16,426 results on '"A. Galan"'
Search Results
2. An accurate solar axions ray-tracing response of BabyIAXO
- Author
-
Ahyoune, S., Altenmueller, K., Antolin, I., Basso, S., Brun, P., Candon, F. R., Castel, J. F., Cebrian, S., Chouhan, D., Della Ceca, R., Cervera-Cortes, M., Chernov, V., Civitani, M. M., Cogollos, C., Costa, E., Cotroneo, V., Dafni, T., Derbin, A., Desch, K., Diaz-Martin, M. C., Diaz-Morcillo, A., Diez-Ibanez, D., Pardos, C. Diez, Dinter, M., Doebrich, B., Drachnev, I., Dudarev, A., Ezquerro, A., Fabiani, S., Ferrer-Ribas, E., Finelli, F., Fleck, I., Galan, J., Galanti, G., Galaverni, M., Garcia, J. A., Garcia-Barcelo, J. M., Gastaldo, L., Giannotti, M., Giganon, A., Goblin, C., Goyal, N., Gu, Y., Hagge, L., Helary, L., Hengstler, D., Heuchel, D., Hoof, S., Iglesias-Marzoa, R., Iguaz, F. J., Iniguez, C., Irastorza, I. G., Jakovcic, K., Kaefer, D., Kaminski, J., Karstensen, S., Law, M., Lindner, A., Loidl, M., Loiseau, C., Lopez-Alegre, G., Lozano-Guerrero, A., Lubsandorzhiev, B., Luzon, G., Manthos, I., Margalejo, C., Marin-Franch, A., Marques, J., Marutzky, F., Menneglier, C., Mentink, M., Mertens, S., Miralda-Escude, J., Mirallas, H., Muleri, F., Muratova, V., Navarro-Madrid, J. R., Navick, X. F., Nikolopoulos, K., Notari, A., Nozik, A., Obis, L., Ortiz-de-Solorzano, A., O'Shea, T., von Oy, J., Pareschi, G., Papaevangelou, T., Perez, K., Perez, O., Picatoste, E., Pivovaroff, M. J., Porron, J., Puyuelo, M. J., Quintana, A., Redondo, J., Reuther, D., Ringwald, A., Rodrigues, M., Rubini, A., Rueda-Teruel, S., Rueda-Teruel, F., Ruiz-Choliz, E., Ruz, J., Schaffran, J., Schiffer, T., Schmidt, S., Schneekloth, U., Schoenfeld, L., Schott, M., Segui, L., Singh, U. R., Soffitta, P., Spiga, D., Stern, M., Straniero, O., Tavecchio, F., Unzhakov, E., Ushakov, N. A., Vecchi, G., Vogel, J. K., Voronin, D. M., Ward, R., Weltman, A., Wiesinger, C., Wolf, R., Yanes-Diaz, A., and Yu, Y.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Physics - Computational Physics ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
BabyIAXO is the intermediate stage of the International Axion Observatory (IAXO) to be hosted at DESY. Its primary goal is the detection of solar axions following the axion helioscope technique. Axions are converted into photons in a large magnet that is pointing to the sun. The resulting X-rays are focused by appropriate X-ray optics and detected by sensitive low-background detectors placed at the focal spot. The aim of this article is to provide an accurate quantitative description of the different components (such as the magnet, optics, and X-ray detectors) involved in the detection of axions. Our efforts have focused on developing robust and integrated software tools to model these helioscope components, enabling future assessments of modifications or upgrades to any part of the IAXO axion helioscope and evaluating the potential impact on the experiment's sensitivity. In this manuscript, we demonstrate the application of these tools by presenting a precise signal calculation and response analysis of BabyIAXO's sensitivity to the axion-photon coupling. Though focusing on the Primakoff solar flux component, our virtual helioscope model can be used to test different production mechanisms, allowing for direct comparisons within a unified framework., Comment: 36 pages, 18 figures, 4 tables, Submitted to JHEP
- Published
- 2024
3. Classification of Adventitious Sounds Combining Cochleogram and Vision Transformers
- Author
-
Mang, Loredana Daria, Martinez, Francisco David Gonzalez, Munoz, Damian Martinez, Galan, Sebastian Garcia, and Cortina, Raquel
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Early identification of respiratory irregularities is critical for improving lung health and reducing global mortality rates. The analysis of respiratory sounds plays a significant role in characterizing the respiratory system's condition and identifying abnormalities. The main contribution of this study is to investigate the performance when the input data, represented by cochleogram, is used to feed the Vision Transformer architecture, since this input classifier combination is the first time it has been applied to adventitious sound classification to our knowledge. Although ViT has shown promising results in audio classification tasks by applying self attention to spectrogram patches, we extend this approach by applying the cochleogram, which captures specific spectro-temporal features of adventitious sounds. The proposed methodology is evaluated on the ICBHI dataset. We compare the classification performance of ViT with other state of the art CNN approaches using spectrogram, Mel frequency cepstral coefficients, constant Q transform, and cochleogram as input data. Our results confirm the superior classification performance combining cochleogram and ViT, highlighting the potential of ViT for reliable respiratory sound classification. This study contributes to the ongoing efforts in developing automatic intelligent techniques with the aim to significantly augment the speed and effectiveness of respiratory disease detection, thereby addressing a critical need in the medical field.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. J1721+8842: The first Einstein zig-zag lens
- Author
-
Dux, F., Millon, M., Lemon, C., Schmidt, T., Courbin, F., Shajib, A. J., Treu, T., Birrer, S., Wong, K. C., Agnello, A., Andrade, A., Galan, A. A., Hjorth, J., Paic, E., Schuldt, S., Schweinfurth, A., Sluse, D., Smette, A., and Suyu, S. H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of the first example of an Einstein zig-zag lens, an extremely rare lensing configuration. In this system, J1721+8842, six images of the same background quasar are formed by two intervening galaxies, one at redshift $z_1 = 0.184$ and a second one at $z_2 = 1.885$. Two out of the six multiple images are deflected in opposite directions as they pass the first lens galaxy on one side, and the second on the other side -- the optical paths forming zig-zags between the two deflectors. In this letter, we demonstrate that J1721+8842, previously thought to be a lensed dual quasar, is in fact a compound lens with the more distant lens galaxy also being distorted as an arc by the foreground galaxy. Evidence supporting this unusual lensing scenario includes: 1- identical light curves in all six lensed quasar images obtained from two years of monitoring at the Nordic Optical Telescope; 2- detection of the additional deflector at redshift $z_2 = 1.885$ in JWST/NIRSpec IFU data; and 3- a multiple-plane lens model reproducing the observed image positions. This unique configuration offers the opportunity to combine two major lensing cosmological probes: time-delay cosmography and dual source-plane lensing since J1721+8842 features multiple lensed sources forming two distinct Einstein radii of different sizes, one of which being a variable quasar. We expect tight constraints on the Hubble constant and the equation of state of dark energy by combining these two probes on the same system. The $z_2 = 1.885$ deflector, a quiescent galaxy, is also the highest-redshift strong galaxy-scale lens with a spectroscopic redshift measurement., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2024
5. Dinosaur in a Haystack : X-ray View of the Entrails of SN 2023ixf and the Radio Afterglow of Its Interaction with the Medium Spawned by the Progenitor Star (Paper 1)
- Author
-
Nayana, A. J., Margutti, Raffaella, Wiston, Eli, Chornock, Ryan, Campana, Sergio, Laskar, Tanmoy, Murase, Kohta, Krips, Melanie, Migliori, Giulia, Tsuna, Daichi, Alexander, Kate D., Chandra, Poonam, Bietenholz, Michael, Berger, Edo, Chevalier, Roger A., De Colle, Fabio, Dessart, Luc, Diesing, Rebecca, Grefenstette, Brian W., Jacobson-Galan, Wynn V., Maeda, Keiichi, Marcote, Benito, Matthews, David, Milisavljevic, Dan, Ray, Alak K., Reguitti, Andrea, and Polzin, Ava
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results from our extensive hard-to-soft X-ray (NuSTAR, Swift-XRT, XMM-Newton, Chandra) and meter-to-mm wave radio (GMRT, VLA, NOEMA) monitoring campaign of the very nearby (d $=6.9$ Mpc) Type II SN2023ixf spanning $\approx$ 4--165 d post-explosion. This unprecedented dataset enables inferences on the explosion's circumstellar medium (CSM) density and geometry. Specifically, we find that the luminous X-ray emission is well modeled by thermal free-free radiation from the forward shock with rapidly decreasing photo-electric absorption with time. The radio spectrum is dominated by synchrotron radiation from the same shock, and the NOEMA detection of high-frequency radio emission may indicate a new component consistent with the secondary origin. Similar to the X-rays, the level of free-free absorption affecting the radio spectrum rapidly decreases with time as a consequence of the shock propagation into the dense CSM. While the X-ray and the radio modeling independently support the presence of a dense medium corresponding to an \emph{effective} mass-loss rate $\dot{M} \approx 10^{-4}\, \rm M_{\odot}\,yr^{-1}$ at $R = (0.4-14) \times 10^{15}$ (for $v_{\rm w}=\rm 25 \,km\,s^{-1}$), our study points at a complex CSM density structure with asymmetries and clumps. The inferred densities are $\approx$10--100 times those of typical red supergiants, indicating an extreme mass-loss phase of the progenitor in the $\approx$200 years preceding core collapse, which leads to the most X-ray luminous Type II SN and the one with the most delayed emergence of radio emission. These results add to the picture of the complex mass-loss history of massive stars on the verge of collapse and demonstrate the need for panchromatic campaigns to fully map their intricate environments., Comment: 32 pages, 16 figures, 9 Tables
- Published
- 2024
6. An incremental algorithm based on multichannel non-negative matrix partial co-factorization for ambient denoising in auscultation
- Author
-
Cruz, Juan De La Torre, Quesada, Francisco Jesus Canadas, Martinez-Munoz, Damian, Reyes, Nicolas Ruiz, Galan, Sebastian Garcia, and Orti, Julio Jose Carabias
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing ,Computer Science - Sound ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The aim of this study is to implement a method to remove ambient noise in biomedical sounds captured in auscultation. We propose an incremental approach based on multichannel non-negative matrix partial co-factorization (NMPCF) for ambient denoising focusing on high noisy environment with a Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) <= -5 dB. The first contribution applies NMPCF assuming that ambient noise can be modelled as repetitive sound events simultaneously found in two single-channel inputs captured by means of different recording devices. The second contribution proposes an incremental algorithm, based on the previous multichannel NMPCF, that refines the estimated biomedical spectrogram throughout a set of incremental stages by eliminating most of the ambient noise that was not removed in the previous stage at the expense of preserving most of the biomedical spectral content. The ambient denoising performance of the proposed method, compared to some of the most relevant state-of-the-art methods, has been evaluated using a set of recordings composed of biomedical sounds mixed with ambient noise that typically surrounds a medical consultation room to simulate high noisy environments with a SNR from -20 dB to -5 dB. Experimental results report that: (i) the performance drop suffered by the proposed method is lower compared to MSS and NLMS; (ii) unlike what happens with MSS and NLMS, the proposed method shows a stable trend of the average SDR and SIR results regardless of the type of ambient noise and the SNR level evaluated; and (iii) a remarkable advantage is the high robustness of the estimated biomedical sounds when the two single-channel inputs suffer from a delay between them.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Improving snore detection under limited dataset through harmonic/percussive source separation and convolutional neural networks
