1,238 results on '"Nardini P"'
Search Results
202. A new relativistic component of the accretion disk wind in PDS 456
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Reeves, James, Braito, Valentina, Nardini, Emanuele, Lobban, Andrew, Matzeu, Gabriele, and Costa, Michele
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Past X-ray observations of the nearby luminous quasar PDS 456 (at $z=0.184$) have revealed a wide angle accretion disk wind (Nardini et al. 2015), with an outflow velocity of $\sim-0.25c$. Here we unveil a new, relativistic component of the wind through hard X-ray observations with NuSTAR and XMM-Newton, obtained in March 2017 when the quasar was in a low flux state. This very fast wind component, with an outflow velocity of $-0.46\pm0.02c$, is detected in the iron K band, in addition to the $-0.25c$ wind zone. The relativistic component may arise from the innermost disk wind, launched from close to the black hole at radius of $\sim10$ gravitational radii. The opacity of the fast wind also increases during a possible obscuration event lasting for 50 ks. We suggest that the very fast wind may only be apparent during the lowest X-ray flux states of PDS 456, becoming overly ionized as the luminosity increases. Overall, the total wind power may even approach the Eddington value., Comment: 5 pages, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2018
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203. Cluster phases and bubbly phase separation in active fluids: Reversal of the Ostwald process
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Tjhung, Elsen, Nardini, Cesare, and Cates, Michael E.
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
It is known that purely repulsive self-propelled colloids can undergo bulk liquid-vapor phase separation. In experiments and large scale simulations, however, more complex steady states are also seen, comprising a dynamic population of dense clusters in a sea of vapor, or dilute bubbles in a liquid. Here we show that these microphase-separated states should emerge generically in active matter, without any need to invoke system-specific details. We give a coarse-grained description of them, and predict transitions between regimes of bulk phase separation and microphase separation. We achieve these results by extending the $\phi^4$ field theory of passive phase separation to allow for all local currents that break detailed balance at leading order in the gradient expansion. These local active currents, whose form we show to emerge from coarse-graining of microscopic models, include a mixture of irrotational and rotational contributions, and can be viewed as arising from an effective nonlocal chemical potential. Such contributions influence, and in some parameter ranges reverse, the classical Ostwald process that would normally drive bulk phase separation to completion., Comment: 18 pages 6 figures
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- 2018
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204. Does the X-ray outflow quasar PDS 456 have a UV outflow at 0.3c?
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Hamann, Fred, Chartas, George, Reeves, James, and Nardini, Emanuele
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The quasar PDS 456 (at redshift ~0.184) has a prototype ultra-fast outflow (UFO) measured in X-rays. This outflow is highly ionized with relativistic speeds, large total column densities log N_H(cm^-2) > 23, and large kinetic energies that could be important for feedback to the host galaxy. A UV spectrum of PDS 456 obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope in 2000 contains one well-measured broad absorption line (BAL) at ~1346A (observed) that might be Ly-alpha at v ~ 0.06c or NV 1240 at v ~ 0.08c. However, we use photoionisation models and comparisons to other outflow quasars to show that these BAL identifications are problematic because other lines that should accompany them are not detected. We argue that the UV BAL is probably CIV 1549 at v ~ 0.30c. This would be the fastest UV outflow ever reported, but its speed is similar to the X-ray outflow and its appearance overall is similar to relativistic UV BALs observed in other quasars. The CIV BAL identification is also supported indirectly by the tentative detection of another broad CIV line at v ~ 0.19c. The high speeds suggest that the UV outflow originates with the X-ray UFO crudely 20 to 30 r_g from the central black hole. We speculate that the CIV BAL might form in dense clumps embedded in the X-ray UFO, requiring density enhancements of only >0.4 dex compared clumpy structures already inferred for the soft X-ray absorber in PDS 456. The CIV BAL might therefore be the first detection of low-ionisation clumps proposed previously to boost the opacities in UFOs for radiative driving., Comment: in press with MNRAS
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- 2018
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205. Process interpretation of current entropic bounds
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Nardini, Cesare and Touchette, Hugo
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Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
We show for Markov diffusion processes that the quadratic entropic bound, recently derived for the rate functions of nonequilibrium currents, can be seen as being produced by an effective process that creates current fluctuations in a sub-optimal way by modifying only the non-reversible part of the drift or force of the process considered while keeping its reversible part constant. This provides a clear interpretation of the bound in terms of a physical process, which explains, among other things, its relation to the fluctuation relation, linear response, and reversible limits. The existence of more general quadratic bounds, and related uncertainty relations, for physical quantities other than currents is also discussed., Comment: v1: 6 pages. v2: typos corrected, references added. v3: minor typos corrected
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- 2017
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206. Bulk Comptonization: new hints from the luminous blazar 4C+25.05
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Kammoun, E. S., Nardini, E., Risaliti, G., Ghisellini, G., Behar, E., and Celotti, A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Blazars are often characterized by a spectral break at soft X-rays, whose origin is still debated. While most sources show a flattening, some exhibit a blackbody-like soft excess with temperatures of the order of $\sim$0.1 keV, similar to low-luminosity, non-jetted Seyferts. Here we present the analysis of the simultaneous XMM-Newton and NuSTAR observation of the luminous FSRQ 4C+25.05 ($z=2.368$). The observed 0.3-30 keV spectrum is best described by the sum of a hard X-ray power law ($\Gamma = 1.38_{-0.03}^{+0.05}$) and a soft component, approximated by a blackbody with $kT_{\rm BB} = 0.66_{-0.04}^{+0.05}$ keV (rest frame). If the spectrum of 4C+25.05 is interpreted in the context of bulk Comptonization by cold electrons of broad-line region photons emitted in the direction of the jet, such an unusual temperature implies a bulk Lorentz factor of the jet of $\Gamma_{\rm bulk}\sim 11.7$. Bulk Comptonization is expected to be ubiquitous on physical grounds, yet no clear signature of it has been found so far, possibly due to its transient nature and the lack of high-quality, broad-band X-ray spectra., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRASL
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- 2017
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207. Simulating Cellular Communications in Vehicular Networks: Making SimuLTE Interoperable with Veins
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Nardini, Giovanni, Virdis, Antonio, and Stea, Giovanni
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Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture ,I.6 ,I.6.7 - Abstract
The evolution of cellular technologies toward 5G progressively enables efficient and ubiquitous communications in an increasing number of fields. Among these, vehicular networks are being considered as one of the most promising and challenging applications, requiring support for communications in high-speed mobility and delay-constrained information exchange in proximity. In this context, simulation frameworks under the OMNeT++ umbrella are already available: SimuLTE and Veins for cellular and vehicular systems, respectively. In this paper, we describe the modifications that make SimuLTE interoperable with Veins and INET, which leverage the OMNeT++ paradigm, and allow us to achieve our goal without any modification to either of the latter two. We discuss the limitations of the previous solution, namely VeinsLTE, which integrates all three in a single framework, thus preventing independent evolution and upgrades of each building block., Comment: Published in: A. Foerster, A. Udugama, A. Koensgen, A. Virdis, M. Kirsche (Eds.), Proc. of the 4th OMNeT++ Community Summit, University of Bremen - Germany - September 7-8, 2017
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- 2017
208. The environment of the SN-less GRB 111005A at z = 0.0133
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Tanga, M., Krühler, T., Schady, P., Klose, S., Graham, J. F., Greiner, J., Kann, D. A., and Nardini, M.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The collapsar model has proved highly successful in explaining the properties of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), with the most direct confirmation being the detection of a supernova (SN) coincident with the majority of nearby long GRBs. Within this model, a long GRB is produced by the core-collapse of a metal-poor, rapidly rotating, massive star. The detection of some long GRBs in metal-rich environments, and more fundamentally the three examples of long GRBs (GRB 060505, GRB 060614 and GRB 111005A) with no coincident SN detection down to very deep limits is in strong contention with theoretical expectations. In this paper we present MUSE observations of the host galaxy of GRB 111005A, which is the most recent and compelling example yet of a SN-less, long GRB. At z=0.01326, GRB 111005A is the third closest GRB ever detected, and second closest long duration GRB, enabling the nearby environment to be studied at a resolution of 270 pc. From the analysis of the MUSE data cube, we find GRB 111005A to have occurred within a metal-rich environment with little signs of ongoing star formation. Spectral analysis at the position of the GRB indicates the presence of an old stellar population (tau > 10 Myr), which limits the mass of the GRB progenitor to M_ZAMS<15 Msolar, in direct conflict with the collapsar model. Our deep limits on the presence of any SN emission combined with the environmental conditions at the position of GRB 111005A necessitate the exploration of a novel long GRB formation mechanism that is unrelated to massive stars., Comment: Now accepted by A&A. Manuscript replaced to match accepted version. Some additional discussion added, and velocity map of the host galaxy now included
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- 2017
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209. Evidence for a radiatively driven disc-wind in PDS 456?
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Matzeu, G. A., Reeves, J. N., Braito, V., Nardini, E., McLaughlin, D. E., Lobban, A. P., Tombesi, F., and Costa, M. T.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a newly discovered correlation between the wind outflow velocity and the X-ray luminosity in the luminous ($L_{\rm bol}\sim10^{47}\,\rm erg\,s^{-1}$) nearby ($z=0.184$) quasar PDS\,456. All the contemporary XMM-Newton, NuSTAR and Suzaku observations from 2001--2014 were revisited and we find that the centroid energy of the blueshifted Fe\,K absorption profile increases with luminosity. This translates into a correlation between the wind outflow velocity and the hard X-ray luminosity (between 7--30\,keV) where we find that $v_{\rm w}/c \propto L_{7-30}^{\gamma}$ where $\gamma=0.22\pm0.04$. We also show that this is consistent with a wind that is predominately radiatively driven, possibly resulting from the high Eddington ratio of PDS\,456., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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- 2017
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210. A deep X-ray view of the bare AGN Ark120. IV. XMM-Newton and NuSTAR spectra dominated by two temperature (warm, hot) Comptonization processes
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Porquet, D., Reeves, J. N., Matt, G., Marinucci, A., Nardini, E., Braito, V., Lobban, A., Ballantyne, D. R., Boggs, S. E., Christensen, F. E., Dauser, T., Farrah, D., Garcia, J., Hailey, C. J., Harrison, F., Stern, D., Tortosa, A., Ursini, F., and Zhang, W. W.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We perform an X-ray spectral analysis of the brightest and cleanest bare AGN known so far, Ark 120, in order to determine the process(es) at work in the vicinity of the SMBH. We present spectral analysis of data from an extensive campaign observing Ark 120 in X-rays with XMM-Newton (4$\times$120 ks, 2014 March 18-24), and NuSTAR (65.5 ks, 2014 March 22). During this very deep X-ray campaign, the source was caught in a high flux state similar to the earlier 2003 XMM-Newton observation, and about twice as bright as the lower-flux observation in 2013. The spectral analysis confirms the "softer when brighter" behaviour of Ark 120. The four XMM-Newton/pn spectra are characterized by the presence of a prominent soft X-ray excess and a significant FeK$\alpha$ complex. The continuum is very similar above about 3 keV, while significant variability is present for the soft X-ray excess. We find that relativistic reflection from a constant-density, flat accretion disk cannot simultaneously produce the soft excess, broad FeK$\alpha$ complex, and hard X-ray excess. Instead, Comptonization reproduces the broadband (0.3-79 keV) continuum well, together with a contribution from a mildly relativistic disk reflection spectrum. During this 2014 observational campaign, the soft X-ray spectrum of Ark 120 below $\sim$0.5 keV was found to be dominated by Comptonization of seed photons from the disk by a warm ($kT_{\rm e}$$\sim$0.5 keV), optically-thick corona ($\tau$$\sim$9). Above this energy, the X-ray spectrum becomes dominated by Comptonization from electrons in a hot optically thin corona, while the broad FeK$\alpha$ line and the mild Compton hump result from reflection off the disk at several tens of gravitational radii., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2017
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211. Nuclear absorption and emission in the AGN merger NGC 6240: the hard X-ray view
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Nardini, Emanuele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the analysis of four NuSTAR observations of the luminous infrared galaxy merger NGC 6240, hosting a close pair of highly obscured active galactic nuclei (AGN). Over a period of about two years, the source exhibits hard X-ray variability of the order of 20 per cent, peaking around 20 keV. When the two AGN are resolved with Chandra, column densities in the range $N_\textrm{H} \sim 1-2 \times 10^{24}$ cm$^{-2}$ are estimated for both of them. The exact values are hard to determine, as they appear to depend on aspects that are sometimes overlooked in Compton-thick objects, such as the covering factor of the absorber, iron abundance, and the contamination in the Fe-K band from foreground hot-gas emission. Nearly spherical covering and slightly subsolar iron abundance are preferred in this case. While the southern nucleus is suggested to be intrinsically more powerful, as also implied by the mid-IR and 2-10 keV brightness ratios, solutions involving a similar X-ray luminosity of the two AGN cannot be ruled out. The observed variability is rather limited compared to the one revealed by the Swift/BAT light curve, and it can be fully explained by changes in the continuum flux from the two AGN, without requiring significant column density variations. NGC 6240 is hereby confirmed to represent a unique opportunity to investigate the X-ray (and broad-band) properties of massive galaxy mergers, which were much more frequent in the early Universe., Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication on MNRAS
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- 2017
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212. Bounding the speed of gravity with gravitational wave observations
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Cornish, Neil, Blas, Diego, and Nardini, Germano
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General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
The time delay between gravitational wave signals arriving at widely separated detectors can be used to place upper and lower bounds on the speed of gravitational wave propagation. Using a Bayesian approach that combines the first three gravitational wave detections reported by the LIGO collaboration we constrain the gravitational waves propagation speed c_gw to the 90% credible interval 0.55 c < c_gw < 1.42 c, where c is the speed of light in vacuum. These bounds will improve as more detections are made and as more detectors join the worldwide network. Of order twenty detections by the two LIGO detectors will constrain the speed of gravity to within 20% of the speed of light, while just five detections by the LIGO-Virgo-Kagra network will constrain the speed of gravity to within 1% of the speed of light., Comment: Version published in PRL. 5 pages, 3 figures
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- 2017
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213. A deep X-ray view of the bare AGN Ark 120. III. X-ray timing analysis and multiwavelength variability
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Lobban, Andrew, Porquet, Delphine, Reeves, James, Markowitz, Alex, Nardini, Emanuele, and Grosso, Nicolas
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the spectral/timing properties of the bare Seyfert galaxy Ark 120 through a deep ~420ks XMM-Newton campaign plus recent NuSTAR observations and a ~6-month Swift monitoring campaign. We investigate the spectral decomposition through fractional rms, covariance and difference spectra, finding the mid- to long-timescale (~day-year) variability to be dominated by a relatively smooth, steep component, peaking in the soft X-ray band. Additionally, we find evidence for variable FeK emission red-ward of the FeK-alpha core on long timescales, consistent with previous findings. We detect a clearly-defined power spectrum which we model with a power law with a slope of alpha ~ 1.9. By extending the power spectrum to lower frequencies through the inclusion of Swift and RXTE data, we find tentative evidence of a high-frequency break, consistent with existing scaling relations. We also explore frequency-dependent Fourier time lags, detecting a negative ('soft') lag for the first time in this source with the 0.3-1 keV band lagging behind the 1-4 keV band with a time delay of ~900s. Finally, we analyze the variability in the optical and UV bands using the Optical/UV Monitor on-board XMM-Newton and the UVOT on-board Swift and search for time-dependent correlations between the optical/UV/X-ray bands. We find tentative evidence for the U-band emission lagging behind the X-rays with a time delay of 2.4 +/- 1.8 days, which we discuss in the context of disc reprocessing., Comment: 23 pages, 20 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
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214. Spatially resolved Fe K spectroscopy of NGC 4945
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Marinucci, Andrea, Bianchi, Stefano, Fabbiano, Giuseppina, Matt, Giorgio, Risaliti, Guido, Nardini, Emanuele, and Wang, Junfeng
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the imaging and spectroscopic analysis of the combined Chandra ACIS-S observations of the Compton-thick Seyfert 2 galaxy NGC 4945. We performed a spatially-resolved spectroscopy of the circumnuclear environment of the source, picturing the innermost 200 parsecs around the highly absorbed nucleus. The additional 200 ks ACIS-S data with respect to the previous campaign allowed us to map with even greater detail the central structure of this source and to discover an enhanced iron emission in the innermost nuclear region, with respect to the associated Compton reflection continuum. We revealed that the Equivalent Width of the iron K$\alpha$ line is spatially variable (ranging from 0.5 to 3 keV), on scales of tens of parsecs, likely due to the ionization state and orientation effects of the reprocessing material, with respect to the central X-ray illuminating source. A clump of highly ionized Fe XXV He-$\alpha$ is also detected, 40 parsecs east to the nucleus. When observations taken years apart are considered, the central unresolved reflected emission is found to remain constant., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
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215. The role of correlations in the collective behaviour of microswimmer suspensions
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Stenhammar, Joakim, Nardini, Cesare, Nash, Rupert W., Marenduzzo, Davide, and Morozov, Alexander
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Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Physics - Biological Physics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
In this Letter, we study the collective behaviour of a large number of self-propelled microswimmers immersed in a fluid. Using unprecedently large-scale lattice Boltzmann simulations, we reproduce the transition to bacterial turbulence. We show that, even well below the transition, swimmers move in a correlated fashion that cannot be described by a mean-field approach. We develop a novel kinetic theory that captures these correlations and is non-perturbative in the swimmer density. To provide an experimentally accessible measure of correlations, we calculate the diffusivity of passive tracers and reveal its non-trivial density dependence. The theory is in quantitative agreement with the lattice Boltzmann simulations and captures the asymmetry between pusher and puller swimmers below the transition to turbulence., Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett
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- 2017
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216. Thermal phase transition with full 2-loop effective potential
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Laine, M., Meyer, M., and Nardini, G.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Theories with extended Higgs sectors constructed in view of cosmological ramifications (gravitational wave signal, baryogenesis, dark matter) are often faced with conflicting requirements for their couplings; in particular those influencing the strength of a phase transition may be large. Large couplings compromise perturbative studies, as well as the high-temperature expansion that is invoked in dimensionally reduced lattice investigations. With the example of the inert doublet extension of the Standard Model (IDM), we show how a resummed 2-loop effective potential can be computed without a high-T expansion, and use the result to scrutinize its accuracy. With the exception of Tc, which is sensitive to contributions from heavy modes, the high-T expansion is found to perform well. 2-loop corrections weaken the transition in IDM, but they are moderate, whereby a strong transition remains an option., Comment: 42 pages. v3: many clarifications added, published version
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- 2017
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217. A light sneutrino rescues the light stop
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Chala, Mikael, Delgado, Antonio, Nardini, Germano, and Quiros, Mariano
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Stop searches in supersymmetric frameworks with $R$-parity conservation usually assume the lightest neutralino to be the lightest supersymmetric particle. In this paper we consider an alternative scenario in which the left-handed tau sneutrino is lighter than neutralinos and stable at collider scales, but possibly unstable at cosmological scales. Moreover the (mostly right-handed) stop $\widetilde t$ is lighter than all electroweakinos, and heavier than the scalars of the third generation doublet, whose charged component, $\widetilde\tau$, is heavier than the neutral one, $\widetilde\nu$. The remaining supersymmetric particles are decoupled from the stop phenomenology. In most of the parameter space, the relevant stop decays are only into $t \widetilde\tau \tau$, $t\widetilde\nu\nu$ and $b \widetilde\nu \tau$ via off-shell electroweakinos. We constrain the branching ratios of these decays by recasting the most sensitive stop searches. Due to the "double invisible" kinematics of the $\widetilde t\to t\widetilde\nu\nu$ process, and the low efficiency in tagging the $t\widetilde\tau\tau$ decay products, light stops are generically allowed. In the minimal supersymmetric standard model with $\sim$ 100 GeV sneutrinos, stops with masses as small as $\sim$ 350 GeV turn out to be allowed at 95% CL., Comment: 25 pages
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- 2017
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218. A high spectral resolution map of the nuclear emitting regions of NGC 7582
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Braito, Valentina, Reeves, James, Bianchi, Stefano, Nardini, Emanuele, and Piconcelli, Enrico
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results of the spatial and spectral analysis of the deep (~200 ksec) Chandra HETG observation of the changing look AGN NGC7582. During this observation NGC7582 was in a highly obscured state. Therefore, we considered also a short Suzaku observation, which caught NGC7582 in a Compton thick state. This allows us to determine the underlying continuum and the amount of absorption ($N_H \sim~1.2\times10^{24}$ cm$^{-2}$). A wealth of emission lines are detected in the Chandra data, which allow us to map the structure of the circum-nuclear emitters. The high resolution spectrum reveals that the soft X-ray emission originates in a hybrid gas, which is ionized in part by the starforming activity and in part by the central AGN. The high resolution images confirm that the emitting region is inhomogeneous and extends up to a few hundred pc from the nuclear source. The X-ray images are more extended in the lower energy lines (Ne and Mg) than in the higher energy lines (Si, Fe), where the former are dominated by the collisionally ionised gas and the latter by the photoionized AGN emission. This is supported by the analysis of the He-like triplets. We deduce that a low density photoionized gas is responsible for the strong forbidden components, which is likely to originate from extended AGN Narrow Line Region gas at distances of 200-300 pc from the black hole. We also detected an absorption feature at ~ 6.7 keV consistent with the rest frame energy of the resonance absorption line from FeXXV, which traces the presence of a sub-parsec scale ionized absorber. The emerging picture is in agreement with our view of the circumnuclear gas in AGN, where the medium is clumpy and stratified in both density and ionization. These absorbers and emitters are located on different scales: from the sub-pc Broad Line Region gas out to the kpc scale of the galactic absorber., Comment: 15 pages, including 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2017
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219. Laser Interferometer Space Antenna
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Amaro-Seoane, Pau, Audley, Heather, Babak, Stanislav, Baker, John, Barausse, Enrico, Bender, Peter, Berti, Emanuele, Binetruy, Pierre, Born, Michael, Bortoluzzi, Daniele, Camp, Jordan, Caprini, Chiara, Cardoso, Vitor, Colpi, Monica, Conklin, John, Cornish, Neil, Cutler, Curt, Danzmann, Karsten, Dolesi, Rita, Ferraioli, Luigi, Ferroni, Valerio, Fitzsimons, Ewan, Gair, Jonathan, Bote, Lluis Gesa, Giardini, Domenico, Gibert, Ferran, Grimani, Catia, Halloin, Hubert, Heinzel, Gerhard, Hertog, Thomas, Hewitson, Martin, Holley-Bockelmann, Kelly, Hollington, Daniel, Hueller, Mauro, Inchauspe, Henri, Jetzer, Philippe, Karnesis, Nikos, Killow, Christian, Klein, Antoine, Klipstein, Bill, Korsakova, Natalia, Larson, Shane L, Livas, Jeffrey, Lloro, Ivan, Man, Nary, Mance, Davor, Martino, Joseph, Mateos, Ignacio, McKenzie, Kirk, McWilliams, Sean T, Miller, Cole, Mueller, Guido, Nardini, Germano, Nelemans, Gijs, Nofrarias, Miquel, Petiteau, Antoine, Pivato, Paolo, Plagnol, Eric, Porter, Ed, Reiche, Jens, Robertson, David, Robertson, Norna, Rossi, Elena, Russano, Giuliana, Schutz, Bernard, Sesana, Alberto, Shoemaker, David, Slutsky, Jacob, Sopuerta, Carlos F., Sumner, Tim, Tamanini, Nicola, Thorpe, Ira, Troebs, Michael, Vallisneri, Michele, Vecchio, Alberto, Vetrugno, Daniele, Vitale, Stefano, Volonteri, Marta, Wanner, Gudrun, Ward, Harry, Wass, Peter, Weber, William, Ziemer, John, and Zweifel, Peter
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Following the selection of The Gravitational Universe by ESA, and the successful flight of LISA Pathfinder, the LISA Consortium now proposes a 4 year mission in response to ESA's call for missions for L3. The observatory will be based on three arms with six active laser links, between three identical spacecraft in a triangular formation separated by 2.5 million km. LISA is an all-sky monitor and will offer a wide view of a dynamic cosmos using Gravitational Waves as new and unique messengers to unveil The Gravitational Universe. It provides the closest ever view of the infant Universe at TeV energy scales, has known sources in the form of verification binaries in the Milky Way, and can probe the entire Universe, from its smallest scales near the horizons of black holes, all the way to cosmological scales. The LISA mission will scan the entire sky as it follows behind the Earth in its orbit, obtaining both polarisations of the Gravitational Waves simultaneously, and will measure source parameters with astrophysically relevant sensitivity in a band from below $10^{-4}\,$Hz to above $10^{-1}\,$Hz., Comment: Submitted to ESA on January 13th in response to the call for missions for the L3 slot in the Cosmic Vision Programme
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- 2017
220. High Resolution X-ray Spectroscopy of the Seyfert 1, Mrk 1040. Revealing the Failed Nuclear Wind with Chandra
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Reeves, James, Braito, Valentina, Behar, Ehud, Fischer, Travis, Kraemer, Steve, Lobban, Andrew, Nardini, Emanuele, Porquet, Delphine, and Turner, Jane
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
High resolution X-ray spectroscopy of the warm absorber in the nearby X-ray bright Seyfert 1 galaxy, Mrk 1040 is presented. The observations were carried out in the 2013-2014 timeframe using the Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating with a total exposure of 200 ks. A multitude of absorption lines from Ne, Mg and Si are detected from a wide variety of ionization states. In particular, the detection of inner K-shell absorption lines from Ne, Mg and Si, from charge states ranging from F-like to Li-like ions, suggests the presence of a substantial amount of low ionization absorbing gas, illuminated by a steep soft X-ray continuum. The observations reveal at least 3 warm absorbing components ranging in ionization parameter from $\log\xi = 0-2$ and with column densities of $N_{\rm H} =1.5-4.0 \times 10^{21}$cm$^{-2}$. The velocity profiles imply that the outflow velocities of the absorbing gas are low and within $\pm100$ km s$^{-1}$ of the systemic velocity of Mrk 1040, which suggests any outflowing gas may have stalled in this AGN on large enough scales. The warm absorber is likely located far from the black hole, within 300 pc of the nucleus and is spatially coincident with emission from an extended Narrow Line Region as seen in the HST images. The iron K band spectrum reveals only narrow emission lines, with Fe K$\alpha$ at 6.4 keV consistent with originating from reflection off Compton thick pc-scale reprocessing gas., Comment: 40 pages, including 12 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2017
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221. Boundaries in Spatial Cognition: Looking Like a Boundary Is More Important than Being a Boundary
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Negen, James, Sandri, Angela, Lee, Sang Ah, and Nardini, Marko
- Abstract
Large walls and other typical boundaries strongly influence neural activity related to navigation and the representations of spatial layouts. They are also major aids to reliable navigation behavior in young children and nonhuman animals. Is this because they are physical boundaries (barriers to movement), or because they present certain visual features, such as visually extended 3D surfaces? Here, these 2 factors were dissociated by using immersive virtual reality and real boundaries. Eighty adults recalled target locations in 1 of 4 environments: plywood, where a virtual wall coincided with a large piece of real plywood; pass through, where the virtual wall coincided with empty space and participants could pass through it; pass over, where the virtual wall was projected downward to be visible underneath a transparent floor; and cones, where the walls were replaced with traffic cones. One condition had features that were boundaries and looked like boundaries (plywood); 2 had features that were not boundaries but looked like boundaries (pass over/through); and 1 had features that were not boundaries and did not look like boundaries (cones). The precision and bias of responses changed only as a function of looking like a boundary. This suggests that variations in spatial coding are more closely linked to the visual properties of environmental layouts than to whether they contain physical boundaries (barriers to movement).
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- 2020
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222. Human amniotic membrane: an improvement in the treatment of Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ)? A case–control study
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Ragazzo, Mirko, Val, Matteo, Montagner, Giulia, Trojan, Diletta, Fusetti, Stefano, and Guarda Nardini, Luca
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- 2022
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223. Central tendency biases must be accounted for to consistently capture Bayesian cue combination in continuous response data
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Aston, Stacey, Negen, James, Nardini, Marko, and Beierholm, Ulrik
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- 2022
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224. Xylem embolism refilling and resilience against drought‐induced mortality in woody plants: processes and trade‐offs
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Klein, Tamir, Zeppel, Melanie JB, Anderegg, William RL, Bloemen, Jasper, De Kauwe, Martin G, Hudson, Patrick, Ruehr, Nadine K, Powell, Thomas L, von Arx, Georg, and Nardini, Andrea
- Subjects
Plant Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Ecology ,Hydraulic conductivity ,Plant hydraulics ,Plant water relations ,Recovery ,Repair ,Plant Biology & Botany ,Environmental Sciences ,Biological sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Understanding which species are able to recover from drought, under what conditions, and the mechanistic processes involved, will facilitate predictions of plant mortality in response to global change. In response to drought, some species die because of embolism-induced hydraulic failure, whilst others are able to avoid mortality and recover, following rehydration. Several tree species have evolved strategies to avoid embolism, whereas others tolerate high embolism rates but can recover their hydraulic functioning upon drought relief. Here, we focus on structures and processes that might allow some plants to recover from drought stress via embolism reversal. We provide insights into how embolism repair may have evolved, anatomical and physiological features that facilitate this process, and describe possible trade-offs and related costs. Recent controversies on methods used for estimating embolism formation/repair are also discussed, providing some methodological suggestions. Although controversial, embolism repair processes are apparently based on the activity of phloem and ray/axial parenchyma. The mechanism is energetically demanding, and the costs to plants include metabolism and transport of soluble sugars, water and inorganic ions. We propose that embolism repair should be considered as a possible component of a ‘hydraulic efficiency-safety’ spectrum. We also advance a framework for vegetation models, describing how vulnerability curves may change in hydrodynamic model formulations for plants that recover from embolism.
- Published
- 2018
225. Target highlights from the first post‐PSI CASP experiment (CASP12, May–August 2016)
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Kryshtafovych, Andriy, Albrecht, Reinhard, Baslé, Arnaud, Bule, Pedro, Caputo, Alessandro T, Carvalho, Ana Luisa, Chao, Kinlin L, Diskin, Ron, Fidelis, Krzysztof, Fontes, Carlos MGA, Fredslund, Folmer, Gilbert, Harry J, Goulding, Celia W, Hartmann, Marcus D, Hayes, Christopher S, Herzberg, Osnat, Hill, Johan C, Joachimiak, Andrzej, Kohring, Gert‐Wieland, Koning, Roman I, Leggio, Leila Lo, Mangiagalli, Marco, Michalska, Karolina, Moult, John, Najmudin, Shabir, Nardini, Marco, Nardone, Valentina, Ndeh, Didier, Nguyen, Thanh‐Hong, Pintacuda, Guido, Postel, Sandra, van Raaij, Mark J, Roversi, Pietro, Shimon, Amir, Singh, Abhimanyu K, Sundberg, Eric J, Tars, Kaspars, Zitzmann, Nicole, and Schwede, Torsten
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Biological Sciences ,Animals ,Bacteria ,Computational Biology ,Crystallography ,X-Ray ,Humans ,Models ,Molecular ,Protein Conformation ,Protein Folding ,Proteins ,Software ,CASP ,NMR ,protein structure prediction ,X-ray crystallography ,Mathematical Sciences ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Bioinformatics ,Biological sciences ,Mathematical sciences - Abstract
The functional and biological significance of the selected CASP12 targets are described by the authors of the structures. The crystallographers discuss the most interesting structural features of the target proteins and assess whether these features were correctly reproduced in the predictions submitted to the CASP12 experiment.
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- 2018
226. Correction: Inter-society consensus for the use of inhaled corticosteroids in infants, children and adolescents with airway diseases
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Duse, Marzia, Santamaria, Francesca, Verga, Maria Carmen, Bergamini, Marcello, Simeone, Giovanni, Leonardi, Lucia, Tezza, Giovanna, Bianchi, Annamaria, Capuano, Annalisa, Cardinale, Fabio, Cerimoniale, Giovanni, Landi, Massimo, Malventano, Monica, Tosca, Mariangela, Varricchio, Attilio, Zicari, Anna Maria, Alfaro, Carlo, Barberi, Salvatore, Becherucci, Paolo, Bernardini, Roberto, Biasci, Paolo, Caffarelli, Carlo, Caldarelli, Valeria, Capristo, Carlo, Castronuovo, Serenella, Chiappini, Elena, Cutrera, Renato, De Castro, Giovanna, De Franciscis, Luca, Decimo, Fabio, Iacono, Iride Dello, Diaferio, Lucia, Di Cicco, Maria Elisa, Di Mauro, Caterina, Di Mauro, Cristina, Di Mauro, Dora, Di Mauro, Francesco, Di Mauro, Gabriella, Doria, Mattia, Falsaperla, Raffaele, Ferraro, Valentina, Fanos, Vassilios, Galli, Elena, Ghiglioni, Daniele Giovanni, Indinnimeo, Luciana, Kantar, Ahmad, Lamborghini, Adima, Licari, Amelia, Lubrano, Riccardo, Luciani, Stefano, Macrì, Francesco, Marseglia, Gianluigi, Martelli, Alberto Giuseppe, Masini, Luigi, Midulla, Fabio, Minasi, Domenico, Miniello, Vito Leonardo, Del Giudice, Michele Miraglia, Morandini, Sergio Renzo, Nardini, Germana, Nocerino, Agostino, Novembre, Elio, Pajno, Giovanni Battista, Paravati, Francesco, Piacentini, Giorgio, Piersantelli, Cristina, Pozzobon, Gabriella, Ricci, Giampaolo, Spanevello, Valter, Turra, Renato, Zanconato, Stefania, Borrelli, Melissa, Villani, Alberto, Corsello, Giovanni, Di Mauro, Giuseppe, and Peroni, Diego
- Published
- 2022
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227. Early downregulation of hsa-miR-144-3p in serum from drug-naïve Parkinson’s disease patients
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Zago, Elisa, Dal Molin, Alessandra, Dimitri, Giovanna Maria, Xumerle, Luciano, Pirazzini, Chiara, Bacalini, Maria Giulia, Maturo, Maria Giovanna, Azevedo, Tiago, Spasov, Simeon, Gómez-Garre, Pilar, Periñán, María Teresa, Jesús, Silvia, Baldelli, Luca, Sambati, Luisa, Calandra-Buonaura, Giovanna, Garagnani, Paolo, Provini, Federica, Cortelli, Pietro, Mir, Pablo, Trenkwalder, Claudia, Mollenhauer, Brit, Franceschi, Claudio, Liò, Pietro, and Nardini, Christine
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- 2022
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228. The ecdysone receptor regulates several key physiological factors in Anopheles funestus
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Maharaj, Surina, Ekoka, Elodie, Erlank, Erica, Nardini, Luisa, Reader, Janette, Birkholtz, Lyn-Marie, and Koekemoer, Lizette L.
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- 2022
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229. Where do you live? North versus Central-South differences in relation to Italian patients with oral lichen planus: a cross-sectional study from the SIPMO (Italian Society of Oral Pathology and Medicine)
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Adamo, Daniela, Calabria, Elena, Canfora, Federica, Coppola, Noemi, Lo Muzio, Lorenzo, Spirito, Francesca, Giuliani, Michele, Azzi, Lorenzo, Maurino, Vittorio, Colella, Giuseppe, Colella, Chiara, Montebugnoli, Lucio, Gissi, Davide Bartolomeo, Gabriele, Mario, Nisi, Marco, Sardella, Andrea, Lodi, Giovanni, Varoni, Elena Maria, Giudice, Amerigo, Antonelli, Alessandro, Arduino, Paolo Giacomo, Gambino, Alessio, Vescovi, Paolo, Majorana, Alessandra, Bardellini, Elena, Campisi, Giuseppina, Panzarella, Vera, Spadari, Francesco, Garagiola, Umberto, Pentenero, Monica, Sutera, Samuele, Biasotto, Matteo, Ottaviani, Giulia, Gobbo, Margherita, Guarda Nardini, Luca, Romeo, Umberto, Tenore, Gianluca, Serpico, Rosario, Lucchese, Alberta, Lajolo, Carlo, Rupe, Cosimo, Aria, Massimo, D’Aniello, Luca, and Mignogna, Michele Davide
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- 2022
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230. First case of systemic fatal mycobacteriosis caused by Mycobacterium goodii in a pet Kenyan sand boa (Eryx colubrinus loveridgei)
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Vetere, Alessandro, Bertocchi, Mara, Pagano, Teresa Bruna, Di Ianni, Francesco, and Nardini, Giordano
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- 2022
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231. THUNDER 2: THeragnostic Utilities for Neoplastic DisEases of the Rectum by MRI guided radiotherapy
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Chiloiro, Giuditta, Cusumano, Davide, Boldrini, Luca, Romano, Angela, Placidi, Lorenzo, Nardini, Matteo, Meldolesi, Elisa, Barbaro, Brunella, Coco, Claudio, Crucitti, Antonio, Persiani, Roberto, Petruzziello, Lucio, Ricci, Riccardo, Salvatore, Lisa, Sofo, Luigi, Alfieri, Sergio, Manfredi, Riccardo, Valentini, Vincenzo, and Gambacorta, Maria Antonietta
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- 2022
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232. Infantile hemangiomas β3-adrenoceptor overexpression is associated with nonresponse to propranolol
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Bassi, Andrea, Filippeschi, Cesare, Oranges, Teresa, Caporalini, Chiara, Pini, Alessandro, Nardini, Patrizia, Gentile, Roberta Marie, and Filippi, Luca
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- 2022
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233. Investigation of a Structured Fisher's Equation with Applications in Biochemistry
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Nardini, John T. and Bortz, D. M.
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Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Quantitative Biology - Cell Behavior - Abstract
Recent biological research has sought to understand how biochemical signaling pathways, such as the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) family, influence the migration of a population of cells during wound healing. Fisher's Equation has been used extensively to model experimental wound healing assays due to its simple nature and known traveling wave solutions. This partial differential equation with independent variables of time and space cannot account for the effects of biochemical activity on wound healing, however. To this end, we derive a structured Fisher's Equation with independent variables of time, space, and biochemical pathway activity level and prove the existence of a self-similar traveling wave solution to this equation. We also consider a more complicated model with different phenotypes based on MAPK activation and numerically investigate how various temporal patterns of biochemical activity can lead to increased and decreased rates of population migration., Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures
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- 2016
234. Entropy production in field theories without time reversal symmetry: Quantifying the non-equilibrium character of active matter
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Nardini, Cesare, Fodor, Etienne, Tjhung, Elsen, van Wijland, Frederic, Tailleur, Julien, and Cates, Michael E.
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Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter - Abstract
Active matter systems operate far from equilibrium due to the continuous energy injection at the scale of constituent particles. At larger scales, described by coarse-grained models, the global entropy production rate S quantifies the probability ratio of forward and reversed dynamics and hence the importance of irreversibility at such scales: it vanishes whenever the coarse-grained dynamics of the active system reduces to that of an effective equilibrium model. We evaluate S for a class of scalar stochastic field theories describing the coarse-grained density of self-propelled particles without alignment interactions, capturing such key phenomena as motility-induced phase separation. We show how the entropy production can be decomposed locally (in real space) or spectrally (in Fourier space), allowing detailed examination of the spatial structure and correlations that underly departures from equilibrium. For phase-separated systems, the local entropy production is concentrated mainly on interfaces with a bulk contribution that tends to zero in the weak-noise limit. In homogeneous states, we find a generalized Harada-Sasa relation that directly expresses the entropy production in terms of the wavevector-dependent deviation from the fluctuation-dissipation relation between response functions and correlators. We discuss extensions to the case where the particle density is coupled to a momentum-conserving solvent, and to situations where the particle current, rather than the density, should be chosen as the dynamical field. We expect the new conceptual tools developed here to be broadly useful in the context of active matter, allowing one to distinguish when and where activity plays an essential role in the dynamics.
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- 2016
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235. X-ray flaring in PDS 456 observed in a high-flux state
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Matzeu, G. A., Reeves, J. N., Nardini, E., Braito, V., Turner, T. J., and Costa, M. T.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an analysis of a $190$\,ks (net exposure) \textit{Suzaku} observation, carried out in 2007, of the nearby ($z=0.184$) luminous (L$_{\rm bol}\sim10^{47}$\,erg\,s$^{-1}$) quasar PDS\,456. In this observation, the intrinsically steep bare continuum is revealed compared to subsequent observations, carried out in 2011 and 2013, where the source is fainter, harder and more absorbed. We detected two pairs of prominent hard and soft flares, restricted to the first and second half of the observation respectively. The flares occur on timescales of the order of $\sim50$\,ks, which is equivalent to a light-crossing distance of $\sim10\,R_{\rm g}$ in PDS\,456. From the spectral variability observed during the flares, we find that the continuum changes appear to be dominated by two components: (i) a variable soft component ($<2$\,keV), which may be related to the Comptonized tail of the disc emission, and (ii) a variable hard power-law component ($>2$\,keV). The photon index of the latter power-law component appears to respond to changes in the soft band flux, increasing during the soft X-ray flares. Here the softening of the spectra, observed during the flares, may be due to Compton cooling of the disc corona induced by the increased soft X-ray photon seed flux. In contrast, we rule out partial covering absorption as the physical mechanism behind the observed short timescale spectral variability, as the timescales are likely too short to be accounted for by absorption variability., Comment: 34 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2016
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236. Confronting SUSY models with LHC data via electroweakino production
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Arina, Chiara, Chala, Mikael, Martin-Lozano, Victor, and Nardini, Germano
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We investigate multi-lepton signals produced by ElectroWeakino (EWino) decays in the MSSM and the TMSSM scenarios with sfermions, gluinos and non Standard Model Higgses at the TeV scale, being the Bino electroweak-scale dark matter. We recast the present LHC constraints on EWinos for these models and we find that wide MSSM and TMSSM parameter regions prove to be allowed. We forecast the number of events expected in the signal regions of the experimental multi-lepton analyses in the next LHC runs. The correlations among these numbers will help to determine whether future deviations in multi-lepton data are ascribable to the EWinos, as well as the supersymmetric model they originate from., Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables
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- 2016
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237. Simulating device-to-device communications in OMNeT++ with SimuLTE: scenarios and configurations
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Nardini, Giovanni, Virdis, Antonio, and Stea, Giovanni
- Subjects
Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
SimuLTE is a tool that enables system-level simulations of LTE/LTE-Advanced networks within OMNeT++. It is designed such that it can be plugged within network elements as an additional Network Interface Card (NIC) to those already provided by the INET framework (e.g. Wi-Fi). Recently, device-to-device (D2D) technology has been widely studied by the research community, as a mechanism to allow direct communications between devices of a LTE cellular network. In this work, we present how SimuLTE can be employed to simulate both one-to-one and one-to-many D2D communications, so that the latter can be exploited as a new communication opportunity in several research fields, like vehicular networks, IoT and machine-to-machine (M2M) applications., Comment: Published in: A. Foerster, V. Vesely, A. Virdis, M. Kirsche (Eds.), Proc. of the 3rd OMNeT++ Community Summit, Brno University of Technology - Czech Republic - September 15-16, 2016
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- 2016
238. A deep X-ray view of the bare AGN Ark 120. II. Evidence for Fe K emission transients
- Author
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Nardini, E., Porquet, D., Reeves, J. N., Braito, V., Lobban, A., and Matt, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the results from a large observational campaign on the bare Seyfert galaxy Ark 120, jointly carried out in 2014 with XMM-Newton, Chandra, and NuSTAR. The fortunate line of sight to this source, devoid of any significant absorbing material, provides an incomparably clean view to the nuclear regions of an active galaxy. Here we focus on the analysis of the iron fluorescence features, which form a composite emission pattern in the 6$-$7 keV band. The prominent K$\alpha$ line from neutral iron at 6.4 keV is resolved in the Chandra High-Energy Transmission Grating spectrum to a full-width at half maximum of 4700$^{+2700}_{-1500}$ km s$^{-1}$, consistent with an origin from the optical broad-line region. Excess components are detected on both sides of the narrow K$\alpha$ line: the red one (6.0$-$6.3 keV) clearly varies in strength in about one year, and hints at the presence of a broad, mildly asymmetric line from the accretion disk; the blue one (6.5$-$7.0 keV), instead, is likely a blend of different contributions, and appears to be constant when integrated over long enough exposures. However, the Fe K excess emission map computed over the 7.5 days of the XMM-Newton monitoring shows that both the red and the blue features are actually highly variable on timescales of $\sim$10$-$15 hours, suggesting that they might arise from short-lived hotspots on the disk surface, located within a few tens of gravitational radii from the central supermassive black hole and possibly illuminated by magnetic reconnection events. Any alternative explanation would still require a highly dynamic, inhomogeneous disk/coronal system, involving clumpiness and/or instability., Comment: 25 pages, 10+2 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2016
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239. Automating Large-Scale Simulation and Data Analysis with OMNeT++: Lession Learned and Future Perspectives
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Virdis, Antonio, Vallati, Carlo, and Nardini, Giovanni
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Computer Science - Performance ,Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
Simulation is widely adopted in the study of modern computer networks. In this context, OMNeT++ provides a set of very effective tools that span from the definition of the network, to the automation of simulation execution and quick result representation. However, as network models become more and more complex to cope with the evolution of network systems, the amount of simulation factors, the number of simulated nodes and the size of results grow consequently, leading to simulations with larger scale. In this work, we perform a critical analysis of the tools provided by OMNeT++ in case of such large-scale simulations. We then propose a unified and flexible software architecture to support simulation automation., Comment: Published in: A. Foerster, V. Vesely, A. Virdis, M. Kirsche (Eds.), Proc. of the 3rd OMNeT++ Community Summit, Brno University of Technology - Czech Republic - September 15-16, 2016
- Published
- 2016
240. Natural Supersymmetry from Extra Dimensions
- Author
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Delgado, Antonio, Garcia-Pepin, Mateo, Nardini, Germano, and Quiros, Mariano
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
We show that natural supersymmetry can be embedded in a five-dimensional theory with supersymmetry breaking \`a la Scherk-Schwarz (SS). There is no 'gluino-sucks' problem for stops localized in the four-dimensional brane and gluinos propagating in the full five-dimensional bulk, and sub-TeV stops are easily accommodated. The $\mu / B_\mu$ problem is absent as well; the SS breaking generates a Higgsino Dirac mass and no bilinear Higgs mass parameter in the superpotential is required. Moreover, for non-maximal SS twists leading to $\tan \beta \simeq 1$, the Higgs spectrum is naturally split, in agreement with LHC data. The 125-GeV Higgs mass and radiative electroweak symmetry breaking can be accommodated by minimally extending the Higgs sector with $Y=0$ $SU(2)_L$ triplets., Comment: 34 pages, 12 figures; v2, matches PRD published version
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- 2016
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241. A deep X-ray view of the bare AGN Ark 120. I. Revealing the Soft X-ray Line Emission
- Author
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Reeves, James, Porquet, Delphine, Braito, Valentina, Nardini, Emanuele, Lobban, Andrew, and Turner, Jane
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Seyfert 1 galaxy, Ark 120, is a prototype example of the so-called class of bare nucleus AGN, whereby there is no known evidence for the presence of ionized gas along the direct line of sight. Here deep ($>400$ ks exposure), high resolution X-ray spectroscopy of Ark 120 is presented, from XMM-Newton observations which were carried out in March 2014, together with simultaneous Chandra/HETG exposures. The high resolution spectra confirmed the lack of intrinsic absorbing gas associated with Ark 120, with the only X-ray absorption present originating from the ISM of our own Galaxy, with a possible slight enhancement of the Oxygen abundance required with respect to the expected ISM values in the Solar neighbourhood. However, the presence of several soft X-ray emission lines are revealed for the first time in the XMM-Newton RGS spectrum, associated to the AGN and arising from the He and H-like ions of N, O, Ne and Mg. The He-like line profiles of N, O and Ne appear velocity broadened, with typical FWHM widths of $\sim5000$ km s$^{-1}$, whereas the H-like profiles are unresolved. From the clean measurement of the He-like triplets, we deduce that the broad lines arise from gas of density $n_{\rm e}\sim10^{11}$ cm$^{-3}$, while the photoionization calculations infer that the emitting gas covers at least 10 percent of $4\pi$ steradian. Thus the broad soft X-ray profiles appear coincident with an X-ray component of the optical-UV Broad Line Region on sub-pc scales, whereas the narrow profiles originate on larger pc scales, perhaps coincident with the AGN Narrow Line Region. The observations show that Ark 120 is not intrinsically bare and substantial X-ray emitting gas exists out of our direct line of sight towards this AGN., Comment: 42 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2016
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242. Physics at a 100 TeV pp collider: beyond the Standard Model phenomena
- Author
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Golling, T., Hance, M., Harris, P., Mangano, M. L., McCullough, M., Moortgat, F., Schwaller, P., Torre, R., Agrawal, P., Alves, D. S. M., Antusch, S., Arbey, A., Auerbach, B., Bambhaniya, G., Battaglia, M., Bauer, M., Dev, P. S. Bhupal, Boveia, A., Bramante, J., Buchmueller, O., Buschmann, M., Chakrabortty, J., Chala, M., Chekanov, S., Chen, C. -Y., Cheng, H. -C., Cirelli, M., Citron, M., Cohen, T., Craig, N., Curtin, D., D'Agnolo, R. T., Doglioni, C., Dror, J. A., Pree, T. du, Dylewsky, D., Ellis, J., Ellis, S. A. R., Essig, R., Fan, J. J., Farina, M., Feng, J. L., Fox, P. J., Galloway, J., Giudice, G., Gluza, J., Gori, S., Guha, S., Hahn, K., Han, T., Helsens, C., Henriques, A., Iwamoto, S., Jelinski, T., Jung, S., Kahlhoefer, F., Khoze, V. V., Kim, D., Kopp, J., Kotwal, A., Kraemer, M., Lindert, J. M., Liu, J., Lou, H. K., Love, J., