719 results on '"Ferretti G."'
Search Results
2. A plant-wide modelling framework to describe microalgae growth on liquid digestate in agro-zootechnical biomethane plants
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Carecci, D., Catenacci, A., Rossi, S., Casagli, F., Ferretti, G., Leva, A., and Ficara, E.
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- 2024
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3. Light scalars in composite Higgs models
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Cacciapaglia, G., Ferretti, G., Flacke, T., and Serôdio, H.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
A composite Higgs boson is likely to be accompanied by additional light states generated by the same dynamics. This expectation is substantiated when realising the composite Higgs mechanism by an underlying gauge theory. We review the dynamics of such objects, which may well be the first sign of compositeness at colliders. We also update our previous analysis of the bounds from LHC searches to the latest results, and discuss the projected reach of the High-Luminosity run., Comment: 28 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication by Frontiers in Physics, section High-Energy and Astroparticle Physics V2: Typo in eq (5) corrected. Results unchanged
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- 2019
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4. Beyond the Standard Model Physics at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC
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Vidal, X. Cid, D'Onofrio, M., Fox, P. J., Torre, R., Ulmer, K. A., Aboubrahim, A., Albert, A., Alimena, J., Allanach, B. C., Alpigiani, C., Altakach, M., Amoroso, S., Anders, J. K., Araz, J. Y., Arbey, A., Azzi, P., Babounikau, I., Baer, H., Baker, M. J., Barducci, D., Barger, V., Baron, O., Navarro, L. Barranco, Battaglia, M., Bay, A., Bhatia, D., Biswas, S., Bloch, D., Bogavac, D., Borschensky, C., Bugge, M. K., Buttazzo, D., Cacciapaglia, G., Cadamuro, L., Calandri, A., Camargo, D. A., Canepa, A., Carminati, L., Carrá, S., Montoya, C. A. Carrillo, De Oliveira, A. Carvalho Antunes, Castillo, F. L., Cavaliere, V., Cavalli, D., Cecchi, C., Celis, A., Cerri, A., Chahal, G. S., Chakraborty, A., Chekanov, S. V., Cheng, H. J., Childers, J. T., Cirelli, M., Colegrove, O., Corcella, G., Corradi, M., Costa, M. J., Covarelli, R., Dang, N. P., Deandrea, A., De Curtis, S., De la Torre, H., Rose, L. Delle, Del Re, D., Demela, A., Demers, S., Dermisek, R., De Santo, A., Deshpande, K., Dey, B., Donini, J., Duncan, A. K., Dutta, V., Escobar, C., Fanó, L., Ferretti, G., Fiaschi, J., Fischer, O., Flacke, T., Frangipane, E. D., Frank, M., Frattari, G., Frizzell, D., Fuchs, E., Fuks, B., Gabrielli, E., Gainer, J., Gao, Y., Navarro, J. E. García, Genest, M. H., Giagu, S., Giudice, G. F., Goh, J., Gouzevitch, M., Govoni, P., Greljo, A., Grohsjean, A., Gurrola, A., Gustavino, G., Guyot, C., Gwilliam, C. B., Ha, S., Haisch, U., Haller, J., Han, T., Hayden, D., Heikinheimo, M., Heintz, U., Helsens, C., Hoepfner, K., Hogan, J. M., Huitu, K., Ilten, P., Ippolito, V., Ismail, A., Iyer, A. M., Jain, Sa., Jamin, D. O., Jeanty, L., Jezo, T., Johns, W., Kalogeropoulos, A., Karancsi, J., Kats, Y., Keller, H., Khanov, A., Kieseler, J., Kim, B., Kim, M. S., Kim, Y. G., Klasen, M., Klimek, M. D., Kogler, R., Komaragiri, J. R., Krämer, M., Kubota, S., Kulesza, A. K., Kulkarni, S., Lari, T., Ledovskoy, A., Lee, G. R., Lee, L., Lee, S. W., Leonardi, R., Les, R., Lewis, I. M., Li, Q., Li, T., Lim, I. T., Lim, S. H., Lin, K., Liu, Z., Long, K., Low, M., Lunghi, E., Madaffari, D., Mahmoudi, F., Majumder, D., Malvezzi, S., Mangano, M. L., Manoni, E., Marcano, X., Mariotti, A., Marjanovic, M., Marlow, D., Camalich, J. Martin, Cuevas, P. Matorras, McCullough, M., McDonald, E. F., Guisao, J. Mejia, Mele, B., Meloni, F., Melzer-Pellmann, I. -A., Merlassino, C., Meyer, A. B., Michielin, E., Miller, A. J., Mittnacht, L., Mondal, S., Moretti, S., Mukhopadhyay, S., Nachman, B. P., Nam, K., Narain, M., Nardecchia, M., Nath, P., Navarro-González, J., Nisati, A., Nitta, T., Noel, D. L., Nojiri, M. M., Ochoa-Ricoux, J. P., Oide, H., Ojeda, M. L., Griso, S. Pagan, Cortezon, E. Palencia, Panella, O., Pani, P., Panizzi, L., Panwar, L., Park, C. B., Pazzini, J., Pedro, K., Perego, M. M., Perrozzi, L., Petersen, B. A., Pierce, A., Polesello, G., Policicchio, A., Potter, C. J., Pralavorio, P., Presilla, M., Proudfoot, J., Queiroz, F. S., Ramirez-Sanchez, G., Redigolo, D., Reimers, A., Resconi, S., Rimoldi, M., Vergara, J. C. Rivera, Rizzo, T., Rogan, C., Romeo, F., Rosten, R., Ruiz, R., Ruiz-Alvarez, J., Iglesias, J. A. Sabater, Samani, B. Safarzadeh, Sagir, S., Saito, M., Saito, S., Sala, F., Salazar, C., Savin, A., Sawada, R., Sawant, S., Schienbein, I., Schlaffer, M., Schneider, B., Schuler, S. C., Sebastiani, C. D., Sekmen, S., Selvaggi, M., Sengupta, D., Serce, H., Serodio, H., Sestini, L., Shakya, B., Haghi, B. Shams Es, Sheldon, P., Shin, S., Simonetto, F., Soffi, L., Spannowsky, M., Stupak, J., Sullivan, M. J., Sunder, M., Takahashi, Y., Tata, X., Teagle, H., Terashi, K., Tesi, A., Thamm, A., Tobioka, K., Tornambe, P., Trovato, F., Tsiakkouri, D., Ungaro, F. C., Urbano, A., Usai, E., Vanegas, N., Vaslin, L., Sierra, C. Vázquez, Vivarelli, I., Milosavljevic, M. Vranjes, Waltari, H., Wang, R., Wang, X., Weber, M. S., Weiland, C., Wielers, M., Williams, J. M., Willocq, S., Xu, D., Yagyu, K., Yazgan, E., Ye, R., Yoo, H. D., You, T., Yu, F., Della Porta, G. Zevi, Zhang, W., Zhu, C., Zhuang, X., Zobec, J., Zupan, J., and Zurita, J.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This is the third out of five chapters of the final report [1] of the Workshop on Physics at HL-LHC, and perspectives on HE-LHC [2]. It is devoted to the study of the potential, in the search for Beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics, of the High Luminosity (HL) phase of the LHC, defined as $3~\mathrm{ab}^{-1}$ of data taken at a centre-of-mass energy of $14~\mathrm{TeV}$, and of a possible future upgrade, the High Energy (HE) LHC, defined as $15~\mathrm{ab}^{-1}$ of data at a centre-of-mass energy of $27~\mathrm{TeV}$. We consider a large variety of new physics models, both in a simplified model fashion and in a more model-dependent one. A long list of contributions from the theory and experimental (ATLAS, CMS, LHCb) communities have been collected and merged together to give a complete, wide, and consistent view of future prospects for BSM physics at the considered colliders. On top of the usual standard candles, such as supersymmetric simplified models and resonances, considered for the evaluation of future collider potentials, this report contains results on dark matter and dark sectors, long lived particles, leptoquarks, sterile neutrinos, axion-like particles, heavy scalars, vector-like quarks, and more. Particular attention is placed, especially in the study of the HL-LHC prospects, to the detector upgrades, the assessment of the future systematic uncertainties, and new experimental techniques. The general conclusion is that the HL-LHC, on top of allowing to extend the present LHC mass and coupling reach by $20-50\%$ on most new physics scenarios, will also be able to constrain, and potentially discover, new physics that is presently unconstrained. Moreover, compared to the HL-LHC, the reach in most observables will generally more than double at the HE-LHC, which may represent a good candidate future facility for a final test of TeV-scale new physics., Comment: Report from Working Group 3 on the Physics of the HL-LHC, and Perspectives at the HE-LHC; v2: final version updated with the latest contributions and summaries; 239 pages + refs; v3: typos and character misprint in Fig. 7.2 fixed; v4: added one missing author
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- 2018
5. Beyond the Standard Model Physics at the HL-LHC and HE-LHC