- Author
-
Gonzalez-Martinez, F. D., Carabias-Orti, J. J., Canadas-Quesada, F. J., Ruiz-Reyes, N., Martinez-Munoz, D., and Garcia-Galan, S.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Sound ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Emerging Technologies ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Snoring, an acoustic biomarker commonly observed in individuals with Obstructive Sleep Apnoea Syndrome (OSAS), holds significant potential for diagnosing and monitoring this recognized clinical disorder. Irrespective of snoring types, most snoring instances exhibit identifiable harmonic patterns manifested through distinctive energy distributions over time. In this work, we propose a novel method to differentiate monaural snoring from non-snoring sounds by analyzing the harmonic content of the input sound using harmonic/percussive sound source separation (HPSS). The resulting feature, based on the harmonic spectrogram from HPSS, is employed as input data for conventional neural network architectures, aiming to enhance snoring detection performance even under a limited data learning framework. To evaluate the performance of our proposal, we studied two different scenarios: 1) using a large dataset of snoring and interfering sounds, and 2) using a reduced training set composed of around 1% of the data material. In the former scenario, the proposed HPSS-based feature provides competitive results compared to other input features from the literature. However, the key advantage of the proposed method lies in the superior performance of the harmonic spectrogram derived from HPSS in a limited data learning context. In this particular scenario, using the proposed harmonic feature significantly enhances the performance of all the studied architectures in comparison to the classical input features documented in the existing literature. This finding clearly demonstrates that incorporating harmonic content enables more reliable learning of the essential time-frequency characteristics that are prevalent in most snoring sounds, even in scenarios where the amount of training data is limited.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Precise physical parameters of three late-type eclipsing binary giant stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud
- Author
-
García, G. Rojas, Graczyk, D., Pietrzyński, G., Gałan, C., Gieren, W., Thompson, I., Suchomska, K., Kałuszyński, M., Soszyński, I., Udalski, A., Karczmarek, P., Narloch, W., Górski, M., Wielgórski, P., Zgirski, B., Miller, N., Hajdu, G., Pilecki, B., Taormina, M., and Lewis, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Detached eclipsing binaries (DEBs) allow for the possibility of precise characterization of its stellar components. They offer a unique opportunity to derive their physical parameters in a near-model-independent way for a number of systems consisting of late-type giant stars. Here we aim to expand the sample of low-metallicity late-type giant stars with precise parameters determined. We aim to determine the fundamental parameters like the mass, radius, or effective temperature for three long-period late-type eclipsing binaries from the Large Magellanic Cloud: OGLE-LMC-ECL-25304, OGLE-LMC-ECL-28283, and OGLE-IV LMC554.19.81. Subsequently we aim to determine the evolutionary stages of the systems. We fit the light curves from the OGLE project and radial velocity curves from high resolution spectrographs using the Wilson-Devinney code. The spectral analysis was performed with the GSSP code and resulted in the determination of atmospheric parameters such as effective temperatures and metallicities. We used isochrones provided by the MIST models based on the MESA code to derive evolutionary status of the stars. We present the first analysis of three DEBs composed of similar He-burning late-type stars passing through the blue loop. Estimated masses for OGLE-LMC-ECL-29293 (G4III + G4III) are $M_1=2.898\pm0.031$ and $M_2=3.153\pm0.038$ $M_\odot$, stellar radii are $R_1=19.43\pm0.31$ and $R_2=19.30\pm0.31$ $R_\odot$. OGLE-LMC-ECL-25304 (G4III + G5III) has stellar masses of $M_1=3.267\pm0.028$ and $M_2=3.229\pm0.029$ $M_\odot$, radii of $R_1=23.62\pm0.42$ and $R_2=25.10\pm0.43$ $R_\odot$. OGLE-IV LMC554.19.81 (G2III + G2III) have masses of $M_1=3.165\pm0.020$ and $M_2=3.184\pm0.020$ $M_\odot$, radii of $R_1=18.86\pm0.26$ and $R_2=19.64\pm0.26$ $R_\odot$. All masses were determined with a precision better than 2\% and radii better than 1.5\%. The ages of the stars are in the range of 270-341 Myr., Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2024
9. Sequential LLM Framework for Fashion Recommendation
- Author
-
Liu, Han, Tang, Xianfeng, Chen, Tianlang, Liu, Jiapeng, Indu, Indu, Zou, Henry Peng, Dai, Peng, Galan, Roberto Fernandez, Porter, Michael D, Jia, Dongmei, Zhang, Ning, and Xiong, Lian
- Subjects
Computer Science - Information Retrieval ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The fashion industry is one of the leading domains in the global e-commerce sector, prompting major online retailers to employ recommendation systems for product suggestions and customer convenience. While recommendation systems have been widely studied, most are designed for general e-commerce problems and struggle with the unique challenges of the fashion domain. To address these issues, we propose a sequential fashion recommendation framework that leverages a pre-trained large language model (LLM) enhanced with recommendation-specific prompts. Our framework employs parameter-efficient fine-tuning with extensive fashion data and introduces a novel mix-up-based retrieval technique for translating text into relevant product suggestions. Extensive experiments show our proposed framework significantly enhances fashion recommendation performance.
- Published
- 2024
10. Military Applications of Machine Learning: A Bibliometric Perspective
- Author
-
Galán, José Javier, Carrasco, Ramón Alberto, and LaTorre, Antonio
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The military environment generates a large amount of data of great importance, which makes necessary the use of machine learning for its processing. Its ability to learn and predict possible scenarios by analyzing the huge volume of information generated provides automatic learning and decision support. This paper aims to present a model of a machine learning architecture applied to a military organization, carried out and supported by a bibliometric study applied to an architecture model of a nonmilitary organization. For this purpose, a bibliometric analysis up to the year 2021 was carried out, making a strategic diagram and interpreting the results. The information used has been extracted from one of the main databases widely accepted by the scientific community, ISI WoS. No direct military sources were used. This work is divided into five parts: the study of previous research related to machine learning in the military world; the explanation of our research methodology using the SciMat, Excel and VosViewer tools; the use of this methodology based on data mining, preprocessing, cluster normalization, a strategic diagram and the analysis of its results to investigate machine learning in the military context; based on these results, a conceptual architecture of the practical use of ML in the military context is drawn up; and, finally, we present the conclusions, where we will see the most important areas and the latest advances in machine learning applied, in this case, to a military environment, to analyze a large set of data, providing utility, machine learning and decision support.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Photon pair generation via down-conversion in III-V semiconductor microrings: modal dispersion and quasi-phase matching
- Author
-
Fontaine, Samuel E., Vendromin, Colin, Steiner, Trevor J., Atrli, Amirali, Thiel, Lillian, Castro, Joshua, Moody, Galan, Bowers, John, Liscidini, Marco, and Sipe, J. E.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
We explore how III-V semiconductor microring resonators can efficiently generate photon pairs and squeezed vacuum states via spontaneous parametric down-conversion by utilizing their built-in quasi phase matching and modal dispersion. We present an analytic expression for the biphoton wave function of photon pairs generated by weak pump pulses, and characterize the squeezed states that result under stronger pumping conditions. Our model includes loss, and captures the statistics of the scattered photons. A detailed sample calculation shows that for low pump powers conversion efficiencies of 10$^{-5}$, corresponding to a rate of 39 MHz for a pump power of 1 $\mu$W, are attainable for rudimentary structures such as a simple microring coupled to a waveguide, in both the continuous wave and pulsed excitation regimes. Our results suggest that high levels of squeezing and pump depletion are attainable, possibly leading to the deterministic generation of non-Gaussian states, Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 2024
12. Validation of up to seven TESS planet candidates through multi-colour transit photometry using MuSCAT2 data
- Author
-
Peláez-Torres, A., Esparza-Borges, E., Pallé, E., Parviainen, H., Murgas, F., Morello, G., Zapatero-Osorio, M. R., Korth, J., Narita, N., Fukui, A., Carleo, I., Luque, R., García, N. Abreu, Barkaoui, K., Boyle, A., Béjar, V. J. S., Calatayud-Borras, Y., Cheryasov, D. V., Christiansen, J. L., Ciardi, D. R., Enoc, G., Essack, Z., Fukuda, I., Furesz, G., Galán, D., Geraldía-González, S., Giacalone, S., Gill, H., Gonzales, E. J., Hayashi, Y., Ikuta, K., Isogai, K., Kagetani, T., Kawai, Y., Kawauchi, K., Klagyvik, P., Kodama, T., Kusakabe, N., Laza-Ramos, A., de Leon, J. P., Livingston, J. H., Lund, M. B., Madrigal-Aguado, A., Meni, P., Mori, M., Torres, S. Muñoz, Orell-Miquel, J., Puig, M., Ricker, G., Sánchez-Benavente, M., Savel, A. B., Schlieder, J. E., Schwarz, R. P., Sefako, R., Sosa-Guillén, P., Stangret, M., Stockdale, C., Tamura, M., Terada, Y., Twicken, J. D., Watanabe, N., Winn, J., Zheltoukhov, S. G., Ziegler, C., and Zou, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The TESS mission searches for transiting exoplanets by monitoring the brightness of hundreds of thousands of stars across the entire sky. M-type planet hosts are ideal targets for this mission due to their smaller size and cooler temperatures, which makes it easier to detect smaller planets near or within their habitable zones. Additionally, M~dwarfs have a smaller contrast ratio between the planet and the star, making it easier to measure the planet's properties accurately. Here, we report the validation analysis of 13 TESS exoplanet candidates orbiting around M dwarfs. We studied the nature of these candidates through a multi-colour transit photometry transit analysis using several ground-based instruments (MuSCAT2, MuSCAT3, and LCO-SINISTRO), high-spatial resolution observations, and TESS light curves. We present the validation of five new planetary systems: TOI-1883b, TOI-2274b, TOI2768b, TOI-4438b, and TOI-5319b, along with compelling evidence of a planetary nature for TOIs 2781b and 5486b. We also present an empirical definition for the Neptune desert boundaries. The remaining six systems could not be validated due to large true radius values overlapping with the brown dwarf regime or, alternatively, the presence of chromaticity in the MuSCAT2 light curves.
