyna, Maria and Brown, John W.S.},
  issn         = {1474-760X},
  journal      = {Genome Biology},
  publisher    = {BioMed Central},
  title        = {{A high-resolution single-molecule sequencing-based Arabidopsis transcriptome using novel methods of Iso-seq analysis}},
  doi          = {10.1186/s13059-022-02711-0},
  volume       = {23},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11588,
  abstract     = {Visualizing cell behavior and effector function on a single cell level has been crucial for understanding key aspects of mammalian biology. Due to their small size, large number and rapid recruitment into thrombi, there is a lack of data on fate and behavior of individual platelets in thrombosis and hemostasis. Here we report the use of platelet lineage restricted multi-color reporter mouse strains to delineate platelet function on a single cell level. We show that genetic labeling allows for single platelet and megakaryocyte (MK) tracking and morphological analysis in vivo and in vitro, while not affecting lineage functions. Using Cre-driven Confetti expression, we provide insights into temporal gene expression patterns as well as spatial clustering of MK in the bone marrow. In the vasculature, shape analysis of activated platelets recruited to thrombi identifies ubiquitous filopodia formation with no evidence of lamellipodia formation. Single cell tracking in complex thrombi reveals prominent myosin-dependent motility of platelets and highlights thrombus formation as a highly dynamic process amenable to modification and intervention of the acto-myosin cytoskeleton. Platelet function assays combining flow cytrometry, as well as in vivo, ex vivo and in vitro imaging show unaltered platelet functions of multicolor reporter mice compared to wild-type controls. In conclusion, platelet lineage multicolor reporter mice prove useful in furthering our understanding of platelet and MK biology on a single cell level.},
  author       = {Nicolai, Leo and Kaiser, Rainer and Escaig, Raphael and Hoffknecht, Marie Louise and Anjum, Afra and Leunig, Alexander and Pircher, Joachim and Ehrlich, Andreas and Lorenz, Michael and Ishikawa-Ankerhold, Hellen and Aird, William C. and Massberg, Steffen and Gärtner, Florian R},
  issn         = {1592-8721},
  journal      = {Haematologica},
  number       = {7},
  pages        = {1669--1680},
  publisher    = {Ferrata Storti Foundation},
  title        = {{Single platelet and megakaryocyte morpho-dynamics uncovered by multicolor reporter mouse strains in vitro and in vivo}},
  doi          = {10.3324/haematol.2021.278896},
  volume       = {107},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11589,
  abstract     = {Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPK) are key components of a wide array of signaling pathways, translating stress and nutrient signaling into the modulation of cellular processes such as ion transport and transcription. However, not much is known about CPKs in endomembrane trafficking. Here, we screened for CPKs that impact on root growth and gravitropism, by overexpressing constitutively active forms of CPKs under the control of an inducible promoter in Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that inducible overexpression of an constitutive active CPK30 (CA-CPK30) resulted in a loss of root gravitropism and ectopic auxin accumulation in the root tip. Immunolocalization revealed that CA-CPK30 roots have reduced PIN protein levels, PIN1 polarity defects and impaired Brefeldin A (BFA)-sensitive trafficking. Moreover, FM4-64 uptake was reduced, indicative of a defect in endocytosis. The effects on BFA-sensitive trafficking were not specific to PINs, as BFA could not induce aggregation of ARF1- and CHC-labeled endosomes in CA-CPK30. Interestingly, the interference with BFA-body formation, could be reverted by increasing the extracellular pH, indicating a pH-dependence of this CA-CPK30 effect. Altogether, our data reveal an important role for CPK30 in root growth regulation and endomembrane trafficking in Arabidopsis thaliana.},
  author       = {Wang, Ren and Himschoot, Ellie and Chen, Jian and Boudsocq, Marie and Geelen, Danny and Friml, Jiří and Beeckman, Tom and Vanneste, Steffen},
  issn         = {1664-462X},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Plant Science},
  publisher    = {Frontiers},
  title        = {{Constitutive active CPK30 interferes with root growth and endomembrane trafficking in Arabidopsis thaliana}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fpls.2022.862398},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11590,
