6,434 results on '"Lipari, A"'
Search Results
202. Adherence to abiraterone or enzalutamide in elderly metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer
- Author
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Banna, Giuseppe L., Urzia, Valeria, Benanti, Chiara, Pitrè, Alessandra, Lipari, Helga, Di Quattro, Rosario, De Giorgi, Ugo, Schepisi, Giuseppe, Basso, Umberto, Bimbatti, Davide, Rundo, Francesco, Libra, Massimo, and Malatino, Lorenzo
- Published
- 2020
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203. From FMTV to WATERS: Lessons Learned from the First Verification Challenge at ECRTS (Artifact)
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Sebastian Altmeyer and Étienne André and Silvano Dal Zilio and Loïc Fejoz and Michael González Harbour and Susanne Graf and J. Javier Gutiérrez and Rafik Henia and Didier Le Botlan and Giuseppe Lipari and Julio Medina and Nicolas Navet and Sophie Quinton and Juan M. Rivas and Youcheng Sun, Altmeyer, Sebastian, André, Étienne, Dal Zilio, Silvano, Fejoz, Loïc, Harbour, Michael González, Graf, Susanne, Gutiérrez, J. Javier, Henia, Rafik, Le Botlan, Didier, Lipari, Giuseppe, Medina, Julio, Navet, Nicolas, Quinton, Sophie, Rivas, Juan M., Sun, Youcheng, Sebastian Altmeyer and Étienne André and Silvano Dal Zilio and Loïc Fejoz and Michael González Harbour and Susanne Graf and J. Javier Gutiérrez and Rafik Henia and Didier Le Botlan and Giuseppe Lipari and Julio Medina and Nicolas Navet and Sophie Quinton and Juan M. Rivas and Youcheng Sun, Altmeyer, Sebastian, André, Étienne, Dal Zilio, Silvano, Fejoz, Loïc, Harbour, Michael González, Graf, Susanne, Gutiérrez, J. Javier, Henia, Rafik, Le Botlan, Didier, Lipari, Giuseppe, Medina, Julio, Navet, Nicolas, Quinton, Sophie, Rivas, Juan M., and Sun, Youcheng
- Abstract
We propose here solutions to the FMTV 2015 challenge of a distributed video processing system using four different formalisms, as well as the description of the challenge itself. This artifact contains several solutions to various subchallenges, and instructions and scripts to reproduce these results smoothly.
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- 2023
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204. From FMTV to WATERS: Lessons Learned from the First Verification Challenge at ECRTS (Invited Paper)
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Sebastian Altmeyer and Étienne André and Silvano Dal Zilio and Loïc Fejoz and Michael González Harbour and Susanne Graf and J. Javier Gutiérrez and Rafik Henia and Didier Le Botlan and Giuseppe Lipari and Julio Medina and Nicolas Navet and Sophie Quinton and Juan M. Rivas and Youcheng Sun, Altmeyer, Sebastian, André, Étienne, Dal Zilio, Silvano, Fejoz, Loïc, Harbour, Michael González, Graf, Susanne, Gutiérrez, J. Javier, Henia, Rafik, Le Botlan, Didier, Lipari, Giuseppe, Medina, Julio, Navet, Nicolas, Quinton, Sophie, Rivas, Juan M., Sun, Youcheng, Sebastian Altmeyer and Étienne André and Silvano Dal Zilio and Loïc Fejoz and Michael González Harbour and Susanne Graf and J. Javier Gutiérrez and Rafik Henia and Didier Le Botlan and Giuseppe Lipari and Julio Medina and Nicolas Navet and Sophie Quinton and Juan M. Rivas and Youcheng Sun, Altmeyer, Sebastian, André, Étienne, Dal Zilio, Silvano, Fejoz, Loïc, Harbour, Michael González, Graf, Susanne, Gutiérrez, J. Javier, Henia, Rafik, Le Botlan, Didier, Lipari, Giuseppe, Medina, Julio, Navet, Nicolas, Quinton, Sophie, Rivas, Juan M., and Sun, Youcheng
- Abstract
We present here the main features and lessons learned from the first edition of what has now become the ECRTS industrial challenge, together with the final description of the challenge and a comparative overview of the proposed solutions. This verification challenge, proposed by Thales, was first discussed in 2014 as part of a dedicated workshop (FMTV, a satellite event of the FM 2014 conference), and solutions were discussed for the first time at the WATERS 2015 workshop. The use case for the verification challenge is an aerial video tracking system. A specificity of this system lies in the fact that periods are constant but known with a limited precision only. The first part of the challenge focuses on the video frame processing system. It consists in computing maximum values of the end-to-end latency of the frames sent by the camera to the display, for two different buffer sizes, and then the minimum duration between two consecutive frame losses. The second challenge is about computing end-to-end latencies on the tracking and camera control for two different values of jitter. Solutions based on five different tools - Fiacre/Tina, CPAL (simulation and analysis), IMITATOR, UPPAAL and MAST - were submitted for discussion at WATERS 2015. While none of these solutions provided a full answer to the challenge, a combination of several of them did allow to draw some conclusions.
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- 2023
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205. Fecal microbiota transplantation for recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection in frail and very old patients
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Montalto, Massimo, Gallo, Antonella, Agnitelli, Maria Chiara, Pellegrino, Simona, Lipari, Alice, Pero, Erika, Covino, Marcello, Landi, Francesco, Gasbarrini, Antonio, Cammarota, Giovanni, Ianiro, Gianluca, Montalto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-8819-3684), Gallo A., Agnitelli M. C., Pellegrino S., Lipari A., Pero E., Covino M. (ORCID:0000-0002-6709-2531), Landi F. (ORCID:0000-0002-3472-1389), Gasbarrini A. (ORCID:0000-0002-7278-4823), Cammarota G. (ORCID:0000-0002-3626-6148), Ianiro G. (ORCID:0000-0002-8318-0515), Montalto, Massimo, Gallo, Antonella, Agnitelli, Maria Chiara, Pellegrino, Simona, Lipari, Alice, Pero, Erika, Covino, Marcello, Landi, Francesco, Gasbarrini, Antonio, Cammarota, Giovanni, Ianiro, Gianluca, Montalto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-8819-3684), Gallo A., Agnitelli M. C., Pellegrino S., Lipari A., Pero E., Covino M. (ORCID:0000-0002-6709-2531), Landi F. (ORCID:0000-0002-3472-1389), Gasbarrini A. (ORCID:0000-0002-7278-4823), Cammarota G. (ORCID:0000-0002-3626-6148), and Ianiro G. (ORCID:0000-0002-8318-0515)
- Abstract
Background: Older age is a well-known risk factor for recurrent and severe Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is widely recognized as an effective and safe therapeutic option for the treatment of recurrent CDI (rCDI). However, the efficacy and safety of FMT for rCDI in very old patients are uncertain. This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of FMT in a group of very old subjects with rCDI, and the reliability of overall comorbidity and frailty assessment for identifying patients at higher risk of worse clinical outcomes. Methods: This is a retrospective single-center study including patients ≥85 years undergoing FMT for rCDI between 2014 and 2022. Primary outcomes included efficacy of FMT, defined as cure of CDI at 8 week-follow-up, and safety evaluation. At baseline, comorbidity was measured with the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI). Frailty was measured with the Clinical Frailty Scale (CFS). Results: Overall, 43 patients with a median age of 88 years underwent FMT by colonoscopy in the study period. The rate of first FMT success was 77%. Five of the 10 patients who failed the first FMT infusion were cured after repeat FMT, with an overall efficacy of 88%. In patients with successful treatment, the CFS was significantly lower compared to those who failed the FMT or underwent repeat FMT (p < 0.01 for both). Mild adverse events occurred in 11 patients (25%). One death, not related to FMT or rCDI, occurred within 7 days from the first procedure. Conclusions: FMT is effective and safe in very old patients. Frailty and high comorbidity do not limit use of FMT in these patients. Frailty assessment has potential to better identify patients at higher risk of worse outcomes or for repeat treatment with FMT.
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- 2023
206. Increase in Chronic Medications and Polypharmacy—The Multifaceted Burden of COVID-19 Disease on Public Health Care
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Gallo, Antonella, Covino, Marcello, Lipari, Alice, Pellegrino, Simona, Ibba, Francesca, Agnitelli, Maria Chiara, Tosato, Matteo, Landi, Francesco, Montalto, Massimo, Gallo A., Covino M. (ORCID:0000-0002-6709-2531), Lipari A., Pellegrino S., Ibba F., Agnitelli M. C., Tosato M., Landi F. (ORCID:0000-0002-3472-1389), Montalto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-8819-3684), Gallo, Antonella, Covino, Marcello, Lipari, Alice, Pellegrino, Simona, Ibba, Francesca, Agnitelli, Maria Chiara, Tosato, Matteo, Landi, Francesco, Montalto, Massimo, Gallo A., Covino M. (ORCID:0000-0002-6709-2531), Lipari A., Pellegrino S., Ibba F., Agnitelli M. C., Tosato M., Landi F. (ORCID:0000-0002-3472-1389), and Montalto M. (ORCID:0000-0001-8819-3684)
- Abstract
The long-term impact of COVID-19 disease is becoming a major global concern. In this retrospective monocentric analysis, we included consecutive subjects admitted to our COVID-19 Post-Acute Care Service for a SARS-CoV-2 infection that occurred between three and twelve months before. A home medication list relative to the period before SARS-CoV-2 infection (baseline) was recorded and compared with that one relative to the time of outpatient visit (follow-up). Drugs were coded according to the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical Classification (ATC) System. In a total of 2007 subjects, at follow-up, a significant increase with respect to baseline was reported in the total median number of chronic medications (two [0–4] vs. one [0–3]) and in specific ATC-group drugs involving the alimentary, blood, cardiovascular, genitourinary, muscle–skeletal, nervous and respiratory systems. In a multivariate analysis, COVID-19 disease severity and age > 65 years resulted in the best predictors for an increase in the number of medications, while anti-SARS-CoV-2 vaccination played a significant protective role. The long-term care of patients infected by COVID-19 may be more complex than reported so far. Multidisciplinary and integrated care pathways should be encouraged, mainly in older and frailer subjects and for patients experiencing a more severe disease. Vaccination may also represent a fundamental protection against long-term sequelae.
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- 2023
207. Sustainable Sourcing of Global Agricultural Raw Materials: Assessing Gaps in Key Impact and Vulnerability Issues and Indicators.
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Springer, Nathaniel P, Garbach, Kelly, Guillozet, Kathleen, Haden, Van R, Hedao, Prashant, Hollander, Allan D, Huber, Patrick R, Ingersoll, Christina, Langner, Megan, Lipari, Genevieve, Mohammadi, Yaser, Musker, Ruthie, Piatto, Marina, Riggle, Courtney, Schweisguth, Melissa, Sin, Emily, Snider, Sara, Vidic, Nataša, White, Aubrey, Brodt, Sonja, Quinn, James F, and Tomich, Thomas P
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Humans ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,International Cooperation ,Agriculture ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Understanding how to source agricultural raw materials sustainably is challenging in today's globalized food system given the variety of issues to be considered and the multitude of suggested indicators for representing these issues. Furthermore, stakeholders in the global food system both impact these issues and are themselves vulnerable to these issues, an important duality that is often implied but not explicitly described. The attention given to these issues and conceptual frameworks varies greatly--depending largely on the stakeholder perspective--as does the set of indicators developed to measure them. To better structure these complex relationships and assess any gaps, we collate a comprehensive list of sustainability issues and a database of sustainability indicators to represent them. To assure a breadth of inclusion, the issues are pulled from the following three perspectives: major global sustainability assessments, sustainability communications from global food companies, and conceptual frameworks of sustainable livelihoods from academic publications. These terms are integrated across perspectives using a common vocabulary, classified by their relevance to impacts and vulnerabilities, and categorized into groups by economic, environmental, physical, human, social, and political characteristics. These issues are then associated with over 2,000 sustainability indicators gathered from existing sources. A gap analysis is then performed to determine if particular issues and issue groups are over or underrepresented. This process results in 44 "integrated" issues--24 impact issues and 36 vulnerability issues--that are composed of 318 "component" issues. The gap analysis shows that although every integrated issue is mentioned at least 40% of the time across perspectives, no issue is mentioned more than 70% of the time. A few issues infrequently mentioned across perspectives also have relatively few indicators available to fully represent them. Issues in the impact framework generally have fewer gaps than those in the vulnerability framework.
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- 2015
208. An updated list of AGILE bright gamma-ray sources and their variability in pointing mode
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Verrecchia, F., Pittori, C., Chen, A. W., Bulgarelli, A., Tavani, M., Lucarelli, F., Giommi, P., Vercellone, S., Pellizzoni, A., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Barbiellini, G., Trifoglio, M., Gianotti, F., Argan, A., Antonelli, L. A., Caraveo, P., Cardillo, M., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., Colafrancesco, S., Contessi, T., Costa, E., Del Monte, E., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Di Persio, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Fanari, G., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Fornari, F., Fuschino, F., Froysland, T., Frutti, M., Galli, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Liello, F., Lipari, P., Mattaini, E., Marisaldi, M., Mastropietro, M., Mauri, A., Mauri, F., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Pontoni, C., Porrovecchio, G., Prest, M., Primavera, R., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rossi, E., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Santolamazza, P., Soffitta, P., Stellato, S., Striani, E., Tamburelli, F., Traci, A., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vittorini, V., Zanello, D., Salotti, L., and Valentini, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a variability study of a sample of bright gamma-ray (30 MeV -- 50 GeV) sources. This sample is an extension of the first AGILE catalogue of gamma-ray sources (1AGL), obtained using the complete set of AGILE observations in pointing mode performed during a 2.3 year period from July 9, 2007 until October 30, 2009. The dataset of AGILE pointed observations covers a long time interval and its gamma-ray data archive is useful for monitoring studies of medium-to-high brightness gamma-ray sources. In the analysis reported here, we used data obtained with an improved event filter that covers a wider field of view, on a much larger (about 27.5 months) dataset, integrating data on observation block time scales, which mostly range from a few days to thirty days. The data processing resulted in a better characterized source list than 1AGL was, and includes 54 sources, 7 of which are new high galactic latitude (|BII| >= 5) sources, 8 are new sources on the galactic plane, and 20 sources from the previous catalogue with revised positions. Eight 1AGL sources (2 high-latitude and 6 on the galactic plane) were not detected in the final processing either because of low OB exposure and/or due to their position in complex galactic regions. We report the results in a catalogue of all the detections obtained in each single OB, including the variability results for each of these sources. In particular, we found that 12 sources out of 42 or 11 out of 53 are variable, depending on the variability index used, where 42 and 53 are the number of sources for which these indices could be calculated. Seven of the 11 variable sources are blazars, the others are Crab pulsar+nebula, LS I +61{\deg}303, Cyg X-3, and 1AGLR J2021+4030., Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures
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- 2013
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209. Calibration of AGILE-GRID with In-Flight Data and Monte Carlo Simulations
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Chen, Andrew W., Argan, A., Bulgarelli, A., Cattaneo, P. W., Contessi, T., Giuliani, A., Pittori, C., Pucella, G., Tavani, M., Trois, A., Verrecchia, F., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P., Colafrancesco, S., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Ferrari, A., Feroci, M., Fioretti, V., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giommi, P., Giusti, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Lucarelli, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Santolamazza, P., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Trifoglio, M., Valentini, G., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., and Zanello, D.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Context: AGILE is a gamma-ray astrophysics mission which has been in orbit since 23 April 2007 and continues to operate reliably. The gamma-ray detector, AGILE-GRID, has observed Galactic and extragalactic sources, many of which were collected in the first AGILE Catalog. Aims: We present the calibration of the AGILE-GRID using in-flight data and Monte Carlo simulations, producing Instrument Response Functions (IRFs) for the effective area A_eff), Energy Dispersion Probability (EDP), and Point Spread Function (PSF), each as a function of incident direction in instrument coordinates and energy. Methods: We performed Monte Carlo simulations at different gamma-ray energies and incident angles, including background rejection filters and Kalman filter-based gamma-ray reconstruction. Long integrations of in-flight observations of the Vela, Crab and Geminga sources in broad and narrow energy bands were used to validate and improve the accuracy of the instrument response functions. Results: The weighted average PSFs as a function of spectra correspond well to the data for all sources and energy bands. Conclusions: Changes in the interpolation of the PSF from Monte Carlo data and in the procedure for construction of the energy-weighted effective areas have improved the correspondence between predicted and observed fluxes and spectra of celestial calibration sources, reducing false positives and obviating the need for post-hoc energy-dependent scaling factors. The new IRFs have been publicly available from the Agile Science Data Centre since November 25, 2011, while the changes in the analysis software will be distributed in an upcoming release.
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- 2013
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210. Establishing the astrophysical origin of a signal in a neutrino telescope
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Lipari, Paolo
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Recently the IceCube collaboration has reported the observation of 28 contained events with a visible energy in the interval between 60 TeV and 1.5 PeV, and has argued that this detection is evidence, with a statistical significance of more than four standard deviations, for the existence of an astrophysical neutrino flux that accounts for a large fraction of the events. In this work we analyze the arguments that allow to identify a component of astrophysical origin in the high energy neutrino flux separating it from atmospheric neutrinos. An astrophysical origin for a large fraction of the IceCube contained events is the simplest and most natural explanation of the data but, conservatively, an atmospheric origin cannot yet be entirely ruled out. This ambiguity should soon be resolved., Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2013
211. Interpretation of the measurements of total, elastic and diffractive cross sections at LHC
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Lipari, Paolo and Lusignoli, Maurizio
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Recently at LHC one has obtained measurements of the total, elastic and diffractive cross sections in pp collisions at very high energy. The total cross section is in good agreement with predictions based on a leading behavior \sigma_{tot} (s) \propto (\ln s/s_0)^2, on the other hand the elastic cross section is lower than most expectations and the diffractive cross section is higher. It is remarkable that the ratio (\sigma_{el} + \sigma_{diff})/\sigma_{tot} calculated combining the results of the TOTEM and ALICE detectors is 0.495^{+0.05}_{-0.06}, very close to the maximum theoretically allowed value of 1/2 known as the Miettinen Pumplin bound. In this work we discuss these results using the frameworks of single and multi--channel eikonal models, and outline the main difficulties for a consistent interpretation of the data., Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures
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- 2013
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212. Parametric Schedulability Analysis of Fixed Priority Real-Time Distributed Systems
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Sun, Youcheng, Soulat, Romain, Lipari, Giuseppe, André, Étienne, and Fribourg, Laurent
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Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing ,Computer Science - Operating Systems - Abstract
Parametric analysis is a powerful tool for designing modern embedded systems, because it permits to explore the space of design parameters, and to check the robustness of the system with respect to variations of some uncontrollable variable. In this paper, we address the problem of parametric schedulability analysis of distributed real-time systems scheduled by fixed priority. In particular, we propose two different approaches to parametric analysis: the first one is a novel technique based on classical schedulability analysis, whereas the second approach is based on model checking of Parametric Timed Automata (PTA). The proposed analytic method extends existing sensitivity analysis for single processors to the case of a distributed system, supporting preemptive and non-preemptive scheduling, jitters and unconstrained deadlines. Parametric Timed Automata are used to model all possible behaviours of a distributed system, and therefore it is a necessary and sufficient analysis. Both techniques have been implemented in two software tools, and they have been compared with classical holistic analysis on two meaningful test cases. The results show that the analytic method provides results similar to classical holistic analysis in a very efficient way, whereas the PTA approach is slower but covers the entire space of solutions., Comment: Submitted to ECRTS 2013 (http://ecrts.eit.uni-kl.de/ecrts13)
- Published
- 2013
213. Giandomenico Amendola, L’immaginario e le epidemie
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Licia Lipari
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Sociology (General) ,HM401-1281 - Published
- 2021
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214. PERFIL TRANSFUSIONAL DOS PACIENTES SUBMETIDOS A TRANSPLANTE HEPÁTICO EM 2020
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LCA Gama, MC Mattos, DADNM Szrajbman, LCRM Silva, CC Lipari, AC Santoro, CP Rebello, and LFF Dalmazzo
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Diseases of the blood and blood-forming organs ,RC633-647.5 - Abstract
O transplante hepatico consolidou-se como uma alternativa no tratamento de pacientes com doenca hepatica terminal. O manejo hematológico relacionado a terapia transfusional é um dos problemas nesses doentes. Estudos recentes mostram efeitos indesejados associados ao excesso de transfusão na morbimortalidade de pacientes submetidos a transplantes de fígado. Existe um Protocolo de Reserva no Hospital desenvolvido junto da equipe de GSH baseado na classificação de MELD (score utilizado para desde 2002 para estratificar os pacientes de acordo com a gravidade da doença hepática usando critérios laboratoriais). Material e método: Em nosso serviço existe um Protocolo de Reserva Cirúrgica para Transplante Hepático bem estabelecido. Os pacientes a serem submetidos a Transplante entram numa fila de espera . A partir do momento em que existe um “fígado” somos sinalizados sobre o paciente que será submetido ao transplante. Dados como grupo sanguíneo, sexo, Escala de Meld, idade são fornecidos. A reserva de sangue feita pela equipe médica é baseada na escala de Meld. Quanto maior o Meld maior a taxa de mortalidade. Adotamos como modelo de reserva desde janeiro de 2020: MELD menor que 25, solicitamos 10 crioprecipitados, 8 plaquetas, 4 hemácias e 4 plasmas. MELD maior que 25 solicitamos 20 criprecipitados, 10 plaquetas, 6 hemácias e 6 plasma. O nosso objetivo foi analisar o perfil dos pacientes atendidos pelo GSH em 2020 quanto a idade, grupo sanguíneo, MELD, além de uma análise dos Hemocomponentes (Hemácias) solicitadas e as Hemácias utilizadas no Centro cirúrgico ou dentro das primeiras 72 horas. Foi feita uma análise retrospectiva dos dados dos pacientes submetidos ao Transplante Hepático. Resultados: No período analisado (janeiro a dezembro de 2020) foram realizados 103 transplantes. Desses 72 homens (70%) e 31 mulheres (30%). Seis pacientes precisaram de mais de um transplante. Dois necessitaram de 3 transplantes. Analisando o Score de gravidade (escala de MELD), 90 pacientes eram MELD < 25 e 13 pacientes eram MELD >25. Distribuindo os pacientes pelo Grupo sanguíneo relacionado a Gravidade obtivemos na análise: 30 pacientes eram do Grupo A (sendo 3 MELD maior 25 – 10%); 4 pacientes eram AB (nenhum MELD maior 25); 8 pacientes eram B (nenhum MELD maior 25); 61 pacientes eram O (sendo 10 MELD maior 25 – 16%). Em relação a distribuição por faixa etária 6 pacientes tinham de 21–30 anos (6%); 7 pacientes tinham 31–40 anos (7%); 15 pacientes tinham 41–50 anos (14,5%); 34 pacientes tinham de 51–60 anos (33%); 33 pacientes tinham de 61–70 anos (32%) e 8 pacientes tinham de 71–80 anos (7,5%). Foram solicitados 617 Concentrados de Hemácias para reserva, sendo utilizados 207 Hemácias (38% das hemácias solicitadas). Sendo que 99 utilizadas no Centro Cirúrgico (48%) e 108 utilizadas nas primeiras 72 horas após a cirurgia (52%). Conclusão: Diante da escassez de estudos nacionais para esclarecer as questoes citadas, este estudo teve como objetivo avaliar as demandas transfusionais e o perfil de pacientes submetidos a transplante hepático, visando evitar reservas de sangue de forma exagerada assim como transfusões. No estudo analisado houve um predomínio do sexo masculino, relação do grupo O com maior gravidade da doença hepática. Além disso teve um índice de utilização das Hemácias reservadas de 38%, sugerindo uma revisão do Protocolo para possível redução da reserva. A utilização de hemácias, quando necessário, foi alta no Centro Cirúrgico demonstrando a necessidade de se ter um estoque adequado para atender a demanda das transfusões em pacientes submetidos a Transplante Hepático e um fluxo adequado do Hospital com a Agência Transfusional .
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- 2021
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215. Towards Probabilistic Modeling and Analysis of Real-Time Systems.
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Laura Carnevali, Luca Santinelli, and Giuseppe Lipari
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- 2018
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216. Multiple Jpeg Compression Detection Through Task-Driven Non-Negative Matrix Factorization.
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Sara Mandelli, Nicolò Bonettini, Paolo Bestagini, Vincenzo Lipari, and Stefano Tubaro
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- 2018
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217. Teacher-Guided Educational VR: Assessment of Live and Prerecorded Teachers Guiding Virtual Field Trips.
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Christoph W. Borst, Nicholas G. Lipari, and Jason W. Woodworth
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- 2018
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218. Towards Probabilistic Modeling and Analysis of Real-Time Systems
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Carnevali, Laura, Santinelli, Luca, Lipari, Giuseppe, Hutchison, David, Series Editor, Kanade, Takeo, Series Editor, Kittler, Josef, Series Editor, Kleinberg, Jon M., Series Editor, Mattern, Friedemann, Series Editor, Mitchell, John C., Series Editor, Naor, Moni, Series Editor, Pandu Rangan, C., Series Editor, Steffen, Bernhard, Series Editor, Terzopoulos, Demetri, Series Editor, Tygar, Doug, Series Editor, Weikum, Gerhard, Series Editor, Bakhshi, Rena, editor, Ballarini, Paolo, editor, Barbot, Benoît, editor, Castel-Taleb, Hind, editor, and Remke, Anne, editor
- Published
- 2018
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219. Neutrino Astronomy
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Capone, Antonio, Lipari, Paolo, Vissani, Francesco, Aloisio, Roberto, editor, Coccia, Eugenio, editor, and Vissani, Francesco, editor
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- 2018
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220. Special issue on real-time scheduling on heterogeneous platforms
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Lipari, Giuseppe and Bate, Iain
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- 2022
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221. Evidence from a long-term experiment that collective risks change social norms and promote cooperation
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Szekely, Aron, Lipari, Francesca, Antonioni, Alberto, Paolucci, Mario, Sánchez, Angel, Tummolini, Luca, and Andrighetto, Giulia
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- 2021
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222. Dissociative identity as a continuum from healthy mind to psychiatric disorders: Epistemological and neurophenomenological implications approached through hypnosis
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Facco, Enrico, Mendozzi, Laura, Bona, Angelo, Motta, Achille, Garegnani, Massimo, Costantini, Isa, Dipasquale, Ottavia, Cecconi, Pietro, Menotti, Roberta, Coscioli, Elisa, and Lipari, Susanna
- Published
- 2019
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223. A comparative study of continuous operation between a dynamic baffle crystallizer and a stirred tank crystallizer
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Liu, Yiqing Claire, Dunn, Davis, Lipari, Mary, Barton, Alastair, Firth, Paul, Speed, Jonathon, Wood, Dan, and Nagy, Zoltan K.
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- 2019
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224. Special issue on real-time scheduling on heterogeneous platforms.
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Giuseppe Lipari and Iain Bate
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- 2022
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225. A minimum of two years of undertreated primary hypothyroidism, as a result of drug-induced malabsorption of l-thyroxine, may have metabolic and cardiovascular consequences
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Benvenga, Salvatore, Pantano, Rachele, Saraceno, Giovanna, Lipari, Luigi, Alibrando, Antonio, Inferrera, Santi, Pantano, Giuseppe, Simone, Giuseppe, Tamà, Sebastiano, Scoglio, Riccardo, Ursino, Maria Giovanna, Simone, Carmen, Catalano, Antonino, and Alecci, Umberto
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- 2019
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226. A Novel Smart Belt for Anxiety Detection, Classification, and Reduction Using IIoMT on Students’ Cardiac Signal and MSY
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Rishi Pal, Deepak Adhikari, Md Belal Bin Heyat, Bishal Guragai, Vivian Lipari, Julien Brito Ballester, Isabel De la Torre Díez, Zia Abbas, and Dakun Lai
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yoga ,anxiety ,machine learning ,internet of medical things ,student ,artificial intelligence ,Technology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The prevalence of anxiety among university students is increasing, resulting in the negative impact on their academic and social (behavioral and emotional) development. In order for students to have competitive academic performance, the cognitive function should be strengthened by detecting and handling anxiety. Over a period of 6 weeks, this study examined how to detect anxiety and how Mano Shakti Yoga (MSY) helps reduce anxiety. Relying on cardiac signals, this study follows an integrated detection-estimation-reduction framework for anxiety using the Intelligent Internet of Medical Things (IIoMT) and MSY. IIoMT is the integration of Internet of Medical Things (wearable smart belt) and machine learning algorithms (Decision Tree (DT), Random Forest (RF), and AdaBoost (AB)). Sixty-six eligible students were selected as experiencing anxiety detected based on the results of self-rating anxiety scale (SAS) questionnaire and a smart belt. Then, the students were divided randomly into two groups: experimental and control. The experimental group followed an MSY intervention for one hour twice a week, while the control group followed their own daily routine. Machine learning algorithms are used to analyze the data obtained from the smart belt. MSY is an alternative improvement for the immune system that helps reduce anxiety. All the results illustrate that the experimental group reduced anxiety with a significant (p < 0.05) difference in group × time interaction compared to the control group. The intelligent techniques achieved maximum accuracy of 80% on using RF algorithm. Thus, students can practice MSY and concentrate on their objectives by improving their intelligence, attention, and memory.
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- 2022
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227. Congestion management in active distribution networks through demand response implementation
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Fotouhi Ghazvini, Mohammad Ali, Lipari, Gianluca, Pau, Marco, Ponci, Ferdinanda, Monti, Antonello, Soares, João, Castro, Rui, and Vale, Zita
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- 2019
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228. Identification of a Helical Segment within the Intrinsically Disordered Region of the PCSK9 Prodomain
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Ultsch, M., Li, W., Eigenbrot, C., Di Lello, P., Lipari, M.T., Gerhardy, S., AhYoung, A.P., Quinn, J., Franke, Y., Chen, Y., Kong Beltran, M., Peterson, A., and Kirchhofer, D.
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- 2019
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229. The characterization of the distant blazar GB6 J1239+0443 from flaring and low activity periods
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Pacciani, L., Donnarumma, I., Denney, K. D., Assef, R. J., Ikejiri, Y., Yamanaka, M., Uemura, M., Domingo, A., Giommi, P., Tarchi, A., Verrecchia, F., Longo, F., Rainó, S., Giusti, M., Vercellone, S., Chen, A. W., Striani, E., Vittorini, V., Tavani, M., Bulgarelli, A., Giuliani, A., Pucella, G., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Colafrancesco, S., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Ferrari, A., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Lucarelli, F., Salotti, L., and Valentini, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In 2008 AGILE and Fermi detected gamma-ray flaring activity from the unidentified EGRET source 3EG J1236+0457, recently associated with a flat spectrum radio quasar GB6 J1239+0443 at z=1.762. The optical counterpart of the gamma-ray source underwent a flux enhancement of a factor 15-30 in 6 years, and of ~10 in six months. We interpret this flare-up in terms of a transition from an accretion-disk dominated emission to a synchrotron-jet dominated one. We analysed a Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) archival optical spectrum taken during a period of low radio and optical activity of the source. We estimated the mass of the central black hole using the width of the CIV emission line. In our work, we have also investigated SDSS archival optical photometric data and UV GALEX observations to estimate the thermal-disk emission contribution of GB6 J1239+0443. Our analysis of the gamma-ray data taken during the flaring episodes indicates a flat gamma-ray spectrum, with an extension of up to 15 GeV, with no statistically-relevant sign of absorption from the broad line region, suggesting that the blazar-zone is located beyond the broad line region. This result is confirmed by the modeling of the broad-band spectral energy distribution (well constrained by the available multiwavelength data) of the flaring activity periods and by the accretion disk luminosity and black hole mass estimated by us using archival data., Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables MNRAS Accepted on 2012 June 18
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- 2012
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230. Galactic Sources Science With Agile: The Case Of The Carina Region
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Sabatini, S., Tavani, M., Pian, E., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Viotti, R., Corcoran, M. F., Giuliani, A., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Vercellone, S., Mereghetti, S., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Boffelli, F., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A. W., Cocco, V., D'Ammando, F., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Ferrari, A., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mastropietro, M., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Porrovecchio, G., Pucella, G., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Santolamazza, P., Giommi, P., Colafrancesco, S., Antonelli, L. A., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
During its first 2 years of operation, the gamma-ray AGILE satellite accumulated an extensive dataset for the Galactic plane. The data have been monitored for transient sources and several gamma-ray sources were detected. Their variability and possible association were studied. In this talk we will focus on the results of extensive observations of the Carina Region during the time period 2007 July - 2009 January, for a total livetime of ~130 days. The region is extremely complex, hosting massive star formation, with the remarkable colliding wind binary Eta Carinae, massive star clusters and HII regions (e.g. NGC 3324, RCW49, Westerlund II) and a giant molecular cloud extending over 150 pc (between l=284.7 and l=289). The Carina Nebula itself is the largest and IR highest surface brightness nebula of the Southern emisphere. We monitored several gamma ray sources in the Carina Region. In particular we detect a gamma ray source (1AGL J1043-5931) consistent with the position of Eta Carinae and report a remarkable 2-days gamma-ray flaring episode from this source on 2008 Oct 11-13. If 1AGL J1043-5931 is associated with the Eta Car system, our data provides the long sought first detection above 100 MeV of a colliding wind binary., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, proceedings of RICAP 2009
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- 2012
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231. The Parallel Multi-Mode Digraph Task Model for Energy-Aware Real-Time Heterogeneous Multi-Core Systems.
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Houssam-Eddine Zahaf, Giuseppe Lipari, Marko Bertogna, and Pierre Boulet
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- 2019
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232. The flaring blazars of the first 1.5 years of the AGILE mission
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Pacciani, L., Bulgarelli, A., Chen, A. W., D'Ammando, F., Donnarumma, I., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Pucella, G., Tavani, M., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Boffelli, F., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Ferrari, A., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Marisaldi, M., Mastropietro, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Porrovecchio, G., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Antonelli, L. A., Colafrancesco, S., Giommi, P., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Santolamazza, P., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the AGILE gamma-ray observations and the results of the multiwavelength campaigns on seven flaring blazars detected by the mission: During two multiwavelength campaigns, we observed gamma-ray activity from two Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars of the Virgo region, e.g. 3C 279 and 3C 273 (the latter being the first extragalactic source simultaneously observed with the gamma-ray telescope and the hard X ray imager of the mission). Due to the large FOV of the AGILE/GRID instrument, we achieved an almost continuous coverage of the FSRQ 3C 454.3. The source showed flux above 10E-6 photons/cm2/s (E > 100 MeV) and showed day by day variability during all the AGILE observing periods. In the EGRET era, the source was found in high gamma-ray activity only once. An other blazar, PKS 1510-089 was frequently found in high gamma-ray activity. S5 0716+71, an intermediate BL Lac object, exhibited a very high gamma-ray activity and fast gamma-ray variability during a period of intense optical activity. We observed high gamma-ray activity from W Comae, a BL Lac object, and Mrk 421, an high energy peaked BL Lac object. For this source, a multiwavelength campaign from optical to TeV has been performed.
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- 2011
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233. The observation of Gamma Ray Bursts and Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes with AGILE
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Del Monte, E., Barbiellini, G., Fuschino, F., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Moretti, E., Trifoglio, M., Vianello, G., Costa, E., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Galli, M., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Pacciani, L., Rapisarda, M., Soffitta, P., Tavani, M., Vercellone, S., Cutini, S., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A., Di Cocco, G., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Striani, E., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vittorini, V., Antonelli, L. A., Pittori, C., Preger, B., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., Giommi, P., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Since its early phases of operation, the AGILE mission is successfully observing Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) in the hard X-ray band with the SuperAGILE imager and in the MeV range with the Mini-Calorimeter. Up to now, three firm GRB detections were obtained above 25 MeV and some bursts were detected with lower statistical confidence in the same energy band. When a GRB is localized, either by SuperAGILE or Swift/BAT or INTEGRAL/IBIS or Fermi/GBM or IPN, inside the field of view of the Gamma Ray Imager of AGILE, a detection is searched for in the gamma ray band or an upper limit is provided. A promising result of AGILE is the detection of very short gamma ray transients, a few ms in duration and possibly identified with Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes. In this paper we show the current status of the observation of Gamma Ray Bursts and Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes with AGILE., Comment: Four pages and four figures
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- 2011
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234. First results about on-ground calibration of the Silicon Tracker for the AGILE satellite
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AGILE Collaboration, Cattaneo, P. W., Argan, A., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Buonomo, B., Chen, A. W., D'Ammando, F., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mazzitelli, G., Pellizzoni, A., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Quintieri, L., Rappoldi, A., Tavani, M., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Valente, P., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Zambra, A., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P., Cocco, V., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Mastropietro, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Porrovecchio, G., Rapisarda, M., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Vittorini, V., Zanello, D., Colafrancesco, S., Giommi, P., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The AGILE scientific instrument has been calibrated with a tagged $\gamma$-ray beam at the Beam Test Facility (BTF) of the INFN Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati (LNF). The goal of the calibration was the measure of the Point Spread Function (PSF) as a function of the photon energy and incident angle and the validation of the Monte Carlo (MC) simulation of the silicon tracker operation. The calibration setup is described and some preliminary results are presented., Comment: Presented at the 2nd Roma International Conference on Astroparticle Physics 2009, Villa Mondragone, Rome, Italy, May 13-15 2009. Pages 6, Figures 10
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- 2011
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235. Characterization of a tagged $\gamma$-ray beam line at the DA$\Phi$NE Beam Test Facility
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Cattaneo, P. W., Argan, A., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Buonomo, B., Chen, A. W., D'Ammando, F., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mazzitelli, G., Pellizzoni, A., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Quintieri, L., Rappoldi, A., Tavani, M., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Valente, P., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Zambra, A., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P., Cocco, V., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Mastropietro, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Porrovecchio, G., Rapisarda, M., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Vittorini, V., Zanello, D., Colafrancesco, S., Giommi, P., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., and Salotti, L.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
At the core of the AGILE scientific instrument, designed to operate on a satellite, there is the Gamma Ray Imaging Detector (GRID) consisting of a Silicon Tracker (ST), a Cesium Iodide Mini-Calorimeter and an Anti-Coincidence system of plastic scintillator bars. The ST needs an on-ground calibration with a $\gamma$-ray beam to validate the simulation used to calculate the energy response function and the effective area versus the energy and the direction of the $\gamma$ rays. A tagged $\gamma$-ray beam line was designed at the Beam Test Facility (BTF) of the INFN Laboratori Nazionali of Frascati (LNF), based on an electron beam generating $\gamma$ rays through bremsstrahlung in a position-sensitive target. The $\gamma$-ray energy is deduced by difference with the post-bremsstrahlung electron energy \cite{prest}-\cite{hasan}. The electron energy is measured by a spectrometer consisting of a dipole magnet and an array of position sensitive silicon strip detectors, the Photon Tagging System (PTS). The use of the combined BTF-PTS system as tagged photon beam requires understanding the efficiency of $\gamma$-ray tagging, the probability of fake tagging, the energy resolution and the relation of the PTS hit position versus the $\gamma$-ray energy. This paper describes this study comparing data taken during the AGILE calibration occurred in 2005 with simulation., Comment: 23 pages; 17 figures. Second and final version accepted by Nucl. Instr. & Meth. A
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- 2011
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236. AGILE detection of Cygnus X-3 {\gamma}-ray active states during the period mid-2009/mid-2010
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Bulgarelli, A., Tavani, M., Chen, A. W., Evangelista, Y., Trifoglio, M., Gianotti, F., Piano, G., Sabatini, S., Striani, E., Pooley, G., Trushkin, S., Nizhelskij, N. A., McCollough, M., Koljonen, K. I. I., Hannikainen, D., Lähteenmäki, A., Tammi, J., Lavonen, N., Steeghs, D., Aboudan, A., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Campana, R., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., Contessi, T., Costa, E., D'Ammando, F., Del Monte, E., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Giuliani, A., Giusti, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Soffitta, P., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Giommi, P., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Santolamazza, P., Lucarelli, F., Colafrancesco, S., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Cygnus X-3 (Cyg X-3) is a well-known microquasar producing variable emission at all wavelengths. Cyg X-3 is a prominent X-ray binary producing relativistic jets, and studying its high energy emission is crucial for the understanding of the fundamental acceleration processes in accreting compact objects. Aims. Our goal is to study extreme particle acceleration and {\gamma}-ray production above 100 MeV during special spectral states of Cyg X- 3 usually characterized by a low hard X-ray flux and enhanced soft X-ray states. We observed Cyg X-3 with the AGILE satellite in extended time intervals from 2009 Jun.-Jul., and 2009 Nov.-2010 Jul. We report here the results of the AGILE {\gamma}-ray monitoring of Cyg X-3 as well as the results from extensive multiwavelength campaigns involving radio (RATAN-600, AMI-LA and Mets\"{a}hovi Radio Observatories) and X-ray monitoring data (XTE and Swift). We detect a series of repeated {\gamma}-ray flaring activity from Cyg X-3 that correlate with the soft X-ray states and episodes of decreasing or non-detectable hard X-ray emission. Furthermore, we detect {\gamma}-ray enhanced emission that tends to be associated with radio flares greater than 1 Jy at 15 GHz, confirming a trend already detected in previous observations. The source remained active above 100 MeV for an extended period of time (almost 1.5 months in 2009 Jun.-Jul. and 1 month in 2010 May). We study in detail the short timescale {\gamma}-ray flares that occurred before or near the radio peaks. Our results confirm the transient nature of the extreme particle acceleration from the microquasar Cyg X-3. A series of repeated {\gamma}-ray flares shows correlations with radio and X-ray emission confirming a well established trend of emission. We compare our results with Fermi-LAT and MAGIC TeV observations of Cyg X-3., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, 7 tables; A&A (2011)
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- 2011
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237. OPERA-reassessing data on the energy dependence of the speed of neutrinos
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Amelino-Camelia, Giovanni, Gubitosi, Giulia, Loret, Niccoló, Mercati, Flavio, Rosati, Giacomo, and Lipari, Paolo
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We offer a preliminary exploration of the two sides of the challenge provided by the recent OPERA data on superluminal neutrinos. On one side we stress that some aspects of this result are puzzling even from the perspective of the wild quantum-gravity literature, where arguments in favor of the possibility of superluminal propagation have been presented, but not considering the possibility of such a sizeable effect for neutrinos of such low energies. We feel this must encourage particularly severe scrutiny of the OPERA result. On the other side, we notice that the OPERA result is reasonably consistent with $\mu$-neutrino-speed data previously obtained at FERMILAB, reported in papers of 2007 and 1979. And it is intriguing that these FERMILAB79 and FERMILAB07 results, when combined with the new OPERA result, in principle provide a window on $\mu$-neutrino speeds at different energies broad enough to compare alternative phenomenological models. We test the discriminating power of such an approach by using as illustrative examples the case of special-relativistic tachyons, the case of "Coleman-Glashow-type" momentum-independent violations of the special-relativistic speed law, and the cases of linear and quadratic energy dependence of the speed of ultrarelativistic muon neutrinos. Even just using $\mu$-neutrino data in the range from $\sim$ 3 GeVs to $\sim$ 200 GeVs the special-relativistic tachyon and the quadratic-dependence case are clearly disfavoured. The linear-dependence case gives a marginally consistent picture and the Coleman-Glashow scenario fits robustly the data. We also comment on Supernova 1987a and its relevance for consideration of other neutrino species, also in relation with some scenarios that appeared in the large-extra-dimension literature., Comment: some references added; figs.1 and 2 redrawn for better visibility of the effects of bias1979; some sentences which had been written a bit too "densely" in V1 are now more readable in this V2
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- 2011
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238. The AGILE observations of the hard and bright GRB 100724B
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Del Monte, E., Barbiellini, G., Donnarumma, I., Fuschino, F., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Pucella, G., Tavani, M., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Argan, A., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A., Costa, E., D'Ammando, F., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Mereghetti, S., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Antonelli, L. A., Cutini, S., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., Giommi, P., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The observation of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) in the gamma-ray band has been advanced by the AGILE and Fermi satellites after the era of the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. AGILE and Fermi are showing that the GeV-bright GRBs share a set of common features, particularly the high fluence from the keV up to the GeV energy bands, the high value of the minimum Lorentz factor, the presence of an extended emission of gamma-rays, often delayed with respect to lower energies, and finally the possible presence of multiple spectral components. GRB 100724B, localised in a joint effort by Fermi and the InterPlanetary Newtork, is the brightest burst detected in gamma-rays so far by AGILE. Characteristic features of GRB 100724B are the simultaneous emissions at MeV and GeV, without delayed onset nor time lag as shown by the analysis of the cross correlation function, and the significant spectral evolution in hard X-rays over the event duration. In this paper we show the analysis of the AGILE data of GRB 100724B and we discuss its features in the context of the bursts observed so far in gamma-rays and the recently proposed models., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication by A&A. Final version after the correction by the language editor
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- 2011
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239. AGILE detection of extreme gamma-ray activity from the blazar PKS 1510-089 during March 2009. Multifrequency analysis
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D'Ammando, F., Raiteri, C. M., Villata, M., Romano, P., Pucella, G., Krimm, H. A., Covino, S., Orienti, M., Giovannini, G., Vercellone, S., Pian, E., Donnarumma, I., Vittorini, V., Tavani, M., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A. W., Cocco, V., Costa, E., Del Monte, E., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Frutti, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Porrovecchio, G., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Agudo, I., Aller, H. D., Aller, M. F., Arkharov, A. A., Bach, U., Benitez, E., Berdyugin, A., Blinov, D. A., Buemi, C. S., Chen, W. P., Di Paola, A., Dolci, M., Forne, E., Fuhrmann, L., Gomez, J. L., Gurwell, M. A., Jordan, B., Jorstad, S. G., Heidt, J., Hiriart, D., Hovatta, T., Hsiao, H. Y., Kimeridze, G., Konstantinova, T. S., Kopatskaya, E. N., Koptelova, E., Kurtanidze, O. M., Kurtanidze, S. O., Larionov, V. M., Lahteenmaki, A., Leto, P., Lindfors, E., Marscher, A. P., McBreen, B., McHardy, I. M., Morozova, D. A., Nilsson, K., Pasanen, M., Roca-Sogorb, M., Sillanpaa, A., Takalo, L. O., Tornikoski, M., Trigilio, C., Troitsky, I. S., Umana, G., Antonelli, L. A., Colafrancesco, S., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., Giommi, P., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the extreme gamma-ray activity from the FSRQ PKS 1510-089 observed by AGILE in March 2009. In the same period a radio-to-optical monitoring of the source was provided by the GASP-WEBT and REM. Moreover, several Swift ToO observations were triggered, adding important information on the source behaviour from optical/UV to hard X-rays. We paid particular attention to the calibration of the Swift/UVOT data to make it suitable to the blazars spectra. Simultaneous observations from radio to gamma rays allowed us to study in detail the correlation among the emission variability at different frequencies and to investigate the mechanisms at work. In the period 9-30 March 2009, AGILE detected an average gamma-ray flux of (311+/-21)x10^-8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 for E>100 MeV, and a peak level of (702+/-131)x10^-8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 on daily integration. The gamma-ray activity occurred during a period of increasing activity from near-IR to UV, with a flaring episode detected on 26-27 March 2009, suggesting that a single mechanism is responsible for the flux enhancement observed from near-IR to UV. By contrast, Swift/XRT observations seem to show no clear correlation of the X-ray fluxes with the optical and gamma-ray ones. However, the X-ray observations show a harder photon index (1.3-1.6) with respect to most FSRQs and a hint of harder-when-brighter behaviour, indicating the possible presence of a second emission component at soft X-ray energies. Moreover, the broad band spectrum from radio-to-UV confirmed the evidence of thermal features in the optical/UV spectrum of PKS 1510-089 also during high gamma-ray state. On the other hand, during 25-26 March 2009 a flat spectrum in the optical/UV energy band was observed, suggesting an important contribution of the synchrotron emission in this part of the spectrum during the brightest gamma-ray flare, therefore a significant shift of the synchrotron peak., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2011
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240. Sibyll with charm
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Ahn, Eun-Joo, Engel, Ralph, Gaisser, Thomas K., Lipari, Paolo, and Stanev, Todor
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The cosmic ray interaction event generator Sibyll is widely used in extensive air shower simulations for cosmic ray and neutrino experiments. Charmed particle production has been added to the Monte Carlo with a phenomenological, non-perturbative model that properly accounts for charm production in the forward direction. As prompt decays of charm can become a significant background for neutrino detection, proper simulation of charmed particles is very important. We compare charmed meson and baryon production to accelerator data., Comment: presented at ISVHECRI 2010
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- 2011
241. Discovery of Powerful Gamma-Ray Flares from the Crab Nebula
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Tavani, M., Bulgarelli, A., Vittorini, V., Pellizzoni, A., Striani, E., Caraveo, P., Weisskopf, M. C., Tennant, A., Pucella, G., Trois, A., Costa, E., Evangelista, Y., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Del Monte, E., Campana, R., Pilia, M., De Luca, A., Donnarumma, I., Horns, D., Ferrigno, C., Heinke, C. O., Trifoglio, M., Gianotti, F., Vercellone, S., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A. W., Contessi, T., D'Ammando, F., DeParis, G., Di Cocco, G., Di Persio, G., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Galli, M., Giuliani, A., Giusti, M., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Fuschino, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Vallazza, E., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Lucarelli, F., Santolamazza, P., Giommi, P., Salotti, L., and Bignami, G. F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The well known Crab Nebula is at the center of the SN1054 supernova remnant. It consists of a rotationally-powered pulsar interacting with a surrounding nebula through a relativistic particle wind. The emissions originating from the pulsar and nebula have been considered to be essentially stable. Here we report the detection of strong gamma-ray (100 MeV-10 GeV) flares observed by the AGILE satellite in September, 2010 and October, 2007. In both cases, the unpulsed flux increased by a factor of 3 compared to the non-flaring flux. The flare luminosity and short timescale favor an origin near the pulsar, and we discuss Chandra Observatory X-ray and HST optical follow-up observations of the nebula. Our observations challenge standard models of nebular emission and require power-law acceleration by shock-driven plasma wave turbulence within a ~1-day timescale., Comment: 23 pages (including Supporting On-line Material), 8 figures, 1 table. Version published in Science Express on January 6, 2011 (available at http://www.sciencemag.org/content/early/2011/01/05/science.1200083)
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- 2011
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242. Hadron-Hadron and Cosmic-Ray Interactions at multi-TeV Energies
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Alessandro, B., Bergman, D., Bongi, M., Bunyatyan, A., Cazon, L., d'Enterria, D., de Mitri, I., Doll, P., Engel, R., Eggert, K., Garzelli, M., Gerhardt, L., Gieseke, S., Godbole, R., Grosse-Oetringhaus, J. F., Gustafson, G., Hebbeker, T., Kheyn, L., Kiryluk, J., Lipari, P., Ostapchenko, S., Pierog, T., Piskounova, O., Ranft, J., Rezaeian, A., Rostovtsev, A., Sakurai, N., Sapeta, S., Schleich, S., Schulz, H., Sjostrand, T., Sonnenschein, L., Sutton, M., Ulrich, R., Werner, K., and Zapp, K.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The workshop on "Hadron-Hadron and Cosmic-Ray Interactions at multi-TeV Energies" held at the ECT* centre (Trento) in Nov.-Dec. 2010 gathered together both theorists and experimentalists to discuss issues of the physics of high-energy hadronic interactions of common interest for the particle, nuclear and cosmic-ray communities. QCD results from collider experiments -- mostly from the LHC but also from the Tevatron, RHIC and HERA -- were discussed and compared to various hadronic Monte Carlo generators, aiming at an improvement of our theoretical understanding of soft, semi-hard and hard parton dynamics. The latest cosmic-ray results from various ground-based observatories were also presented with an emphasis on the phenomenological modeling of the first hadronic interactions of the extended air-showers generated in the Earth atmosphere. These mini-proceedings consist of an introduction and short summaries of the talks presented at the meeting., Comment: 46 pages, 13 figures; Mini-proceedings ECT* Workshop, Trento, Nov. 28 - Dec. 3, 2010. FP7 acknowledgements added
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- 2011
243. Atmospheric lepton fluxes at very high energy
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Illana, J. I., Lipari, Paolo, Masip, M., and Meloni, D.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The observation of astrophysical neutrinos requires a detailed understanding of the atmospheric neutrino background. Since neutrinos are produced in meson decays together with a charged lepton, important constraints on this background can be obtained from the measurement of the atmospheric muon flux. Muons, however, can also be produced as mu+ mu- pairs by purely electromagnetic processes. We use the Z-moment method to study and compare the contributions to the atmospheric muon and neutrino fluxes from different sources (pi/K decay, charmed and unflavored hadron decay, and photon conversion into a muon pair). We pay special attention to the contribution from unflavored mesons (eta, eta', rho0, omega and phi). These mesons are abundant in air showers, their lifetimes are much shorter than those of charged pions or kaons, and they have decay branching ratios of order 10^-4 into final states containing a muon pair. We show that they may be the dominant source of muons at E_mu >10^3 TeV., Comment: Pdflatex, 28 pages, 6 figures
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- 2010
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244. Gamma-Ray Localization of Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes
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Marisaldi, M., Argan, A., Trois, A., Giuliani, A., Tavani, M., Labanti, C., Fuschino, F., Bulgarelli, A., Longo, F., Barbiellini, G., Del Monte, E., Moretti, E., Trifoglio, M., Costa, E., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A., D'Ammando, F., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Di Persio, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Mereghetti, S., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Picozza, P., Piano, G., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Antonelli, L. A., Colafrancesco, S., Cutini, S., Giommi, P., Lucarelli, F., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., and Salotti, L.
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Terrestrial Gamma-Ray Flashes (TGFs) are very short bursts of high energy photons and electrons originating in Earth's atmosphere. We present here a localization study of TGFs carried out at gamma-ray energies above 20 MeV based on an innovative event selection method. We use the AGILE satellite Silicon Tracker data that for the first time have been correlated with TGFs detected by the AGILE Mini-Calorimeter. We detect 8 TGFs with gamma-ray photons of energies above 20 MeV localized by the AGILE gamma-ray imager with an accuracy of 5-10 degrees at 50 MeV. Remarkably, all TGF-associated gamma rays are compatible with a terrestrial production site closer to the sub-satellite point than 400 km. Considering that our gamma rays reach the AGILE satellite at 540 km altitude with limited scattering or attenuation, our measurements provide the first precise direct localization of TGFs from space., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 1 table, available at http://prl.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v105/i12/e128501
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- 2010
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245. Study of the gamma-ray source 1AGL J2022+4032 in the Cygnus Region
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Chen, A. W., Piano, G., Tavani, M., Trois, A., Dubner, G., Giacani, E., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Costa, E., D'Ammando, F., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Giusti, M., Labanti, C., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Scalise, E., Soffitta, P., Striani, E., Trifoglio, M., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Giommi, P., Verrecchia, F., Lucarelli, F., Santolamazza, P., Colafrancesco, S., Antonelli, L. A., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Identification of gamma-ray-emitting Galactic sources is a long-standing problem in astrophysics. One such source, 1AGL J2022+4032, coincident with the interior of the radio shell of the supernova remnant Gamma Cygni (SNR G78.2+2.1) in the Cygnus Region, has recently been identified by Fermi as a gamma-ray pulsar, LAT PSR J2021+4026. We present long-term observations of 1AGL J2022+4032 with the AGILE gamma-ray telescope, measuring its flux and light curve. We compare the light curve of 1AGL J2022+4032 with that of 1AGL J2021+3652 (PSR J2021+3651), showing that the flux variability of 1AGL J2022+4032 appears to be greater than the level predicted from statistical and systematic effects and producing detailed simulations to estimate the probability of the apparent observed variability. We evaluate the possibility that the gamma-ray emission may be due to the superposition of two or more point sources, some of which may be variable, considering a number of possible counterparts. We consider the possibility of a nearby X-ray quiet microquasar contributing to the flux of 1AGL J2022+4032 to be more likely than the hypotheses of a background blazar or intrinsic gamma-ray variabilty of LAT PSR J2021+4026., Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2010
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246. Agile Observations of the 'Soft' Gamma-Ray Pulsar PSR B1509-58
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Pilia, M., Pellizzoni, A., Trois, A., Verrecchia, F., Esposito, P., Weltevrede, P., Johnston, S., Burgay, M., Possenti, A., Del Monte, E., Fuschino, F., Santolamazza, P., Chen, A., Giuliani, A., Caraveo, P., Mereghetti, S., Tavani, M., Argan, A., Costa, E., D'Amico, N., De Luca, A., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Barbiellini, G., Bulgarelli, A., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., D'Ammando, F., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Morselli, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Lucarelli, F., Giommi, P., Salotti, L., and Bignami, G. F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results of new Agile observations of PSR B1509-58 performed over a period of 2.5 years following the detection obtained with a subset of the present data. The modulation significance of the lightcurve above 30 MeV is at a 5$\sigma$ confidence level and the lightcurve is similar to those found earlier by Comptel up to 30 MeV: a broad asymmetric first peak reaching its maximum 0.39 +/- 0.02 cycles after the radio peak plus a second peak at 0.94 +/- 0.03. The gamma-ray spectral energy distribution of the pulsed flux detected by Comptel and Agile is well described by a power-law (photon index alpha=1.87+/-0.09) with a remarkable cutoff at E_c=81 +/- 20 MeV, representing the softest spectrum observed among gamma-ray pulsars so far. The pulsar luminosity at E > 1 MeV is $L_{\gamma}=4.2^{+0.5}_{-0.2} \times10^{35}$ erg/s, assuming a distance of 5.2 kpc, which implies a spin-down conversion efficiency to gamma-rays of $\sim 0.03$. The unusual soft break in the spectrum of PSR B1509-58 has been interpreted in the framework of polar cap models as a signature of the exotic photon splitting process in the strong magnetic field of this pulsar. In this interpretation our spectrum constrains the magnetic altitude of the emission point(s) at 3 km above the neutron star surface, implying that the attenuation may not be as strong as formerly suggested because pair production can substitute photon splitting in regions of the magnetosphere where the magnetic field becomes too low to sustain photon splitting. In the case of an outer-gap scenario, or the two pole caustic model, better constraints on the geometry of the emission would be needed from the radio band in order to establish whether the conditions required by the models to reproduce Agile lightcurves and spectra match the polarization measurements., Comment: 17 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2010
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247. The extraordinary gamma-ray flare of the blazar 3C 454.3
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Striani, E., Vercellone, S., Tavani, M., Vittorini, V., D'Ammando, F., Donnarumma, I., Pacciani, L., Pucella, G., Bulgarelli, A., Trifoglio, M., Gianotti, F., Giommi, P., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A. W., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Ferrari, A., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Giuliani, A., Giusti, M., Labanti, C., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Scalise, E., Soffitta, P., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Santolamazza, P., Lucarelli, F., Colafrancesco, S., Antonelli, L. A., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the gamma-ray data of the extraordinary flaring activity above 100 MeV from the flat spectrum radio quasar 3C 454.3 detected by AGILE during the month of December 2009. 3C 454.3, that has been among the most active blazars of the FSRQ type since 2007, was detected in the gamma-ray range with a progressively rising flux since November 10, 2009. The gamma-ray flux reached a value comparable with that of the Vela pulsar on December 2, 2009. Remarkably, between December 2 and 3, 2009 the source more than doubled its gamma-ray emission and became the brightest gamma-ray source in the sky with a peak flux of F_{\gamma,p} = (2000 \pm 400) x 10^-8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 for a 1-day integration above 100 MeV. The gamma-ray intensity decreased in the following days with the source flux remaining at large values near F \simeq (1000 \pm 200) x 10^-8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 for more than a week. This exceptional gamma-ray flare dissipated among the largest ever detected intrinsic radiated power in gamma-rays above 100 MeV (L_{\gamma, source, peak} \simeq 3 x 10^46 erg s^-1, for a relativistic Doppler factor of {\delta} \simeq 30). The total isotropic irradiated energy of the month-long episode in the range 100 MeV - 3 GeV is E_{\gamma,iso} \simeq 10^56 erg. We report the intensity and spectral evolution of the gamma-ray emission across the flaring episode. We briefly discuss the important theoretical implications of our detection., Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, ApJ accepted
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- 2010
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248. The December 2009 gamma-ray flare of 3C 454.3: the multifrequency campaign
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Pacciani, L., Vittorini, V., Tavani, M., Fiocchi, M. T., Vercellone, S., D'Ammando, F., Sakamoto, T., Pian, E., Raiteri, C. M., Villata, M., Sasada, M., Itoh, R., Yamanaka, M., Uemura, M., Striani, E., Fugazza, D., Tiengo, A., Krimm, H. A., Stroh, M. C., Falcone, A. D., Curran, P. A., Sadun, A. C., Lahteenmaki, A., Tornikoski, M., Aller, H. D., Aller, M. F., Lin, C. S., Larionov, V. M., Leto, P., Takalo, L. O., Berdyugin, A., Gurwell, M. A., Bulgarelli, A., Chen, A. W., Donnarumma, I., Giuliani, A., Longo, F., Pucella, G., Argan, A., Caraveo, G. Barbiellini P., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., Costa, E., De Paris, G., Del Monte, E., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Ferrari, A., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morelli, E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Rubini, A., Sabatini, S., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zanello, D., Colafrancesco, S., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Santolamazza, P., Lucarelli, F., Giommi, P., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
During the month of December, 2009 the blazar 3C 454.3 became the brightest gamma-ray source in the sky, reaching a peak flux F ~2000E-8 ph/cm2/s for E > 100 MeV. Starting in November, 2009 intensive multifrequency campaigns monitored the 3C 454 gamma-ray outburst. Here we report the results of a 2-month campaign involving AGILE, INTEGRAL, Swift/XRT, Swift/BAT, RossiXTE for the high-energy observations, and Swift/UVOT, KANATA, GRT, REM for the near-IR/optical/UV data. The GASP/WEBT provided radio and additional optical data. We detected a long-term active emission phase lasting ~1 month at all wavelengths: in the gamma-ray band, peak emission was reached on December 2-3, 2009. Remarkably, this gamma-ray super-flare was not accompanied by correspondingly intense emission in the optical/UV band that reached a level substantially lower than the previous observations in 2007-2008. The lack of strong simultaneous optical brightening during the super-flare and the determination of the broad-band spectral evolution severely constrain the theoretical modelling. We find that the pre- and post-flare broad-band behavior can be explained by a one-zone model involving SSC plus external Compton emission from an accretion disk and a broad-line region. However, the spectra of the Dec. 2-3, 2009 super-flare and of the secondary peak emission on Dec. 9, 2009 cannot be satisfactorily modelled by a simple one-zone model. An additional particle component is most likely active during these states., Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures, ApJL accepted
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- 2010
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249. AGILE detection of GeV gamma-ray emission from the SNR W28
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Giuliani, A., Tavani, M., Bulgarelli, A., Striani, E., Sabatini, S., Cardillo, M., Fukui, Y., Kawamura, A., Ohama, A., Furukawa, N., Torii, K., Aharonian, F. A., Verrecchia, F., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Caraveo, P. A., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A. W., Cocco, V., Costa, E., D'Ammando, F., Del Monte, E., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Donnarumma, I., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, Y., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Mereghetti, M. Marisaldi., Morselli, A., Moretti, E., Pacciani, L., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Santolamazza, P., Giommi, P., Colafrancesco, S., and Salotti, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Supernova remnants (SNRs) are believed to be the main sources of Galactic cosmic rays. Molecular clouds associated with SNRs can produce gamma-ray emission through the interaction of accelerated particles with the concentrated gas. The middle aged SNR W28, for its associated system of dense molecular clouds, provides an excellent opportunity to test this hypothesis. We present the AGILE/GRID observations of SNR W28, and compare them with observations at other wavelengths (TeV and 12CO J=1-->0 molecular line emission). The gamma-ray flux detected by AGILE from the dominant source associated with W28 is (14 +- 5) 10^-8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 for E > 400 MeV. This source is positionally well correlated with the TeV emission observed by the HESS telescope. The local variations of the GeV to TeV flux ratio suggest a difference between the CR spectra of the north-west and south molecular cloud complexes. A model based on a hadronic-induced interaction and diffusion with two molecular clouds at different distances from the W28 shell can explain both the morphological and spectral features observed by AGILE in the MeV-GeV energy range and by the HESS telescope in the TeV energy range. The combined set of AGILE and H.E.S.S. data strongly support a hadronic model for the gamma-ray production in W28., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters
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- 2010
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250. A year-long AGILE observation of Cygnus X-1 in hard spectral state
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Del Monte, E., Feroci, M., Evangelista, Y., Costa, E., Donnarumma, I., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Pacciani, L., Rapisarda, M., Soffitta, P., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Chen, A., D'Ammando, F., Di Cocco, G., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Giuliani, A., Labanti, C., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Perotti, F., Piano, G., Picozza, P., Pilia, M., Prest, M., Pucella, G., Rappoldi, A., Sabatini, S., Striani, E., Tavani, M., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Vercellone, S., Vittorini, V., Zambra, A., Antonelli, L. A., Cutini, S., Pittori, C., Preger, B., Santolamazza, P., Verrecchia, F., Giommi, P., and Salotti, L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the observation of Cyg X-1 in hard spectral state performed during the AGILE Science Verification Phase and Observing Cycle 1 in hard X-rays (with SuperAGILE) and gamma rays (with the GRID) and lasting for about 160 days with a live time of $\sim 6$ Ms. We investigate the variability of Cyg X-1 in hard X-rays at different timescales, from $\sim 300$ s up to one day, and we apply different tools of timing analysis, such as the autocorrelation function, the first order structure function and the Lomb-Scargle periodogram, to our data (from SuperAGILE) and to the simultaneous data in soft X-rays (from RXTE/ASM). We conclude our investigation with a search for emission in the energy range above 100 MeV with the maximum likelihood technique. In the hard X-ray band the flux of Cyg X-1 shows its typical erratic fluctuations at all timescales with variations of about a factor of two that do not affect significantly the shape of the energy spectrum. From the first order structure function we find that the X-ray emission of Cyg X-1 is characterized by \textit{antipersistence}, indication of a negative feedback mechanism at work. In the gamma ray data a statistically significant point-like source at the position of Cyg X-1 is not found and the upper limit on the flux is $\mathrm{5 \times 10^{-8} \; ph \; cm^{-2} \; s^{-1}}$, over the whole observation (160 days). Finally we compare our upper limit in gamma rays with the expectation of various models of the Cyg X-1 emission, of both hadronic and leptonic origin, in the GeV -- TeV band. The time history of Cyg X-1 in the hard X-ray band over 13 months (not continuous) is shown. Different tools of analysis do not provide fully converging results of the characteristic timescales in the system, suggesting that the timescales found in the structure function are not intrinsic to the physics of the source., Comment: 15 pages and 11 figures (with subfigures). Accepted for publication by A&A.
- Published
- 2010
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