- Published
- 2024
13. Spatial polarization gating of high-harmonic generation in solids
- Author
-
van Essen, Pieter J., de Keijzer, Brian, van Horen, Tanya, Molinero, Eduardo B., Galán, Álvaro Jiménez, Silva, Rui E. F., and Kraus, Peter M.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
High-harmonic generation from solids can be utilized as probe of ultrafast dynamics, but thus far only over extended sample areas, since its spatial resolution is diffraction-limited. Here we propose spatial polarization gating, that is using a spatially varying ellipticity of a driving laser pulse to reduce the spatial profile of high-harmonic emission below the diffraction limit and hence increase spatial resolution. We show experimentally and by numerical simulations that our method is generally applicable as suppressing high harmonics in elliptical fields is a common response in all solids. We also briefly explore the possibility of applying this technique to widefield imaging, specifically to nonlinear structured illumination microscopy. Our findings indicate that spatial polarization gating can enable all-optical femto-to-attosecond label-free imaging beyond the Abbe limit., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures (incl. supplementary material)
- Published
- 2024
14. A MAC Protocol with Time Reversal for Wireless Networks within Computing Packages
- Author
-
Bandara, Ama, Das, Abhijit, Rodríguez-Galán, Fátima, Alarcón, Eduard, and Abadal, Sergi
- Subjects
Computer Science - Emerging Technologies ,Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,C.1.2 ,C.2.2 ,B.4.3 - Abstract
Wireless Network-on-Chip (WNoC) is a promising concept which provides a solution to overcome the scalability issues in prevailing networks-in-package for many-core processors. However, the electromagnetic propagation inside the chip package leads to energy reverberation, resulting in Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI) with high delay spreads. Time Reversal (TR) is a technique that benefits the unique time-invariant channel with rich multipath effects to focus the energy to the desired transceiver. TR mitigates both ISI and co-channel interference, hence providing parallel communications in both space and time. Thus, TR is a versatile candidate to improve the aggregate bandwidth of wireless on-chip networks provided that a Medium Access Control (MAC) is used to efficiently share the wireless medium. In this paper, we explore a simple yet resilient TR-based MAC protocol (TR-MAC) design for WNoC. We propose to manage multiple parallel transmissions with simultaneous spatial channels in the same time slot with TR precoding and focused energy detection at the transceiver. Our results show that TR-MAC can be employed in massive computing architectures with improved latency and throughput while matching with the stringent requirements of the physical layer.
- Published
- 2024
15. Revealing the Berry phase under the tunneling barrier
- Author
-
Faeyrman, Lior, Molinero, Eduardo B., Weiss, Roni, Narovlansky, Vladimir, Kneller, Omer, Arusi-Parpar, Talya, Bruner, Barry D., Yan, Binghai, Ivanov, Misha, Smirnova, Olga, Jimenez-Galan, Alvaro, Piccoli, Riccardo, Silva, Rui E. F., Dudovich, Nirit, and Uzan-Narovlansky, Ayelet J.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
In quantum mechanics, a quantum wavepacket may acquire a geometrical phase as it evolves along a cyclic trajectory in parameter space. In condensed matter systems, the Berry phase plays a crucial role in fundamental phenomena such as the Hall effect, orbital magnetism, and polarization. Resolving the quantum nature of these processes commonly requires sensitive quantum techniques, as tunneling, being the dominant mechanism in STM microscopy and tunneling transport devices. In this study, we integrate these two phenomena - geometrical phases and tunneling - and observe a complex-valued Berry phase via strong field light matter interactions in condensed matter systems. By manipulating the tunneling barrier, with attoseconds precision, we measure the imaginary Berry phase accumulated as the electron tunnels during a fraction of the optical cycle. Our work opens new theoretical and experimental directions in geometrical phases physics and their realization in condensed matter systems, expanding solid state strong field light metrology to study topological quantum phenomena., Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2024
16. Reflectivity Studies and Production of New Flat Mirrors for the Cherenkov Threshold Detectors at CERN
- Author
-
Orgaz, J. Buesa, van Dijk, M., Banerjee, D., Bernhard, J., Brugger, M., Charitonidis, N., Rahmoun, A. Ebn, Lazzaroni, M., Marchand, V., Ruiz, I. Ortega, Parozzi, E. G., Romagnoli, G., Galan, F. Sanchez, Schneider, T., Tan, J., and van Stenis, M.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Cherenkov threshold detectors (XCET) are used for identifying particles in the experimental areas at CERN. These detectors observe Cherenkov light emitted by charged particles travelling inside a pressurized gas vessel. A key component of the XCET detector is the 45-degree flat mirror reflecting the Cherenkov light towards the photomultiplier (PMT). A thorough analysis and optimization was conducted on the design and materials of this mirror, along with the surface coatings and coating techniques. A suitable manufacturing process was selected, and the first mirror prototype was produced, installed, and tested in the East Area at CERN. Experimental data obtained during beam tests is presented to assess the efficiency of the new coating and materials used., Comment: 15th International Particle Accelerator Conference,Nashville, TN
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Integrated Mode-Hop-Free Tunable Lasers at 780 nm for Chip-Scale Classical and Quantum Photonic Applications
- Author
-
Castro, Joshua E., Nolasco-Martinez, Eber, Pintus, Paolo, Zhang, Zeyu, Shen, Boqiang, Morin, Theodore, Thiel, Lillian, Steiner, Trevor J., Lewis, Nicholas, Patel, Sahil D., Bowers, John E., Weld, David M., and Moody, Galan
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
In the last decade, remarkable advances in integrated photonic technologies have enabled table-top experiments and instrumentation to be scaled down to compact chips with significant reduction in size, weight, power consumption, and cost. Here, we demonstrate an integrated continuously tunable laser in a heterogeneous gallium arsenide-on-silicon nitride (GaAs-on-SiN) platform that emits in the far-red radiation spectrum near 780 nm, with 20 nm tuning range, <6 kHz intrinsic linewidth, and a >40 dB side-mode suppression ratio. The GaAs optical gain regions are heterogeneously integrated with low-loss SiN waveguides. The narrow linewidth lasing is achieved with an extended cavity consisting of a resonator-based Vernier mirror and a phase shifter. Utilizing synchronous tuning of the integrated heaters, we show mode-hop-free wavelength tuning over a range larger than 100 GHz (200 pm). To demonstrate the potential of the device, we investigate two illustrative applications: (i) the linear characterization of a silicon nitride microresonator designed for entangled-photon pair generation, and (ii) the absorption spectroscopy and locking to the D1 and D2 transition lines of 87-Rb. The performance of the proposed integrated laser holds promise for a broader spectrum of both classical and quantum applications in the visible range, encompassing communication, control, sensing, and computing.
- Published
- 2024
18. The Long-lived Broadband Afterglow of Short Gamma-Ray Burst 231117A and the Growing Radio-Detected Short GRB Population
- Author
-
Schroeder, Genevieve, Fong, Wen-fai, Kilpatrick, Charles D., Escorial, Alicia Rouco, Laskar, Tanmoy, Nugent, Anya E., Rastinejad, Jillian, Alexander, Kate D., Berger, Edo, Brink, Thomas G., Chornock, Ryan, de Bom, Clecio R., Dong, Yuxin, Eftekhari, Tarraneh, Filippenko, Alexei V., Fuentes-Carvajal, Celeste, Jacobson-Galan, Wynn V., Malkan, Matthew, Margutti, Raffaella, Pearson, Jeniveve, Rhodes, Lauren, Salinas, Ricardo, Sand, David J., Santana-Silva, Luidhy, Santos, Andre, Sears, Huei, Shrestha, Manisha, Smith, Nathan, Webb, Wayne, de Wet, Simon, and Yang, Yi
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present multiwavelength observations of the Swift short $\gamma$-ray burst GRB 231117A, localized to an underlying galaxy at redshift $z = 0.257$ at a small projected offset ($\sim 2~$kpc). We uncover long-lived X-ray (Chandra) and radio/millimeter (VLA, MeerKAT, and ALMA) afterglow emission, detected to $\sim 37~$days and $\sim 20~$days (rest frame), respectively. We measure a wide jet ($\sim 10.4^\circ$) and relatively high circumburst density ($\sim 0.07~{\rm cm}^{-3}$) compared to the short GRB population. Our data cannot be easily fit with a standard forward shock model, but they are generally well fit with the incorporation of a refreshed forward shock and a reverse shock at $< 1~$day. We incorporate GRB 231117A into a larger sample of 132 X-ray detected events, 71 of which were radio-observed (17 cm-band detections), for a systematic study of the distributions of redshifts, jet and afterglow properties, galactocentric offsets, and local environments of events with and without detected radio afterglows. Compared to the entire short GRB population, the majority of radio-detected GRBs are at relatively low redshifts ($z < 0.6$) and have high circumburst densities ($> 10^{-2}~{\rm cm}^{-3}$), consistent with their smaller ($< 8~$kpc) projected galactocentric offsets. We additionally find that 70% of short GRBs with opening angle measurements were radio-detected, indicating the importance of radio afterglows in jet measurements, especially in the cases of wide ($> 10^\circ$) jets where observational evidence of collimation may only be detectable at radio wavelengths. Owing to improved observing strategies and the emergence of sensitive radio facilities, the number of radio-detected short GRBs has quadrupled in the past decade., Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2024
19. FoodMem: Near Real-time and Precise Food Video Segmentation
- Author
-
AlMughrabi, Ahmad, Galán, Adrián, Marques, Ricardo, and Radeva, Petia
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Food segmentation, including in videos, is vital for addressing real-world health, agriculture, and food biotechnology issues. Current limitations lead to inaccurate nutritional analysis, inefficient crop management, and suboptimal food processing, impacting food security and public health. Improving segmentation techniques can enhance dietary assessments, agricultural productivity, and the food production process. This study introduces the development of a robust framework for high-quality, near-real-time segmentation and tracking of food items in videos, using minimal hardware resources. We present FoodMem, a novel framework designed to segment food items from video sequences of 360-degree unbounded scenes. FoodMem can consistently generate masks of food portions in a video sequence, overcoming the limitations of existing semantic segmentation models, such as flickering and prohibitive inference speeds in video processing contexts. To address these issues, FoodMem leverages a two-phase solution: a transformer segmentation phase to create initial segmentation masks and a memory-based tracking phase to monitor food masks in complex scenes. Our framework outperforms current state-of-the-art food segmentation models, yielding superior performance across various conditions, such as camera angles, lighting, reflections, scene complexity, and food diversity. This results in reduced segmentation noise, elimination of artifacts, and completion of missing segments. Here, we also introduce a new annotated food dataset encompassing challenging scenarios absent in previous benchmarks. Extensive experiments conducted on Nutrition5k and Vegetables & Fruits datasets demonstrate that FoodMem enhances the state-of-the-art by 2.5% mean average precision in food video segmentation and is 58 x faster on average.
- Published
- 2024
20. Broadband Entangled-Photon Pair Generation with Integrated Photonics: Guidelines and A Materials Comparison
- Author
-
Duan, Liao, Steiner, Trevor J., Pintus, Paolo, Thiel, Lillian, Castro, Joshua E., Bowers, John E., and Moody, Galan
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Correlated photon-pair sources are key components for quantum computing, networking, and sensing applications. Integrated photonics has enabled chip-scale sources using nonlinear processes, producing high-rate entanglement with sub-100 microwatt power at telecom wavelengths. Many quantum systems operate in the visible or near-infrared ranges, necessitating broadband visible-telecom entangled-pair sources for connecting remote systems via entanglement swapping and teleportation. This study evaluates broadband entanglement generation through spontaneous four-wave mixing in various nonlinear integrated photonic materials, including silicon nitride, lithium niobate, aluminum gallium arsenide, indium gallium phosphide, and gallium nitride. We demonstrate how geometric dispersion engineering facilitates phase-matching for each platform and reveals unexpected results, such as robust designs to fabrication variations and a Type-1 cross-polarized phase-matching condition for III-V materials that expands the operational bandwidth. With experimentally attainable parameters, integrated photonic microresonators with optimized designs can achieve pair generation rates greater than ~1 THz/mW$^2$.