  abstract     = {We investigate the ground-state properties of weakly repulsive one-dimensional bosons in the presence of an attractive zero-range impurity potential. First, we derive mean-field solutions to the problem on a finite ring for the two asymptotic cases: (i) all bosons are bound to the impurity and (ii) all bosons are in a scattering state. Moreover, we derive the critical line that separates these regimes in the parameter space. In the thermodynamic limit, this critical line determines the maximum number of bosons that can be bound by the impurity potential, forming an artificial atom. Second, we validate the mean-field results using the flow equation approach and the multi-layer multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree method for atomic mixtures. While beyond-mean-field effects destroy long-range order in the Bose gas, the critical boson number is unaffected. Our findings are important for understanding such artificial atoms in low-density Bose gases with static and mobile impurities.},
  author       = {Brauneis, Fabian and Backert, Timothy G. and Mistakidis, Simeon I. and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Hammer, Hans Werner and Volosniev, Artem},
  issn         = {1367-2630},
  journal      = {New Journal of Physics},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{Artificial atoms from cold bosons in one dimension}},
  doi          = {10.1088/1367-2630/ac78d8},
  volume       = {24},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11591,
  abstract     = {We investigate the deterministic generation and distribution of entanglement in large quantum networks by driving distant qubits with the output fields of a nondegenerate parametric amplifier. In this setting, the amplifier produces a continuous Gaussian two-mode squeezed state, which acts as a quantum-correlated reservoir for the qubits and relaxes them into a highly entangled steady state. Here we are interested in the maximal amount of entanglement and the optimal entanglement generation rates that can be achieved with this scheme under realistic conditions taking, in particular, the finite amplifier bandwidth, waveguide losses, and propagation delays into account. By combining exact numerical simulations of the full network with approximate analytic results, we predict the optimal working point for the amplifier and the corresponding qubit-qubit entanglement under various conditions. Our findings show that this passive conversion of Gaussian into discrete-variable entanglement offers a robust and experimentally very attractive approach for operating large optical, microwave, or hybrid quantum networks, for which efficient parametric amplifiers are currently developed.},
  author       = {Agustí, J. and Minoguchi, Y. and Fink, Johannes M and Rabl, P.},
  issn         = {2469-9934},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Long-distance distribution of qubit-qubit entanglement using Gaussian-correlated photonic beams}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.105.062454},
  volume       = {105},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11592,
  abstract     = {We compare recent experimental results [Science 375, 528 (2022)] of the superfluid unitary Fermi gas near the critical temperature with a thermodynamic model based on the elementary excitations of the system. We find good agreement between experimental data and our theory for several quantities such as first sound, second sound, and superfluid fraction. We also show that mode mixing between first and second sound occurs. Finally, we characterize the response amplitude to a density perturbation: Close to the critical temperature both first and second sound can be excited through a density perturbation, whereas at lower temperatures only the first sound mode exhibits a significant response.},
  author       = {Bighin, Giacomo and Cappellaro, Alberto and Salasnich, L.},
  issn         = {2469-9934},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Unitary Fermi superfluid near the critical temperature: Thermodynamics and sound modes from elementary excitations}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.105.063329},
  volume       = {105},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11593,