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Vidal, X Cid, D'Onofrio, M, Fox, PJ, Torre, R, Ulmer, KA, Aboubrahim, A, Albert, A, Alimena, J, Allanach, BC, Alpigiani, C, Altakach, M, Amoroso, S, Anders, JK, Araz, JY, Arbey, A, Azzi, P, Babounikau, I, Baer, H, Baker, MJ, Barducci, D, Barger, V, Baron, O, Navarro, L Barranco, Battaglia, M, Bay, A, Bhatia, D, Biswas, S, Bloch, D, Bogavac, D, Borschensky, C, Bugge, MK, Buttazzo, D, Cacciapaglia, G, Cadamuro, L, Calandri, A, Camargo, DA, Canepa, A, Carminati, L, Carrá, S, Montoya, CA Carrillo, Oliveira, A Carvalho Antunes De, Castillo, FL, Cavaliere, V, Cavalli, D, Cecchi, C, Celis, A, Cerri, A, Chahal, GS, Chakraborty, A, Chekanov, SV, Cheng, HJ, Childers, JT, Cirelli, M, Colegrove, O, Corcella, G, Corradi, M, Costa, MJ, Covarelli, R, Dang, NP, Deandrea, A, Curtis, S De, Torre, H De la, Rose, L Delle, Re, D Del, Demela, A, Demers, S, Dermisek, R, Santo, A De, Deshpande, K, Dey, B, Donini, J, Duncan, AK, Dutta, V, Escobar, C, Fanó, L, Ferretti, G, Fiaschi, J, Fischer, O, Flacke, T, Frangipane, ED, Frank, M, Frattari, G, Frizzell, D, Fuchs, E, Fuks, B, Gabrielli, E, Gainer, J, Gao, Y, Navarro, JE García, Genest, MH, Giagu, S, Giudice, GF, Goh, J, Gouzevitch, M, Govoni, P, Greljo, A, Grohsjean, A, Gurrola, A, Gustavino, G, and Guyot, C
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hep-ph ,hep-ex - Abstract
This is the third out of five chapters of the final report [1] of theWorkshop on Physics at HL-LHC, and perspectives on HE-LHC [2]. It is devoted tothe study of the potential, in the search for Beyond the Standard Model (BSM)physics, of the High Luminosity (HL) phase of the LHC, defined as$3~\mathrm{ab}^{-1}$ of data taken at a centre-of-mass energy of$14~\mathrm{TeV}$, and of a possible future upgrade, the High Energy (HE) LHC,defined as $15~\mathrm{ab}^{-1}$ of data at a centre-of-mass energy of$27~\mathrm{TeV}$. We consider a large variety of new physics models, both in asimplified model fashion and in a more model-dependent one. A long list ofcontributions from the theory and experimental (ATLAS, CMS, LHCb) communitieshave been collected and merged together to give a complete, wide, andconsistent view of future prospects for BSM physics at the consideredcolliders. On top of the usual standard candles, such as supersymmetricsimplified models and resonances, considered for the evaluation of futurecollider potentials, this report contains results on dark matter and darksectors, long lived particles, leptoquarks, sterile neutrinos, axion-likeparticles, heavy scalars, vector-like quarks, and more. Particular attention isplaced, especially in the study of the HL-LHC prospects, to the detectorupgrades, the assessment of the future systematic uncertainties, and newexperimental techniques. The general conclusion is that the HL-LHC, on top ofallowing to extend the present LHC mass and coupling reach by $20-50\%$ on mostnew physics scenarios, will also be able to constrain, and potentiallydiscover, new physics that is presently unconstrained. Moreover, compared tothe HL-LHC, the reach in most observables will generally more than double atthe HE-LHC, which may represent a good candidate future facility for a finaltest of TeV-scale new physics.
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- 2018
6. Obstructive and Central Sleep Apnea in First Ever Ischemic Stroke are Associated with Different Time Course and Autonomic Activation
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Riglietti A, Fanfulla F, Pagani M, Lucini D, Malacarne M, Manconi M, Ferretti G, Esposito F, Cereda CW, and Pons M
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sleep disorder breathing ,baroreflex ,chemoreflex ,brain lesion. ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Alessia Riglietti,1,* Francesco Fanfulla,2,* Massimo Pagani,3 Daniela Lucini,3,4 Mara Malacarne,3,4 Mauro Manconi,5– 7 Guido Ferretti,8,9 Fabio Esposito,10,11 Carlo W Cereda,12 Marco Pons1 1Department of Pulmonology, Regional Hospital of Lugano (EOC), Lugano, 6900, Switzerland; 2Respiratory Function and Sleep Unit – Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Pavia, Italy; 3Exercise Medicine Unit, Istituto Auxologico Italiano, MIlan, 20133, Italy; 4University of Milan, BIOMETRA Department, Milan, Italy; 5Sleep and Epilepsy Center, Neurocenter of the Southern Switzerland, Regional Hospital (EOC) of Lugano, Lugano, Switzerland; 6Faculty of Biomedical Sciences, Università della Svizzera Italiana, Lugano, Switzerland; 7Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Inselspital, Bern, Switzerland; 8Department APSI, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland; 9Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy; 10Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy; 11IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Galeazzi, Milan, Italy; 12Stroke Center EOC, Department of Neurology, Neurocenter of Southern Switzerland Regional Hospital (EOC) of Lugano, Lugano, Switzerland*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Mauro ManconiRegional Hospital of Lugano, Via Tesserete, 46, Lugano, 6903, SwitzerlandTel +41-91-8116825Email mauro.manconi@eoc.chIntroduction: Sleep-related breathing disorders are highly prevalent in patients with ischemic stroke. Among sleep-disordered breathing disorders, obstructive sleep apnea is the most represented one, but central sleep apnea, isolated or in the context of a periodic breathing/Cheyne–Stokes respiration, is frequently reported in these patients. Altered baroreflex responses have been reported in the acute phases of a cerebral event.Methods: We conducted, in a group of patients with ischemic stroke (n=60), a prospective 3-month follow-up physiological study to describe the breathing pattern during sleep and baroreflex sensitivity in the acute phase and in the recovery phase.Results: In the acute phase, within 10 days from the onset of symptoms, 22.4% of patients had a normal breathing pattern, 40.3% had an obstructive pattern, 16.4% had a central pattern, and 29.9% showed a mixed pattern. Smaller variations in the Apnea–Hypopnea Index were found in normal breathing and obstructive groups (ΔAHI 2.1± 4.1 and − 2.8± 11.6, respectively) in comparison with central and mixed patterns (ΔAHI − 6.9± 15.1 and − 12.5± 13.1, respectively; ANOVA p=0.01). The obstructive pattern became the most frequent pattern, in 38.3% of patients at baseline and 61.7% of patients at follow-up. Modification of baroreflex sensitivity over time was influenced by the site of the lesion and by the sleep disorder pattern in the acute phase (MANOVA p=0.005).Conclusion: We suggest that a down-regulation of autonomic activity, possibly related to reduced vagal modulation, may help the recovery after stroke, or a transitory disconnection from the cortical node that participates in the regulation of sympathetic outflow.Keywords: sleep-disordered breathing, baroreflex, chemoreflex, brain lesion
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- 2021
7. Artificial intelligence solution to classify pulmonary nodules on CT
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Blanc, D., Racine, V., Khalil, A., Deloche, M., Broyelle, J.-A., Hammouamri, I., Sinitambirivoutin, E., Fiammante, M., Verdier, E., Besson, T., Sadate, A., Lederlin, M., Laurent, F., Chassagnon, G., Ferretti, G., Diascorn, Y., Brillet, P.-Y., Cassagnes, Lucie, Caramella, C., Loubet, A., Abassebay, N., Cuingnet, P., Ohana, M., Behr, J., Ginzac, A., Veyssiere, H., Durando, X., Bousaïd, I., Lassau, N., and Brehant, J.
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- 2020
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8. Incorporating results from seismic microzonation into probabilistic seismic hazard analysis: An example in western Liguria (Italy)
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Barani, S., Ferretti, G., and De Ferrari, R.
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- 2020
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9. Crizotinib in c-MET- or ROS1-positive NSCLC: results of the AcSé phase II trial
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Moro-Sibilot, D., Cozic, N., Pérol, M., Mazières, J., Otto, J., Souquet, P.J., Bahleda, R., Wislez, M., Zalcman, G., Guibert, S.D., Barlési, F., Mennecier, B., Monnet, I., Sabatier, R., Bota, S., Dubos, C., Verriele, V., Haddad, V., Ferretti, G., Cortot, A., De Fraipont, F., Jimenez, M., Hoog-Labouret, N., and Vassal, G.
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- 2019
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10. One-Loop QCD Spin Chain and its Spectrum
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Beisert, N., Ferretti, G., Heise, R., and Zarembo, K.
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High Energy Physics - Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study the renormalization of gauge invariant operators in large Nc QCD. We compute the complete matrix of anomalous dimensions to leading order in the 't Hooft coupling and study its eigenvalues. Thinking of the mixing matrix as the Hamiltonian of a generalized spin chain we find a large integrable sector consisting of purely gluonic operators constructed with self-dual field strengths and an arbitrary number of derivatives. This sector contains the true ground state of the spin chain and all the gapless excitations above it. The ground state is essentially the anti-ferromagnetic ground state of a XXX1 spin chain and the excitations carry either a chiral spin quantum number with relativistic dispersion relation or an anti-chiral one with non-relativistic dispersion relation., Comment: 54 pages, v2: minor changes, references added
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- 2004
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11. Fractional Branes and N=1 Gauge Theories
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Bertolini, M., Di Vecchia, P., Ferretti, G., and Marotta, R.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We discuss fractional D3-branes on the orbifold C^3/Z_2*Z_2. We study the open and the closed string spectrum on this orbifold. The corresponding N=1 theory on the brane has, generically, a U(N_1)*U(N_2)*U(N_3)*U(N_4) gauge group with matter in the bifundamental. In particular, when only one type of brane is present, one obtains pure N=1 Yang-Mills. We study the coupling of the branes to the bulk fields and present the corresponding supergravity solution, valid at large distances. By using a probe analysis, we are able to obtain the Wilsonian beta-function for those gauge theories that possess some chiral multiplet. Although, due to the lack of moduli, the probe technique is not directly applicable to the case of pure N=1 Yang-Mills, we point out that the same formula gives the correct result also for this case., Comment: 21 pages, AMS-LaTeX, v2: references added and typos corrected
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- 2001
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12. D-brane probes on G2 Orbifolds
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Ferretti, G., Salomonson, P., and Tsimpis, D.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We consider type IIB string theory on a seven dimensional orbifold with holonomy in G2. The motivation is to use D1-branes as probes of the geometry. The low energy theory on the D1-brane is a sigma-model with two real supercharges (N = (1,1) in two dimensional language). We study in detail the closed and open string sectors and propose a coupling of the twisted fields to the brane that modifies the vacuum moduli space so that the singularity at the origin is removed. Instead of coming from D-terms, which are not present here, the modification comes from a ``twisted'' mass term for the seven scalar multiplets on the brane. The proposed mechanism involves a generalization of the moment map., Comment: 16 pages; v2: References added; v3: Erroneous interpretation of twisted moduli corrected, acknowledgments added
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- 2001
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13. Supersymmetric 3-branes on smooth ALE manifolds with flux
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Bertolini, M., Campos, V. L., Ferretti, G., Fré, P., Salomonson, P., and Trigiante, M.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We construct a new family of classical BPS solutions of type IIB supergravity describing 3-branes transverse to a 6-dimensional space with topology R^2*ALE. They are characterized by a non-trivial flux of the supergravity 2-forms through the homology 2-cycles of a generic smooth ALE manifold. Our solutions have two Killing spinors and thus preserve N=2 supersymmetry. They are expressed in terms of a quasi harmonic function H (the ``warp factor''), whose properties we study in the case of the simplest ALE, namely the Eguchi-Hanson manifold. The equation for H is identified as an instance of the confluent Heun equation. We write explicit power series solutions and solve the recurrence relation for the coefficients, discussing also the relevant asymptotic expansions. While, as in all such N=2 solutions, supergravity breaks down near the brane, the smoothing out of the vacuum geometry has the effect that the warp factor is regular in a region near the cycle. We interpret the behavior of the warp factor as describing a three-brane charge ``smeared'' over the cycle and consider the asymptotic form of the geometry in that region, showing that conformal invariance is broken even when the complex type IIB 3-form field strength is assumed to vanish. We conclude with a discussion of the basic features of the gauge theory dual., Comment: latex, 36 pages (26 + appendix). Some statements on the gauge dual made more precise. Final version to appear on NPB
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- 2001
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14. An adaptive multilevel radial basis function scheme for the HJB equation
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Ferretti, G., Ferretti, R., Junge, O., and Schreiber, A.
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- 2017
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15. Signatures of vector-like top partners decaying into new neutral scalar or pseudoscalar bosons
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Benbrik, R., Kuutmann, E. Bergeaas, Franzosi, D. Buarque, Ellajosyula, V., Enberg, R., Ferretti, G., Isacson, M., Liu, Y.-B., Mandal, T., Mathisen, T., Moretti, S., and Panizzi, L.
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- 2020
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16. Creation of Fundamental Strings by Crossing D-branes
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Danielsson, U. H., Ferretti, G., and Klebanov, I. R.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We study the force balance between orthogonally positioned $p$-brane and $(8-p)$-brane. The force due to graviton and dilaton exchange is repulsive in this case. We identify the attractive force that balances this repulsion as due to one-half of a fundamental string stretched between the branes. As the $p$-brane passes through the $(8-p)$-brane, the connecting string changes direction, which may be interpreted as creation of one fundamental string. We show this directly from the structure of the Chern-Simons terms in the D-brane effective actions. We also discuss the effect of string creation on the 0-brane quantum mechanics in the type I' theory. The creation of a fundamental string is related by U-duality to the creation of a 3-brane discussed by Hanany and Witten. Both processes have a common origin in M-theory: as two M5-branes with one common direction cross, a M2-brane stretched between them is created., Comment: 6 pages, Latex
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- 1997
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17. Regularization and Quantization of Higher Dimensional Current Algebras
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Ferretti, G.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We present some recently discovered infinite dimensional Lie algebras that can be understood as extensions of the algebra Map(M,g) of maps from a compact p-dimensional manifold to some finite dimensional Lie algebra g. In the first part of the paper, we describe the physical motivations for the study of these algebras. In the second part, we discuss their realization in terms of pseudo-differential operators and comment on their possible representation theory., Comment: (Talk given at the G\"ursey Memorial Conference I on Strings and Symmetries, Istanbul, Turkey, June 6-10 1994.) 11 pages, plain TEX. ITP 94-17
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- 1994
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18. Higher-Dimensional Loop Algebras, Non-Abelian Extensions and p-Branes
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Cederwall, M., Ferretti, G., Nilsson, B. E. W., and Westerberg, A.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We postulate a new type of operator algebra with a non-abelian extension. This algebra generalizes the Kac--Moody algebra in string theory and the Mickelsson--Faddeev algebra in three dimensions to higher-dimensional extended objects ($p$-branes). We then construct new BRST operators, covariant derivatives and curvature tensors in the higher-dimensional generalization of loop space., Comment: (published version, extended introduction), 35 pp.(LaTeX), Goteborg ITP-93-37
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- 1994
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19. The Untruncated Marinari-Parisi Superstring
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Ferretti, G.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
It is shown that the bosonic angular degrees of freedom in the one dimensional Marinari-Parisi superstring can be integrated out exactly in the Hamiltonian formulation without having to perform the Dabholkar truncation. The resulting Hamiltonian is that of a supersymmetric Calogero system plus a four fermions interaction. This extra interaction vanishes for all physical states with fermion number zero or one where supersymmetry is manifest. We confirm that supersymmetry is nonperturbativly broken by instanton effects., Comment: 12 pages, Plain TEX, Chalmers Preprint #ITP 93-41
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- 1993
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20. Magnetic Fields and Passive Scalars in Polyakov's Conformal Turbulence
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Ferretti, G. and Yang, Z.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
Polyakov has suggested that two dimensional turbulence might be described by a minimal model of conformal field theory. However, there are many minimal models satisfying the same physical inputs as Polyakov's solution (p,q)=(2,21). Dynamical magnetic fields and passive scalars pose different physical requirements. For large magnetic Reynolds number other minimal models arise. The simplest one, (p,q)=(2,13) makes reasonable predictions that may be tested in the astrophysical context. In particular, the equipartition theorem between magnetic and kinetic energies does not hold: the magnetic one dominates at larger distances., Comment: 12 pages, UR-1296, ER-745-40685
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- 1992
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21. Three Dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics
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Ferretti, G., Rajeev, S. G., and Yang, Z.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
The subject of this talk was the review of our study of three ($2+1$) dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics. In our previous works, we showed the existence of a phase where parity is unbroken and the flavor group $U(2n)$ is broken to a subgroup $U(n)\times U(n)$. We derived the low energy effective action for the theory and showed that it has solitonic excitations with Fermi statistic, to be identified with the three dimensional ``baryon''. Finally, we studied the current algebra for this effective action and we found a co-homologically non trivial generalization of Kac-Moody algebras to three dimensions., Comment: 7 pages, Plain TEX, talk presented by S.G. Rajeev at the XXVI INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS, DALLAS TX AUG. 1992
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- 1992
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22. Current Algebra in Three Dimensions
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Ferretti, G. and Rajeev, S. G.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We study a three dimensional analogue of the Wess--Zumino--Witten model, which describes the Goldstone bosons of three dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics. The topologically non--trivial term of the action can also be viewed as a nonlinear realization of Chern--Simons form. We obtain the current algebra of this model by canonical methods. This is a three dimensional generalization of the Kac--Moody algebra., Comment: 11 pages, UR-1266, ER40685-720
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- 1992
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23. Baryons as Solitons in Three Dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics
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Ferretti, G., Rajeev, S. G., and Yang, Z.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We show that baryons of three dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics can be understood as solitons of its effective lagrangian. In the parity preserving phase we study, these baryons are fermions for odd $N_c$ and bosons for even $N_c$, never anyons. We quantize the collective variables of the solitons and there by calculate the flavor quantum numbers, magnetic moments and mass splittings of the baryon. The flavor quantum numbers are in agreement with naive quark model for the low lying states. The magnetic moments and mass splittings are smaller in the soliton model by a factor of $\log {F_\pi\over N_c m_\pi}$. We also show that there is a dibaryon solution that is an analogue of the deuteron. These solitons can describe defects in a quantum anti--ferromagnet., Comment: 22 pages + 4 figures (figures not included, postscript files available upon request)
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- 1992
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24. The Effective Lagrangian of Three Dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics
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Ferretti, G., Rajeev, S. G., and Yang, Z.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We consider the low energy limit of three dimensional Quantum Chromodynamics with an even number of flavors. We show that Parity is not spontaneously broken, but the global (flavor) symmetry is spontaneously broken. The low energy effective lagrangian is a nonlinear sigma model on the Grassmannian. Some Chern--Simons terms are necessary in the lagrangian to realize the discrete symmetries correctly. We consider also another parametrization of the low energy sector which leads to a three dimensional analogue of the Wess--Zumino--Witten--Novikov model. Since three dimensional QCD is believed to be a model for quantum anti--ferromagnetism, our effective lagrangian can describe their long wavelength excitations (spin waves)., Comment: 18 pages
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- 1992
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25. $CP^N$ Model With a Chern-Simons Term
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Ferretti, G. and Rajeev, S. G.
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
The $CP^N$ model in three euclidean dimensions is studied in the presence of a Chern-Simons term using the $1/N$ expansion. The $\beta$-function for the CS coefficient $\theta$ is found to be zero to order $1/N$ in the unbroken phase by an explicit calculation. It is argued to be zero to all orders. Some remarks on the $\theta$ dependence of the critical exponents are also made., Comment: 10 pages 2 figures (not included)
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- 1992
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26. Plant invasion risk inside and outside protected areas: Propagule pressure, abiotic and biotic factors definitively matter
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Lozano, V, Di Febbraro, M, Brundu, G, Carranza, M, Alessandrini, A, Ardenghi, N, Barni, E, Bedini, G, Celesti-Grapow, L, Cianfaglione, K, Cogoni, A, Domina, G, Fascetti, S, Ferretti, G, Foggi, B, Iberite, M, Lastrucci, L, Lazzaro, L, Mainetti, A, Marinangeli, F, Montagnani, C, Musarella, C, Orsenigo, S, Peccenini, S, Peruzzi, L, Poggio, L, Proietti, C, Prosser, F, Ranfa, A, Rosati, L, Santangelo, A, Selvaggi, A, Spampinato, G, Stinca, A, Vacca, G, Villani, M, Siniscalco, C, Lozano, Vanessa, Di Febbraro, Mirko, Brundu, Giuseppe, Carranza, Maria Laura, Alessandrini, Alessandro, Ardenghi, Nicola Maria Giuseppe, Barni, Elena, Bedini, Gianni, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Cianfaglione, Kevin, Cogoni, Annalena, Domina, Gianniantonio, Fascetti, Simonetta, Ferretti, Giulio, Foggi, Bruno, Iberite, Mauro, Lastrucci, Lorenzo, Lazzaro, Lorenzo, Mainetti, Andrea, Marinangeli, Francesca, Montagnani, Chiara, Musarella, Carmelo Maria, Orsenigo, Simone, Peccenini, Simonetta, Peruzzi, Lorenzo, Poggio, Laura, Proietti, Chiara, Prosser, Filippo, Ranfa, Aldo, Rosati, Leonardo, Santangelo, Annalisa, Selvaggi, Alberto, Spampinato, Giovanni, Stinca, Adriano, Vacca, Gabriella, Villani, Mariacristina, Siniscalco, Consolata, Lozano, V, Di Febbraro, M, Brundu, G, Carranza, M, Alessandrini, A, Ardenghi, N, Barni, E, Bedini, G, Celesti-Grapow, L, Cianfaglione, K, Cogoni, A, Domina, G, Fascetti, S, Ferretti, G, Foggi, B, Iberite, M, Lastrucci, L, Lazzaro, L, Mainetti, A, Marinangeli, F, Montagnani, C, Musarella, C, Orsenigo, S, Peccenini, S, Peruzzi, L, Poggio, L, Proietti, C, Prosser, F, Ranfa, A, Rosati, L, Santangelo, A, Selvaggi, A, Spampinato, G, Stinca, A, Vacca, G, Villani, M, Siniscalco, C, Lozano, Vanessa, Di Febbraro, Mirko, Brundu, Giuseppe, Carranza, Maria Laura, Alessandrini, Alessandro, Ardenghi, Nicola Maria Giuseppe, Barni, Elena, Bedini, Gianni, Celesti-Grapow, Laura, Cianfaglione, Kevin, Cogoni, Annalena, Domina, Gianniantonio, Fascetti, Simonetta, Ferretti, Giulio, Foggi, Bruno, Iberite, Mauro, Lastrucci, Lorenzo, Lazzaro, Lorenzo, Mainetti, Andrea, Marinangeli, Francesca, Montagnani, Chiara, Musarella, Carmelo Maria, Orsenigo, Simone, Peccenini, Simonetta, Peruzzi, Lorenzo, Poggio, Laura, Proietti, Chiara, Prosser, Filippo, Ranfa, Aldo, Rosati, Leonardo, Santangelo, Annalisa, Selvaggi, Alberto, Spampinato, Giovanni, Stinca, Adriano, Vacca, Gabriella, Villani, Mariacristina, and Siniscalco, Consolata
- Abstract
Invasive alien species are among the main global drivers of biodiversity loss posing major challenges to nature conservation and to managers of protected areas. The present study applied a methodological framework that combined invasive Species Distribution Models, based on propagule pressure, abiotic and biotic factors for 14 invasive alien plants of Union concern in Italy, with the local interpretable model-agnostic explanation analysis aiming to map, evaluate and analyse the risk of plant invasions across the country, inside and outside the network of protected areas. Using a hierarchical invasive Species Distribution Model, we explored the combined effect of propagule pressure, abiotic and biotic factors on shaping invasive alien plant occurrence across three biogeographic regions (Alpine, Continental, and Mediterranean) and realms (terrestrial and aquatic) in Italy. We disentangled the role of propagule pressure, abiotic and biotic factors on invasive alien plant distribution and projected invasion risk maps. We compared the risk posed by invasive alien plants inside and outside protected areas. Invasive alien plant distribution varied across biogeographic regions and realms and unevenly threatens protected areas. As an alien's occurrence and risk on a national scale are linked with abiotic factors followed by propagule pressure, their local distribution in protected areas is shaped by propagule pressure and biotic filters. The proposed modelling framework for the assessment of the risk posed by invasive alien plants across spatial scales and under different protection regimes represents an attempt to fill the gap between theory and practice in conservation planning helping to identify scale, site, and species-specific priorities of management, monitoring and control actions. Based on solid theory and on free geographic information, it has great potential for application to wider networks of protected areas in the world and to any invasive alien plant, aiding i
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- 2023
27. Solitary fibrous tumor of the pleura: Can computed tomography features help predict malignancy? A series of 56 patients with histopathological correlates
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Hélage, S., Revel, M.P., Chabi, M.L., Audureau, É., Ferretti, G., Laurent, F., Alifano, M., Mansuet-Lupo, A., Buy, J.N., and Vadrot, D.
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- 2016
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28. Polytraumatism and solid organ bleeding syndrome: The role of imaging
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Thony, F., Rodière, M., Frandon, J., Vendrell, A., Jankowski, A., Ghelfi, J., Sengel, C., Arvieux, C., Bouzat, P., and Ferretti, G.
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- 2015
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29. On consistency of physical and DEVS models in control-targeted DTs: an industrial case study
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Cimino, C., Granata, C., Ferretti, G., and Leva, A.
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Control and Systems Engineering - Published
- 2022
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30. Prospective study on nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel in advanced breast cancer: clinical results and biological observations in taxane-pretreated patients
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Fabi A, Giannarelli D, Malaguti P, Ferretti G, Vari S, Papaldo P, Nisticò C, Caterino M, De Vita R, Mottolese M, Iacorossi L, and Cognetti F
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Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Alessandra Fabi,1 Diana Giannarelli,2 Paola Malaguti,1 Gianluigi Ferretti,1 Sabrina Vari,1 Paola Papaldo,1 Cecilia Nisticò,1 Mauro Caterino,3 Roy De Vita,4 Marcella Mottolese,5 Laura Iacorossi,6 Francesco Cognetti1 1Department of Medical Oncology, 2Biostatistic Unit, 3Service of Radiology, 4Operative Unit of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Pathology, Regina Elena National Cancer Institute, Rome, Italy; 5Department of Pathology, 6Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University of Rome “Tor Vergata”, Rome, Italy Background: There is a deep need to improve the care of metastatic breast cancer (MBC) patients, since even today it remains an incurable disease. Taxanes are considered the most effective cytotoxic drugs for the treatment of MBC, both in monotherapy and in combined schedules, but the need for synthetic solvents contributes to the severe toxicities and may have a negative impact on the efficacy. Nanoparticle albumin-bound paclitaxel (Nab-paclitaxel) is a colloidal suspension of paclitaxel and human serum albumin initially developed to avoid the toxicities associated with conventional taxanes.Patients and methods: The aim of this prospective, single-center open-label, noncomparative study was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of nab-paclitaxel in MBC patients pretreated with taxanes. The patients were treated with nab-paclitaxel as a single agent, 260 mg/m2 on day 1 of each 3-week cycle or 125 mg/m2 weekly. The primary endpoint was the overall response rate (ORR). Secondary objectives were duration of response, clinical benefit rate, progression-free survival (PFS), overall survival, and safety.Results: A total of 42 patients (median age 48 years, median Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status 0, triple-negative MBC 19%, all pretreated with a taxane-based therapy, mainly in advanced disease) were enrolled in the study. The ORR was 23.8%, including one complete response (2.4%) and nine partial responses (21.4%); the disease control rate was 50%. The median duration of response was 7.2 months. After a median follow-up of 9 months, the median PFS was 4.6 months. ORR and PFS were similar irrespective of the previous chemotherapy lines, metastatic sites, and biomolecular expression. Nab-paclitaxel was well tolerated, and the most frequent treatment-related toxicities were mild to moderate (grades 1–2).Conclusion: This real-life study shows that nab-paclitaxel has a significant antitumor activity and a manageable safety profile in patients pretreated with taxanes and experiencing a treatment failure after at least one line of chemotherapy. Keywords: nab-paclitaxel, metastatic breast cancer, anthracyclines
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- 2015
31. Blunt splenic injury: Outcomes of proximal versus distal and combined splenic artery embolization
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Frandon, J., Rodière, M., Arvieux, C., Michoud, M., Vendrell, A., Broux, C., Sengel, C., Bricault, I., Ferretti, G., and Thony, F.