- Published
- 2024
21. Hyperspectral Dataset and Deep Learning methods for Waste from Electric and Electronic Equipment Identification (WEEE)
- Author
-
Picon, Artzai, Galan, Pablo, Bereciartua-Perez, Arantza, and Benito-del-Valle, Leire
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Hyperspectral imaging, a rapidly evolving field, has witnessed the ascendancy of deep learning techniques, supplanting classical feature extraction and classification methods in various applications. However, many researchers employ arbitrary architectures for hyperspectral image processing, often without rigorous analysis of the interplay between spectral and spatial information. This oversight neglects the implications of combining these two modalities on model performance. In this paper, we evaluate the performance of diverse deep learning architectures for hyperspectral image segmentation. Our analysis disentangles the impact of different architectures, spanning various spectral and spatial granularities. Specifically, we investigate the effects of spectral resolution (capturing spectral information) and spatial texture (conveying spatial details) on segmentation outcomes. Additionally, we explore the transferability of knowledge from large pre-trained image foundation models, originally designed for RGB images, to the hyperspectral domain. Results show that incorporating spatial information alongside spectral data leads to improved segmentation results, and that it is essential to further work on novel architectures comprising spectral and spatial information and on the adaption of RGB foundation models into the hyperspectral domain. Furthermore, we contribute to the field by cleaning and publicly releasing the Tecnalia WEEE Hyperspectral dataset. This dataset contains different non-ferrous fractions of Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE), including Copper, Brass, Aluminum, Stainless Steel, and White Copper, spanning the range of 400 to 1000 nm. We expect these conclusions can guide novel researchers in the field of hyperspectral imaging.
- Published
- 2024
22. Wafer-Scale Fabrication of InGaP-on-Insulator for Nonlinear and Quantum Photonic Applications
- Author
-
Thiel, Lillian, Castro, Joshua E., Steiner, Trevor J., Nguyen, Catherine L., Pechilis, Audrey, Duan, Liao, Lewis, Nicholas, Cole, Garrett D., Bowers, John E., and Moody, Galan
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
The development of manufacturable and scalable integrated nonlinear photonic materials is driving key technologies in diverse areas such as high-speed communications, signal processing, sensing, and quantum information. Here, we demonstrate a novel nonlinear platform -- InGaP-on-insulator -- optimized for visible-to-telecommunication wavelength $\chi^{\left(2\right)}$ nonlinear optical processes. In this work, we detail our 100-mm wafer-scale InGaP-on-insulator fabrication process realized via wafer bonding, optical lithography, and dry-etching techniques. The resulting wafers yield 1000s of components in each fabrication cycle, with initial designs that include chip-to-fiber couplers, 12.5-cm-long nested spiral waveguides, and arrays of microring resonators with free-spectral ranges spanning 400-900 GHz. We demonstrate intrinsic resonator quality factors as high as 324,000 (440,000) for single-resonance (split-resonance) modes near 1550 nm corresponding to 1.56 dB cm$^{-1}$ (1.22 dB cm$^{-1}$) propagation loss. We analyze the loss versus waveguide width and resonator radius to establish the operating regime for optimal 775-to-1550 nm phase matching. By combining the high $\chi^{\left(2\right)}$ and $\chi^{\left(3\right)}$ optical nonlinearity of InGaP with wafer-scale fabrication and low propagation loss, these results open promising possibilities for entangled-photon, multi-photon, and squeezed light generation.
- Published
- 2024
23. A new upper limit on the axion-photon coupling with an extended CAST run with a Xe-based Micromegas detector
- Author
-
CAST Collaboration, Altenmüller, K., Anastassopoulos, V., Arguedas-Cuendis, S., Aune, S., Baier, J., Barth, K., Bräuninger, H., Cantatore, G., Caspers, F., Castel, J. F., Çetin, S. A., Christensen, F., Cogollos, C., Dafni, T., Davenport, M., Decker, T. A., Desch, K., Díez-Ibáñez, D., Döbrich, B., Ferrer-Ribas, E., Fischer, H., Funk, W., Galán, J., García, J. A., Gardikiotis, A., Giomataris, I., Golm, J., Hailey, C. H., Hasinoff, M. D., Hoffmann, D. H. H., Irastorza, I. G., Jacoby, J., Jakobsen, A. C., Jakovčić, K., Kaminski, J., Karuza, M., Kostoglou, S., Krieger, C., Lakić, B., Laurent, J. M., Luzón, G., Malbrunot, C., Margalejo, C., Maroudas, M., Miceli, L., Mirallas, H., Navarro, P., Obis, L., Özbey, A., Özbozduman, K., Papaevangelou, T., Pérez, O., Pivovaroff, M. J., Rosu, M., Ruiz-Chóliz, E., Ruz, J., Schmidt, S., Schumann, M., Semertzidis, Y. K., Solanki, S. K., Stewart, L., Vafeiadis, T., Vogel, J. K., and Zioutas, K.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Hypothetical axions provide a compelling explanation for dark matter and could be emitted from the hot solar interior. The CERN Axion Solar Telescope (CAST) has been searching for solar axions via their back conversion to X-ray photons in a 9-T 10-m long magnet directed towards the Sun. We report on an extended run with the IAXO (International Axion Observatory) pathfinder detector, doubling the previous exposure time. The detector was operated with a xenon-based gas mixture for part of the new run, providing technical insights for future detector configurations in IAXO. No counts are detected in the 95\% signal-encircling region during the new run, while one is expected. The new data improve the axion-photon coupling limit to 5.7$\times 10^{-11}\,$GeV$^{-1}$ at 95\% C.L., the most restrictive experimental limit to date., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures (plus 6 pages, 10 figures of supplemental material) Corresponding authors: C. Margalejo (cmargalejo@unizar.es) and J. Ruz (Jaime.Ruz@cern.ch)
- Published
- 2024
24. Exploiting the diversity of modeling methods to probe systematic biases in strong lensing analyses
- Author
-
Galan, A., Vernardos, G., Minor, Q., Sluse, D., Van de Vyvere, L., and Gomer, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In the past decade, the diversity of strong lens modeling methods has exploded, from being purely analytical to pixelated and non-parametric, or based on deep learning. We embrace this diversity by selecting different software packages and use them to blindly model independently simulated Hubble Space Telescope imaging data. To overcome the difficulties arising from using different codes and conventions, we use the COde-independent Organized LEns STandard (COOLEST) to store, compare and release all models in a self-consistent and human-readable manner. From an ensemble of six modeling methods, we study the recovery of the lens potential parameters and properties of the reconstructed source. In particular, we simulate and infer parameters of an elliptical power-law mass distribution with external shear for the lens while each modeling method reconstructs the source differently. We find that overall, both lens and source properties are recovered reasonably well, but systematic biases arise in all methods. Interestingly, we do not observe that a single method is significantly more accurate than others, and the amount of bias largely depends on the specific lens or source property of interest. By combining posterior distributions from individual methods using equal weights, the maximal systematic biases on lens model parameters inferred from individual models are reduced by a factor of 5.4 on average. We investigate a selection of modeling effects that partly explain the observed biases, such as the cuspy nature of the background source and the accuracy of the point spread function. This work introduces, for the first time, a generic framework to compare and ease the combination of models obtained from different codes and methods, which will be key to retain accuracy in future strong lensing analyses., Comment: 24 pages, 16 figures. Submitted to A&A
- Published
- 2024
25. TDCOSMO. XVI. Measurement of the Hubble Constant from the Lensed Quasar WGD$\,$2038$-$4008
- Author
-
Wong, Kenneth C., Dux, Frédéric, Shajib, Anowar J., Suyu, Sherry H., Millon, Martin, Mozumdar, Pritom, Wells, Patrick R., Agnello, Adriano, Birrer, Simon, Buckley-Geer, Elizabeth J., Courbin, Frédéric, Fassnacht, Christopher D., Frieman, Joshua, Galan, Aymeric, Lin, Huan, Marshall, Philip J., Poh, Jason, Schuldt, Stefan, Sluse, Dominique, and Treu, Tommaso
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Time-delay cosmography is a powerful technique to constrain cosmological parameters, particularly the Hubble constant ($H_{0}$). The TDCOSMO collaboration is performing an ongoing analysis of lensed quasars to constrain cosmology using this method. In this work, we obtain constraints from the lensed quasar WGD 2038-4008 using new time-delay measurements and previous mass models by TDCOSMO. This is the first TDCOSMO lens to incorporate multiple lens modeling codes and the full time-delay covariance matrix into the cosmological inference. The models are fixed before the time delay is measured, and the analysis is performed blinded with respect to the cosmological parameters to prevent unconscious experimenter bias. We obtain $D_{\Delta t} = 1.68^{+0.40}_{-0.38}$ Gpc using two families of mass models, a power-law describing the total mass distribution, and a composite model of baryons and dark matter, although the composite model is disfavored due to kinematics constraints. In a flat $\Lambda$CDM cosmology, we constrain the Hubble constant to be $H_{0} = 65^{+23}_{-14}\, \rm km\ s^{-1}\,Mpc^{-1}$. The dominant source of uncertainty comes from the time delays, due to the low variability of the quasar. Future long-term monitoring, especially in the era of the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time, could catch stronger quasar variability and further reduce the uncertainties. This system will be incorporated into an upcoming hierarchical analysis of the entire TDCOSMO sample, and improved time delays and spatially-resolved stellar kinematics could strengthen the constraints from this system in the future., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables; accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Stochastic Earned Value Analysis using Monte Carlo Simulation and Statistical Learning Techniques
- Author
-
Acebes, Fernando, Pereda, M, Poza, David, Pajares, Javier, and Galan, Jose M
- Subjects
Quantitative Finance - Risk Management - Abstract
The aim of this paper is to describe a new an integrated methodology for project control under uncertainty. This proposal is based on Earned Value Methodology and risk analysis and presents several refinements to previous methodologies. More specifically, the approach uses extensive Monte Carlo simulation to obtain information about the expected behavior of the project. This dataset is exploited in several ways using different statistical learning methodologies in a structured fashion. Initially, simulations are used to detect if project deviations are a consequence of the expected variability using Anomaly Detection algorithms. If the project follows this expected variability, probabilities of success in cost and time and expected cost and total duration of the project can be estimated using classification and regression approaches., Comment: 20 pages
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Gliese 12 b: A temperate Earth-sized planet at 12 pc ideal for atmospheric transmission spectroscopy
- Author
-
Kuzuhara, M., Fukui, A., Livingston, J. H., Caballero, J. A., de Leon, J. P., Hirano, T., Kasagi, Y., Murgas, F., Narita, N., Omiya, M., Orell-Miquel, Jaume, Palle, E., Changeat, Q., Esparza-Borges, E., Harakawa, H., Hellier, C., Hori, Yasunori, Ikuta, Kai, Ishikawa, H. T., Kodama, T., Kotani, T., Kudo, T., Morales, J. C., Mori, M., Nagel, E., Parviainen, H., Perdelwitz, V., Reiners, A., Ribas, I., Sanz-Forcada, J., Sato, B., Schweitzer, A., Tabernero, H. M., Takarada, T., Uyama, T., Watanabe, N., Zechmeister, M., García, N. Abreu, Aoki, W., Beichman, C., Béjar, V. J. S., Brandt, T. D., Calatayud-Borras, Y., Carleo, I., Charbonneau, D., Collins, K. A., Currie, T., Doty, J. P., Dreizler, S., Fernández-Rodríguez, G., Fukuda, I., Galán, D., Geraldía-González, S., González-Garcia, J., Hayashi, Y., Hedges, C., Henning, T., Hodapp, K., Ikoma, M., Isogai, K., Jacobson, S., Janson, M., Jenkins, J. M., Kagetani, T., Kambe, E., Kawai, Y., Kawauchi, K., Kokubo, E., Konishi, M., Korth, J., Krishnamurthy, V., Kurokawa, T., Kusakabe, N., Kwon, J., Laza-Ramos, A., Libotte, F., Luque, R., Madrigal-Aguado, A., Matsumoto, Y., Mawet, D., McElwain, M. W., Gallardo, P. P. Meni, Morello, G., Torres, S. Mu~noz, Nishikawa, J., Nugroho, S. K., Ogihara, M., Pel'aez-Torres, A., Rapetti, D., S'anchez-Benavente, M., Schlecker, M., Seager, S., Serabyn, E., Serizawa, T., Stangret, M., Takahashi, A., Teng, H., Tamura, M., Terada, Y., Ueda, A., Usuda, T., Vanderspek, R., Vievard, S., Watanabe, D., Winn, J. N., and Osorio, M. R. Zapatero
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent discoveries of Earth-sized planets transiting nearby M dwarfs have made it possible to characterize the atmospheres of terrestrial planets via follow-up spectroscopic observations. However, the number of such planets receiving low insolation is still small, limiting our ability to understand the diversity of the atmospheric composition and climates of temperate terrestrial planets. We report the discovery of an Earth-sized planet transiting the nearby (12 pc) inactive M3.0 dwarf Gliese 12 (TOI-6251) with an orbital period ($P_{\rm{orb}}$) of 12.76 days. The planet, Gliese 12b, was initially identified as a candidate with an ambiguous $P_{\rm{orb}}$ from TESS data. We confirmed the transit signal and $P_{\rm{orb}}$ using ground-based photometry with MuSCAT2 and MuSCAT3, and validated the planetary nature of the signal using high-resolution images from Gemini/NIRI and Keck/NIRC2 as well as radial velocity (RV) measurements from the InfraRed Doppler instrument on the Subaru 8.2 m telescope and from CARMENES on the CAHA 3.5 m telescope. X-ray observations with XMM-Newton showed the host star is inactive, with an X-ray-to-bolometric luminosity ratio of $\log L_{\rm X}/L_{\rm bol} \approx -5.7$. Joint analysis of the light curves and RV measurements revealed that Gliese 12b has a radius of 0.96 $\pm$ 0.05 $R_\oplus$, a 3$\sigma$ mass upper limit of 3.9 $M_\oplus$, and an equilibrium temperature of 315 $\pm$ 6 K assuming zero albedo. The transmission spectroscopy metric (TSM) value of Gliese 12b is close to the TSM values of the TRAPPIST-1 planets, adding Gliese 12b to the small list of potentially terrestrial, temperate planets amenable to atmospheric characterization with JWST., Comment: 29 pages (20 pages in main body), 13 figures (10 figures in main body). Equal contributions from M. K. and A. F.. Accepted for Publication in ApJL at 2024 March 21
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The Pristine survey -- XXVI. The very metal-poor Galaxy: Chemodynamics through the follow-up of the Pristine-Gaia synthetic catalogue
- Author
-
Viswanathan, Akshara, Yuan, Zhen, Ardern-Arentsen, Anke, Starkenburg, Else, Martin, Nicolas F., Youakim, Kris, Ibata, Rodrigo A., Sestito, Federico, Matsuno, Tadafumi, Prieto, Carlos Allende, Barwell, Freya, Bayer, Manuel, Doliva-Dolinsky, Amandine, Fernandez-Alvar, Emma, Anta, Pablo M. Galan-de, Jhass, Kiran, Longeard, Nicolas, Arroyo-Polonio, Jose Maria, Massana, Pol, Montelius, Martin, Rusterucci, Samuel, Santos, Judith, Thomas, Guillaume F., Vitali, Sara, Wu, Wenbo, Yarker, Paige, Ye, Xianhao, Aguado, David S., Gran, Felipe, and Navarro, Julio
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Pristine-\textit{Gaia} synthetic catalogue provides reliable photometric metallicities for $\sim$30 million FGK stars using the Pristine survey model and Gaia XP spectra. We perform the first low-to-medium-resolution spectroscopic follow-up of bright (G<15) and distant (up to 35 kpc) very and extremely metal-poor (V/EMP, [Fe/H]<-2.5) red giant branch stars from this. We use Isaac Newton Telescope/Intermediate Dispersion Spectrograph (INT/IDS) observations centred around the calcium triplet region ideal for V/EMP stars. We find that 76\% of our stars indeed have [Fe/H]<-2.5 with these inferred spectroscopic metallicities and only 3\% are outliers with [Fe/H] > -2.0. We report a success rate of 77\% and 38\% in finding stars with [Fe/H]<-2.5 and -3.0 respectively. This will allow for 10,000-20,000 homogeneously analysed EMP stars using the WEAVE survey follow-up of Pristine EMP candidates. We associate 20\%, 46\%, and 34\% of the stars to be confined to the disc plane, or to have inner and outer halo orbits, respectively. We also associate these V/EMP stars to known accretion events such as Gaia-Enceladus-Sausage (GES), LMS-1/Wukong, Thamnos, Helmi streams, Sagittarius, Sequoia, etc. For the stars that orbit close to the disc plane, we find that the prograde region with low vertical action is overdense with a significance of 4$\sigma$ as compared to its retrograde counterpart. We also find three new (brightest) members of the most metal-poor stellar stream, C-19, one of which is 50$^\circ$ away from the main body of the stream. Our measured mean metallicity, velocity dispersion, and stream width are consistent with the literature, but our results favour a higher distance ($\sim$21.5 kpc) for the stream. We publish a catalogue (and 1D spectra) of 215 V/EMP stars from this spectroscopic follow-up and showcase the power of chemokinematic analysis of V/EMP end., Comment: Submitted to A&A. 17 pages (9 figures) + 3 pages (3 figures) in Appendix. Comments are very welcome! The catalogue and 1D spectra will be made available public after acceptance and before upon reasonable request to the first author
- Published
- 2024
29. The Discovery and Follow-up of Four Transiting Short-period Sub-Neptunes Orbiting M dwarfs
- Author
-
Hori, Y., Fukui, A., Hirano, T., Narita, N., de Leon, J. P., Ishikawa, H. T., Hartman, J. D., Morello, G., García, N. Abreu, Hernández, L. Álvarez, Béjar, V. J. S., Calatayud-Borras, Y., Carleo, I., Enoc, G., Esparza-Borges, E., Fukuda, I., Galán, D., Geraldía-González, S., Hayashi, Y., Ikoma, M., Ikuta, K., Isogai, K., Kagetani, T., Kawai, Y., Kawauchi, K., Kimura, T., Kodama, T., Korth, J., Kusakabe, N., Laza-Ramos, A., Livingston, J. H., Luque, R., Miyakawa, K., Mori, M., Torres, S. Muñoz, Murgas, F., Orell-Miquel, J., Palle, E., Parviainen, H., Peláez-Torres, A., Puig-Subirá, M., Sánchez-Benavente, M., Sosa-Guillén, P., Stangret, M., Terada, Y., Watanabe, N., Bakos, G. Á., Barkaoui, K., Beichman, C., Benkhaldoun, Z., Boyle, A. W., Ciardi, D. R., Clark, C. A., Collins, K. A., Collins, K. I., Conti, D. M., Crossfield, I. J. M., Everett, M. E., Furlan, E., Ghachoui, M., Gillon, M., Gonzales, E. J., Higuera, J., Horne, K., Howell, S. B., Jehin, E., Lester, K. V., Lund, M. B., Matson, R., Matthews, E. C., Pozuelos, F. J., Safonov, B. S., Schlieder, J. E., Schwarz, R. P., Sefako, R., Srdoc, G., Strakhov, I. A., Waalkes, W. C., Ziegler, C., Charbonneau, D., Essack, Z., Timmermans, M., Guerrero, N. M., Harakawa, H., Hedges, C., Ishizuka, M., Jenkins, J. M., Konishi, M., Kotani, T., Kudo, T., Kurokawa, T., Kuzuhara, M., Nishikawa, J., Omiya, M., Ricker, G. R., Seager, S., Serizawa, T., Striegel, S., Tamura, M., Ueda, A., Vanderspek, R., Vievard, S., and Winn, J. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Sub-Neptunes with $2-3R_\oplus$ are intermediate in size between rocky planets and Neptune-sized planets. The orbital properties and bulk compositions of transiting sub-Neptunes provide clues to the formation and evolution of close-in small planets. In this paper, we present the discovery and follow-up of four sub-Neptunes orbiting M dwarfs (TOI-782, TOI-1448, TOI-2120, and TOI-2406), three of which were newly validated by ground-based follow-up observations and statistical analyses. TOI-782 b, TOI-1448 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b have radii of $R_\mathrm{p} = 2.740^{+0.082}_{-0.079}\,R_\oplus$, $2.769^{+0.073}_{-0.068}\,R_\oplus$, $2.120\pm0.067\,R_\oplus$, and $2.830^{+0.068}_{-0.066}\,R_\oplus$ and orbital periods of $P = 8.02$, $8.11$, $5.80$, and $3.08$\,days, respectively. Doppler monitoring with Subaru/InfraRed Doppler instrument led to 2$\sigma$ upper limits on the masses of $<19.1\ M_\oplus$, $<19.5\ M_\oplus$, $<6.8\ M_\oplus$, and $<15.6\ M_\oplus$ for TOI-782 b, TOI-1448 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b, respectively. The mass-radius relationship of these four sub-Neptunes testifies to the existence of volatile material in their interiors. These four sub-Neptunes, which are located above the so-called ``radius valley'', are likely to retain a significant atmosphere and/or an icy mantle on the core, such as a water world. We find that at least three of the four sub-Neptunes (TOI-782 b, TOI-2120 b, and TOI-2406 b) orbiting M dwarfs older than 1 Gyr, are likely to have eccentricities of $e \sim 0.2-0.3$. The fact that tidal circularization of their orbits is not achieved over 1 Gyr suggests inefficient tidal dissipation in their interiors., Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ, 32 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables
- Published
- 2024
30. The daily modulations and broadband strategy in axion searches. An application with CAST-CAPP detector
- Author
-
Adair, C. M., Altenmüller, K., Anastassopoulos, V., Cuendis, S. Arguedas, Baier, J., Barth, K., Belov, A., Bozicevic, D., Bräuninger, H., Cantatore, G., Caspers, F., Castel, J. F., Çetin, S. A., Chung, W., Choi, H., Choi, J., Dafni, T., Davenport, M., Dermenev, A., Desch, K., Döbrich, B., Fischer, H., Funk, W., Galan, J., Gardikiotis, A., Gninenko, S., Golm, J., Hasinoff, M. D., Hoffmann, D. H. H., Ibáñez, D. Díez, Irastorza, I. G., Jakovčić, K., Kaminski, J., Karuza, M., Krieger, C., Kutlu, Ç., Lakić, B., Laurent, J. M., Lee, J., Lee, S., Luzón, G., Margalejo, C., Maroudas, M., Miceli, L., Mirallas, H., Obis, L., Özbey, A., Özbozduman, K., Pivovaroff, M. J., Rosu, M., Ruz, J., Ruiz-Chóliz, E., Schmidt, S., Semertzidis, Y. K., Solanki, S. K., Stewart, L., Tsagris, I., Vafeiadis, T., Vogel, J. K., Vretenar, M., Youn, S., Zhitnitsky, A., and Zioutas, K.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
It has been previously advocated that the presence of the daily and annual modulations of the axion flux on the Earth's surface may dramatically change the strategy of the axion searches. The arguments were based on the so-called Axion Quark Nugget (AQN) dark matter model which was originally put forward to explain the similarity of the dark and visible cosmological matter densities $\Omega_{\rm dark}\sim \Omega_{\rm visible}$. In this framework, the population of galactic axions with mass $ 10^{-6} {\rm eV}\lesssim m_a\lesssim 10^{-3}{\rm eV}$ and velocity $\langle v_a\rangle\sim 10^{-3} c$ will be accompanied by axions with typical velocities $\langle v_a\rangle\sim 0.6 c$ emitted by AQNs. Furthermore, in this framework, it has also been argued that the AQN-induced axion daily modulation (in contrast with the conventional WIMP paradigm) could be as large as $(10-20)\%$, which represents the main motivation for the present investigation. We argue that the daily modulations along with the broadband detection strategy can be very useful tools for the discovery of such relativistic axions. The data from the CAST-CAPP detector have been used following such arguments. Unfortunately, due to the dependence of the amplifier chain on temperature-dependent gain drifts and other factors, we could not conclusively show the presence or absence of a dark sector-originated daily modulation. However, this proof of principle analysis procedure can serve as a reference for future studies., Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2024
31. Time Reversal for Near-Field Communications on Multi-chip Wireless Networks
- Author
-
Rodríguez-Galán, Fátima, Bandara, Ama, de Santana, Elana Pereira, Bolívar, Peter Haring, Alarcón, Eduard, and Abadal, Sergi
- Subjects
Computer Science - Hardware Architecture - Abstract
Wireless Network-on-Chip (WNoC) has been proposed as a low-latency, versatile, and broadcast-capable complement to current interconnects in the quest for satisfying the ever-increasing communications needs of modern computing systems. However, to realize the promise of WNoC, multiple wireless links operating at several tens of Gb/s need to be created within a computing package. Unfortunately, the highly integrated and enclosed nature of such computing packages incurs significant Co-Channel Interference (CCI) and Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI), not only preventing the deployment of multiple spatial channels, but also severely limiting the symbol rate of each individual channel. In this work, Time Reversal (TR) is proposed as a means to compensate the channel impairments and enable multiple concurrent high-speed links at the chip scale. We offer evidence, via full-wave simulations at 140 GHz, that TR can increase the symbol rate by an order of magnitude and allow the deployment of multiple concurrent links towards achieving aggregate speeds in excess of 100 Gb/s. Finally, the challenges relative to the realization of TR at the chip scale are analyzed from the implementation, protocol support, and architectural perspectives.
- Published
- 2024
32. SN 2024ggi in NGC 3621: Rising Ionization in a Nearby, CSM-Interacting Type II Supernova
- Author
-
Jacobson-Galán, W. V., Davis, K. W., Kilpatrick, C. D., Dessart, L., Margutti, R., Chornock, R., Foley, R. J., Arunachalam, P., Auchettl, K., Bom, C. R., Cartier, R., Coulter, D. A., Dimitriadis, G., Dickinson, D., Drout, M. R., Gagliano, A. T., Gall, C., Garretson, B., Izzo, L., Jones, D. O., LeBaron, N., Miao, H. -Y., Milisavljevic, D., Pan, Y. -C., Rest, A., Rojas-Bravo, C., Santos, A., Sears, H., Subrayan, B. M., Taggart, K., and Tinyanont, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present UV/optical/NIR observations and modeling of supernova (SN) 2024ggi, a type II supernova (SN II) located in NGC 3621 at 7.2 Mpc. Early-time ("flash") spectroscopy of SN 2024ggi within +0.8 days of discovery shows emission lines of H I, He I, C III, and N III with a narrow core and broad, symmetric wings (i.e., IIn-like) arising from the photoionized, optically-thick, unshocked circumstellar material (CSM) that surrounded the progenitor star at shock breakout. By the next spectral epoch at +1.5 days, SN 2024ggi showed a rise in ionization as emission lines of He II, C IV, N IV/V and O V became visible. This phenomenon is temporally consistent with a blueward shift in the UV/optical colors, both likely the result of shock breakout in an extended, dense CSM. The IIn-like features in SN 2024ggi persist on a timescale of $t_{\rm IIn} = 3.8 \pm 1.6$ days at which time a reduction in CSM density allows the detection of Doppler broadened features from the fastest SN material. SN 2024ggi has peak UV/optical absolute magnitudes of $M_{\rm w2} = -18.7$ mag and $M_{\rm g} = -18.1$ mag that are consistent with the known population of CSM-interacting SNe II. Comparison of SN 2024ggi with a grid of radiation hydrodynamics and non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (nLTE) radiative-transfer simulations suggests a progenitor mass-loss rate of $\dot{M} = 10^{-2}$M$_{\odot}$ yr$^{-1}$ ($v_w$ = 50 km/s), confined to a distance of $r < 5\times 10^{14}$ cm. Assuming a wind velocity of $v_w$ = 50 km/s, the progenitor star underwent an enhanced mass-loss episode in the last ~3 years before explosion., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2306.04721, arXiv:2403.02382
- Published
- 2024
33. Towards Scalable Multi-Chip Wireless Networks with Near-Field Time Reversal
- Author
-
Bandara, Ama, Rodríguez-Galán, Fátima, Talarn, Pau, de Santana, Elana Pereira, Bolívar, Peter Haring, Alarcón, Eduard, and Abadal, Sergi
- Subjects
Computer Science - Emerging Technologies ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
The concept of Wireless Network-on-Chip (WNoC) has emerged as a potential solution to address the escalating communication demands of modern computing systems due to their low-latency, versatility, and reconfigurability. However, for WNoC to fulfill its potential, it is essential to establish multiple high-speed wireless links across chips. Unfortunately, the compact and enclosed nature of computing packages introduces significant challenges in the form of Co-Channel Interference (CCI) and Inter-Symbol Interference (ISI), which not only hinder the deployment of multiple spatial channels but also severely restrict the symbol rate of each individual channel. In this paper, we posit that Time Reversal (TR) could be effective in addressing both impairments in this static scenario thanks to its spatiotemporal focusing capabilities even in the near field. Through comprehensive full-wave simulations and bit error rate analysis in multiple scenarios and at multiple frequency bands, we provide evidence that TR can increase the symbol rate by an order of magnitude, enabling the deployment of multiple concurrent links and achieving aggregate speeds exceeding 100 Gb/s. Finally, we evaluate the impact of reducing the sampling rate of the TR filter on the achievable speeds, paving the way to practical TR-based wireless communications at the chip scale.
- Published
- 2024
34. The Gravity Collective: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Electromagnetic Search for the Binary Neutron Star Merger GW190425
- Author
-
Coulter, D. A., Kilpatrick, C. D., Jones, D. O., Foley, R. J., Filippenko, A. V., Zheng, W., Swift, J. J., Rahman, G. S., Stacey, H. E., Piro, A. L., Rojas-Bravo, C., Vilchez, J. Anais, Muñoz-Elgueta, N., Arcavi, I., Dimitriadis, G., Siebert, M. R., Bloom, J. S., Bustamante-Rosell, M. J., Clever, K. E., Davis, K. W., Kutcka, J., Macias, P., McGill, P., Quiñonez, P. J., Ramirez-Ruiz, E., Siellez, K., Tinyanont, S., Cenko, S. B., Drout, M. R., Hausen, R., Jacobson-Galán, W. V., Howell, D. Andrew, Kasen, D., McCully, C., Rest, A., Taggart, K., and Valenti, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an ultraviolet-to-infrared search for the electromagnetic (EM) counterpart to GW190425, the second-ever binary neutron star (BNS) merger discovered by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration (LVK). GW190425 was more distant and had a larger localization area than GW170817, therefore we use a new tool teglon to redistribute the GW190425 localization probability in the context of galaxy catalogs within the final localization volume. We derive a 90th percentile area of 6,688 deg$^{2}$, a $\sim$1.5$\times$ improvement relative to the LIGO/Virgo map, and show how teglon provides an order of magnitude boost to the search efficiency of small ($\leq$1 deg$^{2}$) field-of-view instruments. We combine our data with all publicly reported imaging data, covering 9,078.59 deg$^2$ of unique area and 48.13% of the LIGO/Virgo-assigned localization probability, to calculate the most comprehensive kilonova, short gamma-ray burst (sGRB) afterglow, and model-independent constraints on the EM emission from a hypothetical counterpart to GW190425 to date under the assumption that no counterpart was found in these data. If the counterpart were similar to AT 2017gfo, there was a 28.4% chance that it would have been detected in the combined dataset. We are relatively insensitive to an on-axis sGRB, and rule out a generic transient with a similar peak luminosity and decline rate as AT 2017gfo to 30% confidence. Finally, across our new imaging and all publicly-reported data, we find 28 candidate optical counterparts that we cannot rule out as being associated with GW190425, finding that 4 such counterparts discovered within the localization volume and within 5 days of merger exhibit luminosities consistent with a kilonova., Comment: 41 pages, 11 figures, Submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2024
35. Strong-lensing and kinematic analysis of CASSOWARY 31: can strong lensing constrain the masses of multi-plane lenses?