  abstract     = {A drawing of a graph on a surface is independently even if every pair of nonadjacent edges in the drawing crosses an even number of times. The Z2 -genus of a graph G is the minimum g such that G has an independently even drawing on the orientable surface of genus g. An unpublished result by Robertson and Seymour implies that for every t, every graph of sufficiently large genus contains as a minor a projective t×t grid or one of the following so-called t -Kuratowski graphs: K3,t, or t copies of K5 or K3,3 sharing at most two common vertices. We show that the Z2-genus of graphs in these families is unbounded in t; in fact, equal to their genus. Together, this implies that the genus of a graph is bounded from above by a function of its Z2-genus, solving a problem posed by Schaefer and Štefankovič, and giving an approximate version of the Hanani–Tutte theorem on orientable surfaces. We also obtain an analogous result for Euler genus and Euler Z2-genus of graphs.},
  author       = {Fulek, Radoslav and Kynčl, Jan},
  issn         = {1432-0444},
  journal      = {Discrete and Computational Geometry},
  pages        = {425--447},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The Z2-Genus of Kuratowski minors}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00454-022-00412-w},
  volume       = {68},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11600,
  abstract     = {The Sun’s surface hosts varying magnetic activities and rotation rates (from equator to pole), and unique solar weather. Now, a combination of ground and space observations has unveiled a previously undetected magnetized plasma current.},
  author       = {Bugnet, Lisa Annabelle},
  issn         = {2397-3366},
  journal      = {Nature Astronomy},
  keywords     = {Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  pages        = {631--632},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Hidden currents at the Sun’s surface}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41550-022-01683-2},
  volume       = {6},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11601,
  abstract     = {We present the third and final data release of the K2 Galactic Archaeology Program (K2 GAP) for Campaigns C1–C8 and C10–C18. We provide asteroseismic radius and mass coefficients, κR and κM, for ∼19,000 red giant stars, which translate directly to radius and mass given a temperature. As such, K2 GAP DR3 represents the largest asteroseismic sample in the literature to date. K2 GAP DR3 stellar parameters are calibrated to be on an absolute parallactic scale based on Gaia DR2, with red giant branch and red clump evolutionary state classifications provided via a machine-learning approach. Combining these stellar parameters with GALAH DR3 spectroscopy, we determine asteroseismic ages with precisions of ∼20%–30% and compare age-abundance relations to Galactic chemical evolution models among both low- and high-α populations for α, light, iron-peak, and neutron-capture elements. We confirm recent indications in the literature of both increased Ba production at late Galactic times as well as significant contributions to r-process enrichment from prompt sources associated with, e.g., core-collapse supernovae. With an eye toward other Galactic archeology applications, we characterize K2 GAP DR3 uncertainties and completeness using injection tests, suggesting that K2 GAP DR3 is largely unbiased in mass/age, with uncertainties of 2.9% (stat.) ± 0.1% (syst.) and 6.7% (stat.) ± 0.3% (syst.) in κR and κM for red giant branch stars and 4.7% (stat.) ± 0.3% (syst.) and 11% (stat.) ± 0.9% (syst.) for red clump stars. We also identify percent-level asteroseismic systematics, which are likely related to the time baseline of the underlying data, and which therefore should be considered in TESS asteroseismic analysis.},
  author       = {Zinn, Joel C. and Stello, Dennis and Elsworth, Yvonne and García, Rafael A. and Kallinger, Thomas and Mathur, Savita and Mosser, Benoît and Hon, Marc and Bugnet, Lisa Annabelle and Jones, Caitlin and Reyes, Claudia and Sharma, Sanjib and Schönrich, Ralph and Warfield, Jack T. and Luger, Rodrigo and Vanderburg, Andrew and Kobayashi, Chiaki and Pinsonneault, Marc H. and Johnson, Jennifer A. and Huber, Daniel and Buder, Sven and Joyce, Meridith and Bland-Hawthorn, Joss and Casagrande, Luca and Lewis, Geraint F. and Miglio, Andrea and Nordlander, Thomas and Davies, Guy R. and Silva, Gayandhi De and Chaplin, William J. and Silva Aguirre, Victor},
  issn         = {1538-4357},
  journal      = {The Astrophysical Journal},
  keywords     = {Space and Planetary Science, Astronomy and Astrophysics},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{The K2 Galactic Archaeology Program data release 3: Age-abundance patterns in C1–C8 and C10–C18}},
  doi          = {10.3847/1538-4357/ac2c83},
  volume       = {926},
  year         = {2022},
}