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- 2014
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32. Management strategy of pulmonary nodule in 2013
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Lederlin, M., Revel, M.-P., Khalil, A., Ferretti, G., Milleron, B., and Laurent, F.
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- 2013
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33. Subduction-related melt refertilisation and alkaline metasomatism in the Eastern Transylvanian Basin lithospheric mantle: Evidence from mineral chemistry and noble gases in fluid inclusions
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Faccini, B, Rizzo, A, Bonadiman, C, Ntaflos, T, Seghedi, I, Grégoire, M, Ferretti, G, Coltorti, M, Faccini B, Rizzo A, Bonadiman C, Ntaflos T, Seghedi I, Grégoire M, Ferretti G, Coltorti M, Faccini, B, Rizzo, A, Bonadiman, C, Ntaflos, T, Seghedi, I, Grégoire, M, Ferretti, G, Coltorti, M, Faccini B, Rizzo A, Bonadiman C, Ntaflos T, Seghedi I, Grégoire M, Ferretti G, and Coltorti M
- Abstract
Calc-alkaline and alkaline magmatic activity is generally separated in space and/or in time. The Eastern Transylvanian Basin in Romania is one of the few places where, during Pleistocene, alkaline eruptions occurred contemporaneously with the calc-alkaline activity. Mantle xenoliths entrained in Perşani Mts. alkaline volcanic products have been studied in order to investigate the interaction of metasomatic agents of different magmatic affinities with the mantle wedge. Based on mineral major and trace element and noble gases in fluid inclusions, two main events have been recognized. The first was a pervasive, complete re-fertilization of a previously depleted mantle by a calc-alkaline subduction-related melt, causing the formation of very fertile, amphibole-bearing lithotypes. This is shown by the a) increased amounts of modal clinopyroxene up to 21.9 % with Al2O3 contents up to 8.16 wt%, higher than what is expected for clinopyroxene in Primordial Mantle; b) 4He/40Ar* ratios up to 1.2, within the reported range for mantle production; c) 3He/4He in olivine, opx and cpx of 5.8 ± 0.2 Ra, among the most radiogenic values of European mantle, below the typical MORB mantle value (8 ± 1 Ra), reflecting recycling of crustal material in the local lithosphere. The second event is related to later interaction with an alkaline metasomatic agent similar to the host basalts that caused slight LREE enrichment in pyroxenes and disseminated amphiboles and precipitation of vein amphiboles with a composition similar to amphiboles megacrysts also found in the Perşani Mts. volcanic deposits. This is highlighted by the 4He/40Ar* and 3He/4He values found in some opx and cpx, up to 2.5 and 6.6 Ra, respectively, more typical of magmatic fluids.
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- 2020
34. Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 9
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Galasso, G, Domina, G, Adorni, M, Angiolini, C, Apruzzese, M, Ardenghi, N, Assini, S, Aversa, M, Bacchetta, G, Banfi, E, Barberis, G, Bartolucci, F, Bernardo, L, Bertolli, A, Bonali, F, Bonari, G, Bonini, I, Bracco, F, Brundu, G, Buccomino, G, Buono, S, Calvia, G, Cambria, S, Castagnini, P, Ceschin, S, Dagnino, D, Di Gristina, E, Di Turi, A, Fascetti, S, Ferretti, G, Fois, M, Gentili, R, Gheza, G, Gubellini, L, Hofmann, N, Iamonico, D, Ilari, A, Kiraly, A, Kiraly, G, Laface, V, Lallai, A, Lazzaro, L, Lonati, M, Longo, D, Lozano, V, Lupoletti, J, Magrini, S, Mainetti, A, Manca, M, Marchetti, D, Mariani, F, Mariotti, M, Masin, R, Mei, G, Menini, F, Merli, M, Milani, A, Minuto, L, Mugnai, M, Musarella, C, Olivieri, N, Onnis, L, Passalacqua, N, Peccenini, S, Peruzzi, L, Pica, A, Pinzani, L, Pittarello, M, Podda, L, Prosser, F, Enri, S, Roma-Marzio, F, Rosati, L, Sarigu, M, Scafidi, F, Sciandrello, S, Selvaggi, A, Spampinato, G, Stinca, A, Tavilla, G, Toffolo, C, Tomasi, G, Turcato, C, Villano, C, Nepi, C, Galasso G., Domina G., Adorni M., Angiolini C., Apruzzese M., Ardenghi N. M. G., Assini S., Aversa M., Bacchetta G., Banfi E., Barberis G., Bartolucci F., Bernardo L., Bertolli A., Bonali F., Bonari G., Bonini I., Bracco F., Brundu G., Buccomino G., Buono S., Calvia G., Cambria S., Castagnini P., Ceschin S., Dagnino D., Di Gristina E., Di Turi A., Fascetti S., Ferretti G., Fois M., Gentili R., Gheza G., Gubellini L., Hofmann N., Iamonico D., Ilari A., Kiraly A., Kiraly G., Laface V. L. A., Lallai A., Lazzaro L., Lonati M., Longo D., Lozano V., Lupoletti J., Magrini S., Mainetti A., Manca M., Marchetti D., Mariani F., Mariotti M. G., Masin R. R., Mei G., Menini F., Merli M., Milani A., Minuto L., Mugnai M., Musarella C. M., Olivieri N., Onnis L., Passalacqua N. G., Peccenini S., Peruzzi L., Pica A., Pinzani L., Pittarello M., Podda L., Prosser F., Enri S. R., Roma-Marzio F., Rosati L., Sarigu M., Scafidi F., Sciandrello S., Selvaggi A., Spampinato G., Stinca A., Tavilla G., Toffolo C., Tomasi G., Turcato C., Villano C., Nepi C., Galasso, G, Domina, G, Adorni, M, Angiolini, C, Apruzzese, M, Ardenghi, N, Assini, S, Aversa, M, Bacchetta, G, Banfi, E, Barberis, G, Bartolucci, F, Bernardo, L, Bertolli, A, Bonali, F, Bonari, G, Bonini, I, Bracco, F, Brundu, G, Buccomino, G, Buono, S, Calvia, G, Cambria, S, Castagnini, P, Ceschin, S, Dagnino, D, Di Gristina, E, Di Turi, A, Fascetti, S, Ferretti, G, Fois, M, Gentili, R, Gheza, G, Gubellini, L, Hofmann, N, Iamonico, D, Ilari, A, Kiraly, A, Kiraly, G, Laface, V, Lallai, A, Lazzaro, L, Lonati, M, Longo, D, Lozano, V, Lupoletti, J, Magrini, S, Mainetti, A, Manca, M, Marchetti, D, Mariani, F, Mariotti, M, Masin, R, Mei, G, Menini, F, Merli, M, Milani, A, Minuto, L, Mugnai, M, Musarella, C, Olivieri, N, Onnis, L, Passalacqua, N, Peccenini, S, Peruzzi, L, Pica, A, Pinzani, L, Pittarello, M, Podda, L, Prosser, F, Enri, S, Roma-Marzio, F, Rosati, L, Sarigu, M, Scafidi, F, Sciandrello, S, Selvaggi, A, Spampinato, G, Stinca, A, Tavilla, G, Toffolo, C, Tomasi, G, Turcato, C, Villano, C, Nepi, C, Galasso G., Domina G., Adorni M., Angiolini C., Apruzzese M., Ardenghi N. M. G., Assini S., Aversa M., Bacchetta G., Banfi E., Barberis G., Bartolucci F., Bernardo L., Bertolli A., Bonali F., Bonari G., Bonini I., Bracco F., Brundu G., Buccomino G., Buono S., Calvia G., Cambria S., Castagnini P., Ceschin S., Dagnino D., Di Gristina E., Di Turi A., Fascetti S., Ferretti G., Fois M., Gentili R., Gheza G., Gubellini L., Hofmann N., Iamonico D., Ilari A., Kiraly A., Kiraly G., Laface V. L. A., Lallai A., Lazzaro L., Lonati M., Longo D., Lozano V., Lupoletti J., Magrini S., Mainetti A., Manca M., Marchetti D., Mariani F., Mariotti M. G., Masin R. R., Mei G., Menini F., Merli M., Milani A., Minuto L., Mugnai M., Musarella C. M., Olivieri N., Onnis L., Passalacqua N. G., Peccenini S., Peruzzi L., Pica A., Pinzani L., Pittarello M., Podda L., Prosser F., Enri S. R., Roma-Marzio F., Rosati L., Sarigu M., Scafidi F., Sciandrello S., Selvaggi A., Spampinato G., Stinca A., Tavilla G., Toffolo C., Tomasi G., Turcato C., Villano C., and Nepi C.
- Abstract
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Furthermore, three new combinations are proposed. Nomenclatural and distribution updates published elsewhere are provided as Suppl. material 1.
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- 2020
35. Unleashing the full power of LHCb to probe stealth new physics
- Author
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Borsato, M., Cid Vidal, X., Tsai, Y., Sierra, C. Vazquez, Zurita, J., Alonso-Alvarez, G., Boyarsky, A., Brea Rodriguez, A., Franzosi, D. Buarque, Cacciapaglia, G., Casais Vidal, A., Du, M., Elor, G., Escudero, M., Ferretti, G., Flacke, T., Foldenauer, P., Hajer, J., Henry, L., Ilten, P., Kamenik, J., Kishor Jashal, B., Knapen, S., Redi, F. L., Low, M., Liu, Z., Oyanguren Campos, A., Polycarpo, E., Ramos, M., Pernas, M. Ramos, Salvioni, E., Rangel, M. S., Schaefer, R., Sestini, L., Soreq, Y., Tran, V. Q., Timiryasov, I, van Veghel, M., Westhoff, S., Williams, M., Zupan, J., Borsato, M., Cid Vidal, X., Tsai, Y., Sierra, C. Vazquez, Zurita, J., Alonso-Alvarez, G., Boyarsky, A., Brea Rodriguez, A., Franzosi, D. Buarque, Cacciapaglia, G., Casais Vidal, A., Du, M., Elor, G., Escudero, M., Ferretti, G., Flacke, T., Foldenauer, P., Hajer, J., Henry, L., Ilten, P., Kamenik, J., Kishor Jashal, B., Knapen, S., Redi, F. L., Low, M., Liu, Z., Oyanguren Campos, A., Polycarpo, E., Ramos, M., Pernas, M. Ramos, Salvioni, E., Rangel, M. S., Schaefer, R., Sestini, L., Soreq, Y., Tran, V. Q., Timiryasov, I, van Veghel, M., Westhoff, S., Williams, M., and Zupan, J.
- Abstract
In this paper, we describe the potential of the LHCb experiment to detect stealth physics. This refers to dynamics beyond the standard model that would elude searches that focus on energetic objects or precision measurements of known processes. Stealth signatures include long-lived particles and light resonances that are produced very rarely or together with overwhelming backgrounds. We will discuss why LHCb is equipped to discover this kind of physics at the Large Hadron Collider and provide examples of well-motivated theoretical models that can be probed with great detail at the experiment.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Automatic computation of bending sequences for wire bending machines
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Baraldo, A. (Andrea), Bascetta, L. (Luca), Caprotti, F. (Fabrizio), Chourasiya, S. (Sumit), Ferretti, G. (Gianni), Ponti, A. (Angelo), Sakcak, B. (Basak), Baraldo, A. (Andrea), Bascetta, L. (Luca), Caprotti, F. (Fabrizio), Chourasiya, S. (Sumit), Ferretti, G. (Gianni), Ponti, A. (Angelo), and Sakcak, B. (Basak)
- Abstract
Determining a feasible bending sequence, i.e., ensuring absence of wire self-collisions and wire-machine collisions, or even an optimal bending sequence, i.e., minimising time or energy required to perform it, is a difficult and time-consuming task for complex workpieces, even for expert operators. Introducting algorithms for the computation of wire-bending sequences is thus crucial to increase productivity and production flexibility, and to decrease production costs. This work proposes an algorithm to automatically determine an appropriate bending sequence for a given workpiece, bending tool, and machine 3D CAD model, which leverages on a representation of the wire as a robotic manipulator and of a bending sequence as a tree, and on the adoption of A* as graph search algorithm. A cost and a heuristic function, suitable for the wire-bending problem, and an approach to parallelise the execution of A* are introduced, as well. In this way, a computationally simple and efficient wire-bending sequence computation algorithm is devised, able to determine a solution in an amount of time less or equal to the time used by an expert operator, without the need of high computational power. The effectiveness of this algorithm is assessed on two different test cases, relevant to industrial workpieces.
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- 2022
37. Unleashing the full power of LHCb to probe stealth new physics
- Author
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Borsato, M, Cid Vidal, X, Tsai, Y, Vázquez Sierra, C, Zurita, J, Alonso-Álvarez, G, Boyarsky, A, Brea Rodríguez, A, Buarque Franzosi, D, Cacciapaglia, G, Casais Vidal, A, Du, M, Elor, G, Escudero, M, Ferretti, G, Flacke, T, Foldenauer, P, Hajer, J, Henry, L, Ilten, P, Kamenik, J, Kishor Jashal, B, Knapen, S, Kostiuk, I, Redi, F, Low, M, Liu, Z, Oyanguren Campos, A, Polycarpo, E, Ramos, M, Ramos Pernas, M, Salvioni, E, Rangel, M, Schäfer, R, Sestini, L, Soreq, Y, Tran, V, Timiryasov, I, van Veghel, M, Westhoff, S, Williams, M, Zupan, J, Kostiuk, Igor, Redi, F L, Rangel, M S, Tran, V Q, Borsato, M, Cid Vidal, X, Tsai, Y, Vázquez Sierra, C, Zurita, J, Alonso-Álvarez, G, Boyarsky, A, Brea Rodríguez, A, Buarque Franzosi, D, Cacciapaglia, G, Casais Vidal, A, Du, M, Elor, G, Escudero, M, Ferretti, G, Flacke, T, Foldenauer, P, Hajer, J, Henry, L, Ilten, P, Kamenik, J, Kishor Jashal, B, Knapen, S, Kostiuk, I, Redi, F, Low, M, Liu, Z, Oyanguren Campos, A, Polycarpo, E, Ramos, M, Ramos Pernas, M, Salvioni, E, Rangel, M, Schäfer, R, Sestini, L, Soreq, Y, Tran, V, Timiryasov, I, van Veghel, M, Westhoff, S, Williams, M, Zupan, J, Kostiuk, Igor, Redi, F L, Rangel, M S, and Tran, V Q
- Abstract
In this paper, we describe the potential of the LHCb experiment to detect stealth physics. This refers to dynamics beyond the standard model that would elude searches that focus on energetic objects or precision measurements of known processes. Stealth signatures include long-lived particles and light resonances that are produced very rarely or together with overwhelming backgrounds. We will discuss why LHCb is equipped to discover this kind of physics at the Large Hadron Collider and provide examples of well-motivated theoretical models that can be probed with great detail at the experiment.
- Published
- 2022
38. Valorisation of Crocus sativus flower parts for herbal infusions: impact of brewing conditions on phenolic profiling, antioxidant capacity and sensory traits
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Bellachioma, L., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Morresi, C., Martinelli, E., Lucini, Luigi, Ferretti, G., Damiani, E., Bacchetti, T., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464), Bellachioma, L., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Morresi, C., Martinelli, E., Lucini, Luigi, Ferretti, G., Damiani, E., Bacchetti, T., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), and Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464)
- Abstract
Saffron production from Crocus sativus flowers produces large amounts of by-products that may represent an excellent source of polyphenols. The aim of this work was to evaluate infusions originating from different brewing processes and from different saffron flower portions, in terms of both functional and sensory traits. For this aim, total polyphenols and total flavonoids, in vitro antioxidant assays and an untargeted phenolic profiling were applied. In general, tepals showed higher polyphenol and flavonoid content than stamen infusions, and their bioactive content depended more on brewing temperature than brewing time. These findings were consistent with both antioxidant capacity and phenolic profiling. Multivariate statistics highlighted polyphenols discriminating ‘boiled’ vs. ‘cold’ infusions, being mainly flavonoids, phenolic acids and the alkylphenol 5-pentadecylresorcinol (showing a strong down-accumulation at the higher brewing temperatures). Positive correlations could be highlighted between anthocyanins, flavones, flavonols and lignans, and the in vitro antioxidant assays. In general, cold brewing was successful in extracting phenolic compounds and provided better sensory properties, thus indicating that this may represent a valuable strategy to develop saffron-based functional beverages with better consumers' acceptability.
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- 2022
39. Phytochemical profiling, antibacterial and antioxidant properties of Crocus sativus flower: A comparison between tepals and stigmas
- Author
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Bellachioma, L., Marini, E., Magi, G., Pugnaloni, A., Facinelli, B., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Martinelli, E., Lucini, Luigi, Morresi, C., Bacchetti, T., Ferretti, G., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464), Bellachioma, L., Marini, E., Magi, G., Pugnaloni, A., Facinelli, B., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Martinelli, E., Lucini, Luigi, Morresi, C., Bacchetti, T., Ferretti, G., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), and Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464)
- Abstract
Several studies have demonstrated that stigmas of Crocus sativus contain several bioactive compounds with potential health-promoting properties. However, during the processing of stigmas, large amounts of floral bio-residues are normally discarded as by-products. In this study, using untargeted metabolomics, the comprehensive phytochemical composition of C. sativus stigma and tepals was investigated. Moreover, the antibacterial and anti-biofilm properties of the extracts of C. sativus stigmas and tepals were compared. The study was carried out using two methicillin-resistant staphylococcal reference strains (i.e., Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 43300 and Staphylococcus epidermidis ATCC 35984), representing important Gram-positive biofilm-forming human pathogens. The antibacterial properties were correlated with total polyphenol content, total terpenoid content, and in vitro antioxidant properties of tepals and stigmas. The results demonstrated that stigma and tepal extracts, at the sub-Toxic concentrations, were able to interfere with biofilm formation by ATCC 43300 and ATCC 35984. Besides, the higher antibacterial activity of tepals than stigmas was associated with higher levels of phycompounds. Therefore, our results demonstrated that C. sativus stigmas and bio-residues, such as tepals, are potential antioxidant sources and good candidates as antibacterial agents to prevent biofilm formation. Taken together, these findings showed that C. sativus could be used as functional ingredient by the food and pharmaceutical industries.