- Author
-
Wang, H., Canameras, R., Suyu, S. H., Galan, A., Grillo, C., Caminha, G. B., and Christensen, L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a mass measurement for the secondary lens along the line of sight (LoS) in the multi-plane strong lens modeling of the group-scale lens CASSOWARY 31 (CSWA 31). The secondary lens at redshift $z = 1.49$ is a spiral galaxy well aligned along the LoS with the main lens at $z = 0.683$. Using the MUSE integral-field spectroscopy of this spiral galaxy, we measure its rotation velocities and determine the mass from the gas kinematics. We compare the mass estimation of the secondary lens from the lensing models to the mass measurement from kinematics, finding that the predictions from strong lensing tend to be higher. By introducing an additional lens plane at $z = 1.36$ for an overdensity known to be present, we find a mass of $\simeq 10^{10}$ M$_\odot$ enclosed within 3.3 kpc from the centroid of the spiral galaxy, approaching the estimate from kinematics. This shows that secondary-lens mass measurements from multiple-plane modeling are affected by systematic uncertainties from the degeneracies between lens planes and the complex LoS structure. Conducting a detailed analysis of the LoS structures is therefore essential to improve the mass measurement of the secondary lens., Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. We welcome the comments from readers
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Using Micromegas detectors for direct dark matter searches: challenges and perspectives
- Author
-
Altenmueller, K., Antolin, ., Calvet, D., Candon, F. R., Castel, J., Cebrian, S., Cogollos, C., Dafni, T., Ibanez, D. Diez, Ferrer-Ribas, E., Galan, J., Garcia, J. A., Gomez, H., Gu, Y., Ezquerro, A., Irastorza, I. G, Luzon, G., Margalejo, C., Mirallas, H., Obis, L., de Solorzano, A. Ortiz, Papaevangelou, T., Perez, O., Picatoste, E., Porron, J., Puyuelo, M. J., Quintana, A., Ruiz-Choliz, E., Ruz, J., and Vogel, J.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Gas time projection chambers (TPCs) with Micromegas pixelated readouts are being used in dark matter searches and other rare event searches, due to their potential in terms of low background levels, energy and spatial resolution, gain, and operational stability. Moreover, these detectors can provide precious features,such as topological information, allowing for event directionality and powerful signal-background discrimination. The Micromegas technology of the microbulk type is particularly suited to low-background applications and is being exploited by detectors for CAST and IAXO (solar axions) and TREX-DM (low-mass WIMPs) experiments. Challenges for the future include reducing intrinsic background levels, reaching lower energy detection levels, and technical issues such as robustness of detector, new design choices, novel gas mixtures and operation points, scaling up to larger detector sizes, handling large readout granularity, etc. We report on the status and prospects of the development ongoing in the context of IAXO and TREX-DM experiments, pointing to promising perspectives for the use of Micromegas detectors in directdark matter searches
- Published
- 2024
37. CTLA4 blockade abrogates KEAP1/STK11-related resistance to PD-(L)1 inhibitors
- Author
-
Skoulidis, Ferdinandos, Araujo, Haniel A., Do, Minh Truong, Qian, Yu, Sun, Xin, Cobo, Ana Galan, Le, John T., Montesion, Meagan, Palmer, Rachael, Jahchan, Nadine, Juan, Joseph M., Min, Chengyin, Yu, Yi, Pan, Xuewen, Arbour, Kathryn C., Vokes, Natalie, Schmidt, Stephanie T., Molkentine, David, Owen, Dwight H., Memmott, Regan, Patil, Pradnya D., Marmarelis, Melina E., Awad, Mark M., Murray, Joseph C., Hellyer, Jessica A., Gainor, Justin F., Dimou, Anastasios, Bestvina, Christine M., Shu, Catherine A., Riess, Jonathan W., Blakely, Collin M., Pecot, Chad V., Mezquita, Laura, Tabbó, Fabrizio, Scheffler, Matthias, Digumarthy, Subba, Mooradian, Meghan J., Sacher, Adrian G., Lau, Sally C. M., Saltos, Andreas N., Rotow, Julia, Johnson, Rocio Perez, Liu, Corinne, Stewart, Tyler, Goldberg, Sarah B., Killam, Jonathan, Walther, Zenta, Schalper, Kurt, Davies, Kurtis D., Woodcock, Mark G., Anagnostou, Valsamo, Marrone, Kristen A., Forde, Patrick M., Ricciuti, Biagio, Venkatraman, Deepti, Van Allen, Eliezer M., Cummings, Amy L., Goldman, Jonathan W., Shaish, Hiram, Kier, Melanie, Katz, Sharyn, Aggarwal, Charu, Ni, Ying, Azok, Joseph T., Segal, Jeremy, Ritterhouse, Lauren, Neal, Joel W., Lacroix, Ludovic, Elamin, Yasir Y., Negrao, Marcelo V., Le, Xiuning, Lam, Vincent K., Lewis, Whitney E., Kemp, Haley N., Carter, Brett, Roth, Jack A., Swisher, Stephen, Lee, Richard, Zhou, Teng, Poteete, Alissa, Kong, Yifan, Takehara, Tomohiro, Paula, Alvaro Guimaraes, Parra Cuentas, Edwin R., Behrens, Carmen, Wistuba, Ignacio I., Zhang, Jianjun, Blumenschein, George R., Gay, Carl, Byers, Lauren A., Gibbons, Don L., Tsao, Anne, Lee, J. Jack, Bivona, Trever G., Camidge, D. Ross, Gray, Jhannelle E., Lieghl, Natasha, Levy, Benjamin, Brahmer, Julie R., Garassino, Marina C., Gandara, David R., Garon, Edward B., Rizvi, Naiyer A., Scagliotti, Giorgio Vittorio, Wolf, Jürgen, Planchard, David, Besse, Benjamin, Herbst, Roy S., Wakelee, Heather A., Pennell, Nathan A., Shaw, Alice T., Jänne, Pasi A., Carbone, David P., Hellmann, Matthew D., Rudin, Charles M., Albacker, Lee, Mann, Helen, Zhu, Zhou, Lai, Zhongwu, Stewart, Ross, Peters, Solange, Johnson, Melissa L., Wong, Kwok K., Huang, Alan, Winslow, Monte M., Rosen, Michael J., Winters, Ian P., Papadimitrakopoulou, Vassiliki A., Cascone, Tina, Jewsbury, Philip, and Heymach, John V.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Integrated non-reciprocal magneto-optics with ultra-high endurance for photonic in-memory computing
- Author
-
Pintus, Paolo, Dumont, Mario, Shah, Vivswan, Murai, Toshiya, Shoji, Yuya, Huang, Duanni, Moody, Galan, Bowers, John E., and Youngblood, Nathan
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The impact of hypoglycaemia on daily functioning among adults with diabetes: a prospective observational study using the Hypo-METRICS app
- Author
-
Søholm, Uffe, Broadley, Melanie, Zaremba, Natalie, Divilly, Patrick, Baumann, Petra Martina, Mahmoudi, Zeinab, Martine-Edith, Gilberte, Mader, Julia K., Cigler, Monika, Brøsen, Julie Maria Bøggild, Vaag, Allan, Heller, Simon, Pedersen-Bjergaard, Ulrik, McCrimmon, Rory J., Renard, Eric, Evans, Mark, de Galan, Bastiaan, Abbink, Evertine, Amiel, Stephanie A., Hendrieckx, Christel, Speight, Jane, Choudhary, Pratik, and Pouwer, Frans
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Estimating risk of consequences following hypoglycaemia exposure using the Hypo-RESOLVE cohort: a secondary analysis of pooled data from insulin clinical trials
- Author
-
Mellor, Joseph, Kuznetsov, Dmitry, Heller, Simon, Gall, Mari-Anne, Rosilio, Myriam, Amiel, Stephanie A., Ibberson, Mark, McGurnaghan, Stuart, Blackbourn, Luke, Berthon, William, Salem, Adel, Qu, Yongming, McCrimmon, Rory J., de Galan, Bastiaan E., Pedersen-Bjergaard, Ulrik, Leaviss, Joanna, McKeigue, Paul M., and Colhoun, Helen M.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Global Point Cloud Registration Network for Large Transformations
- Author
-
Cuevas-Velasquez, Hanz, Galán-Cuenca, Alejandro, Gallego, Antonio Javier, Saval-Calvo, Marcelo, and Fisher, Robert B.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Three-dimensional data registration is an established yet challenging problem that is key in many different applications, such as mapping the environment for autonomous vehicles, and modeling objects and people for avatar creation, among many others. Registration refers to the process of mapping multiple data into the same coordinate system by means of matching correspondences and transformation estimation. Novel proposals exploit the benefits of deep learning architectures for this purpose, as they learn the best features for the data, providing better matches and hence results. However, the state of the art is usually focused on cases of relatively small transformations, although in certain applications and in a real and practical environment, large transformations are very common. In this paper, we present ReLaTo (Registration for Large Transformations), an architecture that faces the cases where large transformations happen while maintaining good performance for local transformations. This proposal uses a novel Softmax pooling layer to find correspondences in a bilateral consensus manner between two point sets, sampling the most confident matches. These matches are used to estimate a coarse and global registration using weighted Singular Value Decomposition (SVD). A target-guided denoising step is then applied to both the obtained matches and latent features, estimating the final fine registration considering the local geometry. All these steps are carried out following an end-to-end approach, which has been shown to improve 10 state-of-the-art registration methods in two datasets commonly used for this task (ModelNet40 and KITTI), especially in the case of large transformations.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Improving Galileo OSNMA Time To First Authenticated Fix
- Author
-
Galan, Aleix, Fernandez-Hernandez, Ignacio, De Wilde, Wim, Pollin, Sofie, and Seco-Granados, Gonzalo
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing - Abstract
Galileo is the first global navigation satellite system to authenticate their civilian signals through the Open Service Galileo Message Authentication (OSNMA) protocol. However, OSNMA delays the time to obtain a first position and time fix, the Time To First Authentication Fix (TTFAF). Reducing the TTFAF as much as possible is crucial to integrate the technology seamlessly into the current products. In the cases where the receiver already has cryptographic data available, the so-called hot start mode and focus of this article, the currently available implementations achieve an average TTFAF of around 100 seconds in ideal environments. In this work, we explore the TTFAF optimizations available to general OSNMA capable receivers and to receivers with a tighter time synchronization than the required by the OSNMA guidelines. We dissect the TTFAF process, describe the optimizations, and benchmark them in three distinct scenarios with recorded real data (open-sky, soft urban, and hard urban) and the official OSNMA test vectors. The first block of optimizations centers on extracting as much information as possible from broken sub-frames by processing them at page level and combining redundant data from multiple satellites. The second block of optimizations aims to reconstruct missed navigation data by the intelligent use of fields in the authentication tags belonging to the same sub-frame as the authentication key. Combining both optimization ideas improves the TTFAF substantially for all considered scenarios. We obtain an average TTFAF of 60.9 and 68.8 seconds for the test vectors and the open-sky scenario, respectively, with a lowest TTFAF of 44.0 seconds in both. Likewise, the urban scenarios see a drastic reduction of the average TTFAF between the non-optimized and optimized cases. These optimizations have been made available as part of the open-source OSNMAlib library on GitHub., Comment: This work has been submitted to the IEEE for possible publication. 15 pages, 17 figures. Updated version with major changes. New sections II-B, IV-A, IV-C. Updated sections IV-B, VI-D. Acronym changes and fixed typos
- Published
- 2024
43. Background discrimination with a Micromegas detector prototype and veto system for BabyIAXO
- Author
-
Altenmüller, K., Castel, J. F., Cebrián, S., Dafni, T., Díez-Ibañez, D., Ezquerro, A., Ferrer-Ribas, E., Galan, J., Galindo, J., García, J. A., Giganon, A., Goblin, C., Irastorza, I. G., Loiseau, C., Luzón, G., Navick, X. F., Margalejo, C., Mirallas, H., Obis, L., de Solórzano, A. Ortiz, Papaevangelou, T., Pérez, O., Quintana, A., Ruz, J., and Vogel, J. K.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
In this paper we present measurements performed with a Micromegas X-ray detector setup. The detector is a prototype in the context of the BabyIAXO helioscope, which is under construction to search for an emission of the hypothetical axion particle from the sun. An important component of such a helioscope is a low background X-ray detector with a high efficiency in the 1-10 keV energy range. The goal of the measurement was to study techniques for background discrimination. In addition to common techniques we used a multi-layer veto system designed to tag cosmogenic neutron background. Over an effective time of 52 days, a background level of $8.6 \times 10^{-7}\,\text{counts keV}^{-1}\,\text{cm}^{-2} \, \text{s}^{-1}$ was reached in a laboratory at above ground level. This is the lowest background level achieved at surface level. In this paper we present the experimental setup, show simulations of the neutron-induced background, and demonstrate the process to identify background signals in the data. Finally, prospects to reach lower background levels down to $10^{-7} \, \text{counts keV}^{-1} \, \text{cm}^{-2} \, \text{s}^{-1}$ will be discussed.
- Published
- 2024
44. Final Moments II: Observational Properties and Physical Modeling of CSM-Interacting Type II Supernovae
- Author
-
Jacobson-Galán, W. V., Dessart, L., Davis, K. W., Kilpatrick, C. D., Margutti, R., Foley, R. J., Chornock, R., Terreran, G., Hiramatsu, D., Newsome, M., Gonzalez, E. Padilla, Pellegrino, C., Howell, D. A., Filippenko, A. V., Anderson, J. P., Angus, C. R., Auchettl, K., Bostroem, K. A., Brink, T. G., Cartier, R., Coulter, D. A., de Boer, T., Drout, M. R., Earl, N., Ertini, K., Farah, J. R., Farias, D., Gall, C., Gao, H., Gerlach, M. A., Guo, F., Haynie, A., Hosseinzadeh, G., Ibik, A. L., Jha, S. W., Jones, D. O., Langeroodi, D., LeBaron, N, Magnier, E. A., Piro, A. L., Raimundo, S. I., Rest, A., Rest, S., Rich, R. Michael, Rojas-Bravo, C., Sears, H., Taggart, K., Villar, V. A., Wainscoat, R. J., Wang, X-F., Wasserman, A. R., Yan, S., Yang, Y., Zhang, J., and Zheng, W.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present ultraviolet/optical/near-infrared observations and modeling of Type II supernovae (SNe II) whose early-time ($\delta t < 2$ days) spectra show transient, narrow emission lines from shock ionization of confined ($r < 10^{15}$ cm) circumstellar material (CSM). The observed electron-scattering broadened line profiles (i.e., IIn-like) of HI, He I/II, C III/IV, and N III/IV/V from the CSM persist on a characteristic timescale ($t_{\rm IIn}$) that marks a transition to a lower-density CSM and the emergence of Doppler-broadened features from the fast-moving SN ejecta. Our sample, the largest to date, consists of 39 SNe with early-time IIn-like features in addition to 35 "comparison" SNe with no evidence of early-time IIn-like features, all with ultraviolet observations. The total sample consists of 50 unpublished objects with 474 previously unpublished spectra and 50 multiband light curves, collected primarily through the Young Supernova Experiment and Global Supernova Project collaborations. For all sample objects, we find a significant correlation between peak ultraviolet brightness and both $t_{\rm IIn}$ and the rise time, as well as evidence for enhanced peak luminosities in SNe II with IIn-like features. We quantify mass-loss rates and CSM density for the sample through matching of peak multiband absolute magnitudes, rise times, $t_{\rm IIn}$ and optical SN spectra with a grid of radiation hydrodynamics and non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (nLTE) radiative-transfer simulations. For our grid of models, all with the same underlying explosion, there is a trend between the duration of the electron-scattering broadened line profiles and inferred mass-loss rate: $t_{\rm IIn} \approx 3.8[\dot{M}/(0.01 \textrm{M}_{\odot} \textrm{yr}^{-1})]$ days., Comment: 58 pages, 24 figures, submitted to ApJ. Supplementary figures available on Github (https://github.com/wynnjacobson-galan/Flash_Spectra_Sample). Data release following publication
- Published
- 2024
45. El Gordo needs El Anzuelo: Probing the structure of cluster members with multi-band extended arcs in JWST data
- Author
-
Galan, A., Caminha, G. B., Knollmüller, J., Roth, J., and Suyu, S. H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters involves hundreds of galaxies over a large redshift range and increases the likelihood of rare phenomena (supernovae, dark substructures, etc.). We present the detailed analysis of \elanz, a prominent quintuply imaged dusty star-forming galaxy ($\zs=2.29$), mainly lensed by three members of the massive galaxy cluster ACT-CL\,J0102$-$4915, also known as \elgor ($z_{\rm d}=0.87$). We leverage JWST/NIRCam images, which contain lensing features that were unseen in previous HST images, using a Bayesian, multi-wavelength, differentiable and GPU-accelerated modeling framework that combines \herculens (lens modeling) and \nifty (field model and inference) software packages. For one of the deflectors, we complement lensing constraints with stellar kinematics measured from VLT/MUSE data. In our lens model, we explicitly include the mass distribution of the cluster, locally corrected by a constant shear field. We find that the two main deflectors (L1 and L2) have logarithmic mass density slopes steeper than isothermal, with $\gamma_{\rm L1} = 2.23\pm0.05$ and $\gamma_{\rm L2} = 2.21\pm0.04$. We argue that such steep density profiles can arise due to tidally truncated mass distributions, which we probe thanks to the cluster lensing boost and the strong asymmetry of the lensing configuration. Moreover, our three-dimensional source model captures most of the surface brightness of the lensed galaxy, revealing a clump with a maximum diameter of $400$ parsecs at the source redshift, visible at wavelengths $\lambda_{\rm rest}\gtrsim0.6$ $\mu$m. Finally, we caution on using point-like features within extended arcs to constrain galaxy-scale lens models before securing them with extended arc modeling., Comment: 27 pages, published in Astronomy & Astrophysics (September 2024)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Optimal Communication Unbalanced Private Set Union
- Author
-
Dumas, Jean-Guillaume, Galan, Alexis, Grenet, Bruno, Maignan, Aude, and Roche, Daniel S.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Symbolic Computation - Abstract
We present new two-party protocols for the Unbalanced Private Set Union (UPSU) problem.Here, the Sender holds a set of data points, and the Receiver holds another (possibly much larger) set, and they would like for the Receiver to learn the union of the two sets and nothing else. Furthermore, the Sender's computational cost, along with the communication complexity, should be smaller when the Sender has a smaller set.While the UPSU problem has numerous applications and has seen considerable recent attention in the literature, our protocols are the first where the Sender's computational cost and communication volume are linear in the size of the Sender's set only, and do not depend on the size of the Receiver's set.Our constructions combine linearly homomorphic encryption (LHE) withfully homomorphic encryption (FHE). The first construction uses multi-point polynomial evaluation (MEv) on FHE, and achieves optimal linear cost for the Sender, but has higher quadratic computational cost for the Receiver. In the second construction we explore another trade-off: the Receiver computes fast polynomial Euclidean remainder in FHE while the Sender computes a fast MEv, in LHE only. This reduces the Receiver's cost to quasi-linear, with a modest increase in the computational cost for the Sender.Preliminary experimental results using HElib indicate that, for example, a Sender holding 1000 elements can complete our first protocol using less than 2s of computation time and less than 10MB of communication volume, independently of the Receiver's set size.
- Published
- 2024
47. Rational Design of Efficient Defect-Based Quantum Emitters
- Author
-
Turiansky, Mark E., Parto, Kamyar, Moody, Galan, and Van de Walle, Chris G.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Single-photon emitters are an essential component of quantum networks, and defects or impurities in semiconductors are a promising platform to realize such quantum emitters. Here we present a model that encapsulates the essential physics of coupling to phonons, which governs the behavior of real single-photon emitters, and critically evaluate several approximations that are commonly utilized. Emission in the telecom wavelength range is highly desirable, but our model shows that nonradiative processes are greatly enhanced at these low photon energies, leading to a decrease in efficiency. Our results suggest that reducing the phonon frequency is a fruitful avenue to enhance the efficiency.
- Published
- 2024
48. Reverse design of the ideal pulse for hollow capillary fiber post-compression schemes
- Author
-
Galán, Marina Fernández, Jarque, Enrique Conejero, and Roman, Julio San
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
The countless applications of ultrashort laser pulses in very different scientific areas explain the ongoing efforts to develop new strategies for the generation of light pulses with increasingly better characteristics. In this work, we theoretically study the application of the nonlinear reverse propagation method to produce few-cycle pulses with clean temporal profiles from standard post-compression setups based in hollow capillary fibers. By numerically solving the propagation of a desired goal pulse in the backward direction, we are able to predict the structure of the ideal input pulse that could be perfectly compressed in a given setup. Although the goal pulse cannot be chosen in a simple manner due to the fundamental symmetries of the nonlinear propagation equation, our analysis shows that the ideal pulse presents a recurring form and that, in general, both its intensity profile and phase must be shaped to recover the optimized goal output., Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Understanding the Role of Open Metal Sites in MOFs for the Efficient Separation of Benzene/Cyclohexane Mixtures
- Author
-
González-Galán, C., Madero-Castro, R. M., Luna-Triguero, A., Vicent-Luna, J. M., and Calero, S.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Separating C6 cyclic hydrocarbons, specifically benzene and cyclohexane, presents a significant industrial challenge due to their similar physicochemical properties. We conducted Monte Carlo simulations in the Grand-Canonical ensemble to acquire adsorption properties and separation performance data for benzene and cyclohexane in three metal-organic frameworks featuring coordinatively unsaturated metal sites (Ni-MOF-74, Ni-ClBBTA, and Ni-ClBTDD). The separation performance of these MOFs was analyzed and compared with literature data for adsorbents of different natures, demonstrating superior performance. Additionally, we explored the molecular origins of this effective separation, examining the pore-filling mechanism, interaction of guest molecules with metal centers, and mutual interactions of each adsorbate. Our results highlight that the selected adsorbents, with remarkable loading capacity, can efficiently separate both compounds in a mixture with exceptional effectiveness.
- Published
- 2024
50. Classification of Radiologically Isolated Syndrome and Clinically Isolated Syndrome with Machine-Learning Techniques
- Author
-
Mato-Abad, V, Labiano-Fontcuberta, A, Rodriguez-Yanez, S, Garcia-Vazquez, R, Munteanu, CR, Andrade-Garda, J, Domingo-Santos, A, Sanchez-Seco, V Galan, Aladro, Y, Martinez-Gines, ML, Ayuso, L, and Benito-Leon, J
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Background and purpose: The unanticipated detection by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the brain of asymptomatic subjects of white matter lesions suggestive of multiple sclerosis (MS) has been named radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS). As the difference between early MS [i.e. clinically isolated syndrome (CIS)] and RIS is the occurrence of a clinical event, it is logical to improve detection of the subclinical form without interfering with MRI as there are radiological diagnostic criteria for that. Our objective was to use machine-learning classification methods to identify morphometric measures that help to discriminate patients with RIS from those with CIS. Methods: We used a multimodal 3-T MRI approach by combining MRI biomarkers (cortical thickness, cortical and subcortical grey matter volume, and white matter integrity) of a cohort of 17 patients with RIS and 17 patients with CIS for single-subject level classification. Results: The best proposed models to predict the diagnosis of CIS and RIS were based on the Naive Bayes, Bagging and Multilayer Perceptron classifiers using only three features: the left rostral middle frontal gyrus volume and the fractional anisotropy values in the right amygdala and right lingual gyrus. The Naive Bayes obtained the highest accuracy [overall classification, 0.765; area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC), 0.782]. Conclusions: A machine-learning approach applied to multimodal MRI data may differentiate between the earliest clinical expressions of MS (CIS and RIS) with an accuracy of 78%. Keywords: Bagging; Multilayer Perceptron; Naive Bayes classifier; clinically isolated syndrome; diffusion tensor imaging; machine-learning; magnetic resonance imaging; multiple sclerosis; radiologically isolated syndrome., Comment: 24 pages, 2 tables
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.