- Published
- 2022
40. C. spinosa L. subsp. rupestris Phytochemical Profile and Effect on Oxidative Stress in Normal and Cancer Cells
- Author
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Bacchetti, T., Campagna, R., Sartini, D., Cecati, M., Morresi, C., Bellachioma, L., Martinelli, E., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Lucini, Luigi, Ferretti, G., Emanuelli, M., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464), Bacchetti, T., Campagna, R., Sartini, D., Cecati, M., Morresi, C., Bellachioma, L., Martinelli, E., Rocchetti, Gabriele, Lucini, Luigi, Ferretti, G., Emanuelli, M., Rocchetti G. (ORCID:0000-0003-3488-4513), and Lucini L. (ORCID:0000-0002-5133-9464)
- Abstract
Spices, widely used to improve the sensory characteristics of food, contain several bioactive compounds as well, including polyphenols, carotenoids, and glucosynolates. Acting through multiple pathways, these bioactive molecules affect a wide variety of cellular processes involved in molecular mechanisms important in the onset and progress of human diseases. Capparis spinosa L. is an aromatic plant characteristic of the Mediterranean diet. Previous studies have reported that different parts (aerial parts, roots, and seeds) of C. spinosa exert various pharmacological activities. Flower buds of C. spinosa contain several bioactive compounds, including polyphenols and glucosinolates. Two different subspecies of C. spinosa L., namely, C. spinosa L. subsp. spinosa, and C. spinosa L. subsp. rupestris, have been reported. Few studies have been carried out in C. spinosa L. subsp. rupestris. The aim of our study was to investigate the phytochemical profile of floral buds of the less investigated species C. spinosa subsp. rupestris. Moreover, we investigated the effect of the extract from buds of C. spinosa subsp. rupestris (CSE) on cell proliferation, intracellular ROS levels, and expression of the antioxidant and anti-apoptotic enzyme paraoxonase-2 (PON2) in normal and cancer cells. T24 cells and Caco-2 cells were selected as models of advanced-stage human bladder cancer and human colorectal adenocarcinoma, respectively. The immortalized human urothelial cell line (UROtsa) and human dermal fibroblast (HuDe) were chosen as normal cell models. Through an untargeted metabolomic approach based on ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography quadrupole-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QTOF-MS), our results demonstrate that C. spinosa subsp. rupestris flower buds contain polyphenols and glucosinolates able to exert a higher cytotoxic effect and higher intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in cancer cells compared to normal cells. Moreover, upregulation of
- Published
- 2022
41. Endobronchial tumours in a campaign for early detection of bronchial cancer: Computed tomography versus endoscopy
- Author
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Lecourtois, B., Jankowski, A., Arbib, F., Lantuejoul, S., Brichon, P.Y., Moro-Sibilot, D., Brambilla, C., and Ferretti, G.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Muon Collider Facility for Physics Discovery
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Stratakis, D., Mokhov, N., Palmer, M., Pastrone, N., Raubenheimer, T., Rogers, C., Schulte, D., Shiltsev, V., Tang, J., Aimè, C., Mahmoud, M. A., Bartosik, N., Barzi, E., Bersani, A., Bertolin, A., Bonesini, M., Caiffi, B., Casarsa, M., Catanesi, M. G., Cerri, A., Curatolo, C., Dam, M., Damerau, H., Matteis, E., Denizli, H., Di Micco, B., Dorigo, T., Farinon, S., Filthaut, F., Fiorina, D., Giove, D., Greco, M., Grojean, C., Han, T., Jindariani, S., Koppenburg, P., Krizka, K., Li, Q., Liu, Z., Long, K. R., Lucchesi, D., Mariotto, S., Meloni, F., Merlassino, C., Métral, E., Montella, A., Musenich, R., Nardecchia, M., Nardi, F., Neuffer, D., Griso, S. Pagan, Potamianos, K., Prioli, M., Radicioni, E., Reina, L., Riccardi, C., Ristori, L., Rossi, L., Salvini, P., Santiago, J., Senol, A., Sestini, L., Sorbi, M., Stark, G., Statera, M., Sun, X., Vai, I., Agashe, K., Allanach, B. C., Apresyan, A., Asadi, P., Athanasakos, D., Azatov, A., Batsch, F., Biagini, M. E., Black, K. M., Braghieri, A., Bross, A., Buonincontri, L., Buttazzo, D., Calderini, G., Calzaferri, S., Canepa, A., Capdevilla, R., Castelli, L., Cesarotti, C., Chachamis, G., Chacko, Z., Chancé, A., Chen, S., Chien, Y. -T, Colaleo, A., Costa, M., Craig, N., Cui, Y., Curtin, D., D Agnolo, R. T., Da Molin, G., Dasu, S., Blas, J., Deandrea, A., Delahaye, J., Delgado, A., Dermisek, R., Di Petrillo, K. F., Dickinson, J., Dracos, M., Errico, F., Everaerts, P., Everett, L., Ferretti, G., Forslund, M., Franceschini, R., Gabrielli, E., Garosi, F., Giambastiani, L., Giraldin, C., Glioti, A., Gray, L., Greljo, A., Gu, J., Haber, H. E., Han, C., Hauptman, J., Henning, B., Hermanek, K., Herndon, M., Holmes, T. R., Homiller, S., Jana, S., Jia, H., Kahn, Y., Kaplan, D. M., Kilian, W., Kong, K., Krintiras, G. K., Krnjaic, G., Losito, R., Lee, L., Li, W., Low, I., Lu, Q., Ma, Y., Maltoni, F., Mantani, L., Marzocca, D., Mastrapasqua, P., Matchev, K., Mazzacane, A., Mcginnis, N., Meade, P., Mele, B., Merkel, P., Mescia, F., Mishra, R. K., Mohammadi, A., Mohapatra, R., Montagna, P., Neufeld, N., Newman, H., Nomura, Y., Ojalvo, I., Panci, P., Pagani, D., Paradisi, P., Antonello Pellecchia, Perloff, A., Piccinini, F., Pierini, M., Procura, M., Radogna, R., Redigolo, D., Reuter, J., Riva, F., Robens, T., Queiroz, F. S., Sala, F., Salko, J., Salvioni, E., Sarra, I., Schieck, J., Selvaggi, M., Sharma, V., Simone, F. M., Stamerra, A., Stolarski, D., Stupak, J., Su, S., Sundrum, R., Swiatlowski, M., Sytov, A., Tait, T., Thompson, E. A., Torre, R., Tortora, L., Trifinopoulos, S., Valente, M., Valle, N., Venditti, R., Verwilligen, P., Vittorio, L., Vitulo, P., Vryonidou, E., Vuosalo, C., Weber, H., Wu, Y., Wulzer, A., Xie, K., Yonehara, K., Yu, H. -B, Zaza, A., Zheng, Y. J., Zuliani, D., Zurita, J., Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE (UMR_7585)), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Institut de Physique Théorique - UMR CNRS 3681 (IPHT), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Physique des 2 Infinis de Lyon (IP2I Lyon), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut Pluridisciplinaire Hubert Curien (IPHC), Université de Strasbourg (UNISTRA)-Université de Haute-Alsace (UHA) Mulhouse - Colmar (Université de Haute-Alsace (UHA))-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Université Louis Pasteur - Strasbourg I, Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Hautes Energies (LPTHE), Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Muon Collider
- Subjects
Accelerator Physics (physics.acc-ph) ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-ACC-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Accelerator Physics [physics.acc-ph] ,FOS: Physical sciences ,costs ,Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,accelerator: technology ,muon: storage ring ,Accelerators and Storage Rings ,activity report ,performance ,accelerator: design ,physics.acc-ph - Abstract
Muon colliders provide a unique route to deliver high energy collisions that enable discovery searches and precision measurements to extend our understanding of the fundamental laws of physics. The muon collider design aims to deliver physics reach at the highest energies with costs, power consumption and on a time scale that may prove favorable relative to other proposed facilities. In this context, a new international collaboration has formed to further extend the design concepts and performance studies of such a machine. This effort is focused on delivering the elements of a $\sim$10 TeV center of mass (CM) energy design to explore the physics energy frontier. The path to such a machine may pass through lower energy options. Currently a 3 TeV CM stage is considered. Other energy stages could also be explored, e.g. an s-channel Higgs Factory operating at 125 GeV CM. We describe the status of the R&D and design effort towards such a machine and lay out a plan to bring these concepts to maturity as a tool for the high energy physics community., 23 pages, 3 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2201.07895
- Published
- 2022
43. Promising Technologies and R&D Directions for the Future Muon Collider Detectors
- Author
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Jindariani, S., Meloni, F., Aimè, C., Bartosik, N., Barzi, E., Bertolin, A., Braghieri, A., Buonincontri, L., Calzaferri, S., Casarsa, M., Catanesi, M. G., Cerri, A., Chachamis, G., Colaleo, A., Curatolo, C., Da Molin, G., Delahaye, J., Di Micco, B., Dorigo, T., Errico, F., Fiorina, D., Gianelle, A., Giraldin, C., Hauptman, J., Holmes, T. R., Krizka, K., Lee, L., Long, K. R., Lucchesi, D., Mokhov, N., Montella, A., Nardi, F., Neufeld, N., Neuffer, D., Pagan Griso, S., Antonello Pellecchia, Potamianos, K., Radicioni, E., Radogna, R., Riccardi, C., Ristori, L., Rossi, L., Salvini, P., Schulte, D., Sestini, L., Shiltsev, V., Simone, F. M., Stamerra, A., Sun, X., Tang, J., Thompson, E. A., Vai, I., Valle, N., Venditti, R., Verwilligen, P., Vitulo, P., Weber, H., Yonehara, K., Zaza, A., Agashe, K., Allanach, B. C., Asadi, P., Mahmoud, M. A., Azatov, A., Batsch, F., Bersani, A., Biagini, M. E., Black, K. M., Bogacz, S. A., Bonesini, M., Bross, A., Buttazzo, D., Caiffi, B., Calderini, G., Capdevilla, R., Castelli, L., Cesarotti, C., Chacko, Z., Chancé, A., Chen, S., Chien, Y. -T, Costa, M., Craig, N., Curtin, D., D Agnolo, R. T., Dam, M., Damerau, H., Dasu, S., Blas, J., Matteis, E., Deandrea, A., Delgado, A., Denizli, H., Dermisek, R., Di Petrillo, K. F., Dickinson, J., Everaerts, P., Everett, L., Farinon, S., Ferretti, G., Filthaut, F., Forslund, M., Franceschini, R., Gabrielli, E., Garosi, F., Giambastiani, L., Glioti, A., Gray, L., Greljo, A., Grojean, C., Gu, J., Han, C., Han, T., Henning, B., Hermanek, K., Homiller, S., Jana, S., Jia, H., Kahn, Y., Kaplan, D. M., Kilian, W., Kong, K., Koppenburg, P., Krintiras, G. K., Li, W., Li, Q., Liu, Z., Lu, Q., Ma, Y., Maltoni, F., Mantani, L., Mariotto, S., Marzocca, D., Mastrapasqua, P., Matchev, K., Mazzacane, A., Mcginnis, N., Meade, P., Mele, B., Merkel, P., Merlassino, C., Mishra, R. K., Mohammadi, A., Mohapatra, R., Montagna, P., Musenich, R., Nomura, Y., Ojalvo, I., Panci, P., Paradisi, P., Perloff, A., Piccinini, F., Pierini, M., Prioli, M., Procura, M., Raubenheimer, T., Redigolo, D., Reina, L., Reuter, J., Riva, F., Robens, T., Sala, F., Salko, J., Salvioni, E., Santiago, J., Sarra, I., Schieck, J., Selvaggi, M., Senol, A., Sharma, V., Sorbi, M., Stark, G., Statera, M., Stupak, J., Su, S., Sundrum, R., Swiatlowski, M., Torre, R., Tortora, L., Trifinopoulos, S., Valente, M., Valente, R. U., Vittorio, L., Vryonidou, E., Vuosalo, C., Wendt, M., Wu, Y., Wulzer, A., Xie, K., Yu, H. -B, Zheng, Y. J., Zurita, J., HEP, INSPIRE, Laboratoire de Physique Nucléaire et de Hautes Énergies (LPNHE (UMR_7585)), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Recherches sur les lois Fondamentales de l'Univers (IRFU), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay, Institut de Physique Théorique - UMR CNRS 3681 (IPHT), Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA)-Université Paris-Saclay-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Institut de Physique des 2 Infinis de Lyon (IP2I Lyon), Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL), Université de Lyon-Université de Lyon-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Laboratoire de Physique Théorique et Hautes Energies (LPTHE), Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Muon Collider
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,[PHYS.HEXP] Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,hep-ex ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,muon: storage ring ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET] Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det] ,accelerator: technology ,Detectors and Experimental Techniques ,physics.ins-det ,flux: background ,Particle Physics - Experiment ,performance - Abstract
Among the post-LHC generation of particle accelerators, the muon collider represents a unique machine with capability to provide very high energy leptonic collisions and to open the path to a vast and mostly unexplored physics programme. However, on the experimental side, such great physics potential is accompanied by unprecedented technological challenges, due to the fact that muons are unstable particles. Their decay products interact with the machine elements and produce an intense flux of background particles that eventually reach the detector and may degrade its performance. In this paper, we present technologies that have a potential to match the challenging specifications of a muon collider detector and outline a path forward for the future R&D efforts., Comment: Contribution to Snowmass 2021, 27 pages, 15 figures
- Published
- 2022
44. N dynamics in a sandy soil amended with natural chabazite zeolite tuff and fertilized with different N sources
- Author
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Ferretti, G., Medoro, V., Alberghini, M., Galamini, G., Faccini, B., and Coltorti, M.
- Published
- 2022
45. N leached from a sandy soil amended with urea, liquid digestate, struvite and NH4-enriched chabazite zeolite-tuff
- Author
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Ferretti, G., Galamini, G., Medoro, V., Faccini, B., and Coltorti, M.
- Published
- 2022
46. Contributions for a vascular flora of Tuscany. XIII (813-873)
- Author
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Peruzzi L., Viciani D., Adami M., Angiolini C., Astuti G., Bonari G., Bonaventuri G., Castagnini P., De Simone L., Domina G., Fanfarillo E., Fedeli R., Ferretti G., Festi F., Fiaschi T., Foggi B., Franzoni J., Gabellini A., Gennai M., Gestri G., Giaco A., Gottschlich G., Maccherini S., Mugnai M., Pierini B., Pinzani L., Roma-Marzio F., Sarmati S., Vannini A., Zangari G., Bedini G., Peruzzi L., Viciani D., Adami M., Angiolini C., Astuti G., Bonari G., Bonaventuri G., Castagnini P., De Simone L., Domina G., Fanfarillo E., Fedeli R., Ferretti G., Festi F., Fiaschi T., Foggi B., Franzoni J., Gabellini A., Gennai M., Gestri G., Giaco A., Gottschlich G., Maccherini S., Mugnai M., Pierini B., Pinzani L., Roma-Marzio F., Sarmati S., Vannini A., Zangari G., and Bedini G.
- Subjects
Conservation ,Flora ,Italy ,Tuscany ,Settore BIO/02 - Botanica Sistematica - Abstract
New localities and/or confirmations concerning 61 specific and subspecific plant taxa of Tuscan vascular flora, belonging to 56 genera and 25 families are presented: Delosperma (Aizoaceae), Ridolfia (Apiaceae), Dracunculus (Araceae), Gamochaeta, Hieracium, Matricaria, Rhagadiolus, Senecio, Tolpis (Asteraceae), Atriplex (Amaranthaceae), Iberis, Thlaspi (Brassicaceae), Legousia (Campanulaceae), Canna (Cannaceae), Lonicera, Symphoricarpos, Valerianella (Caprifoliaceae), Sabulina, Scleranthus, Silene (Caryophyllaceae), Sedum (Crassulaceae), Carex, Cyperus, Eleocharis (Cyperaceae), Orthilia (Ericaceae), Acacia, Albizia, Astragalus, Lathyrus, Medicago, Trifolium, Trigonella (Fabaceae), Streptopus (Liliaceae), Abutilon, Malva (Malvaceae), Epilobium (Onagraceae), Orobanche, Phelipanche (Orobanchaceae), Plantago (Plantaginaceae), Ampelodesmos, Bromopsis, Cenchrus, Ceratochloa, Phyllostachys, Pseudosasa, Sesleria, Sporobolus, Trisetaria (Poaceae), Fallopia (Polygonaceae), Alchemilla, Potentilla (Rosaceae), Galium (Rubiaceae), Dictamnus, Ruta (Rutaceae), Atropa, Solanum (Solanaceae). In the end, the conservation status of the units and eventual protection of the cited biotopes are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
47. C8 - Brain metastases and ado-trastuzumab emtansine (TDM-1) treatment in HER2 positive metastatic patients: an Italian multicenter analysis
- Author
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Fabi, A., Alesini, D., Valle, E., Carbognin, L., Arpino, G., Santini, D., Montemurro, F., Ciccarese, M., Cannita, K., Paris, I., Moscetti, L., De Laurentiis, M., Zambelli, A., La Verde, N., Nisticò, C., Ferretti, G., Gasparro, S., Giannarelli, D., and Cognetti, F.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Inter- and intraobserver consistency in assessing eligibility for bevacizumab (BVZ) in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients with centrally located tumors
- Author
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Barlési, F., Balleyguier, C., Besse, B., Bonodeau, F., Brenac, F., Corneloup, O., Dansin, E., Ferretti, G., Gaubert, J.Y., Gervais, R., Lacombe, C., Loundou, A., Moro-Sibilot, D., Planchard, D., Scherpereel, A., and Menu, Y.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Investigations on ecology and distribution of Senecio inaequidens DC. in Tuscany
- Author
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Misuri, A., Ferretti, G., Lazzaro, L., Mugnai, M., Dell’Olmo, L., and Viciani, D.
- Subjects
Alien invasive species, plant ecology, plant distribution - Published
- 2021
50. Relationships among vascular plants, mosses and lichens in grasslands communities along elevational gradients
- Author
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Mugnai, M., Hurtado, P., Di Nuzzo, L., Balzani, P., Frasconi Wendt, C., Beltramini, A., Ferretti, G., Viciani, D., Benesperi, R., and Lazzaro, L.
- Subjects
Plant taxonomic and functional diversity, vegetation, cross-taxon studies, plant ecology - Published
- 2021
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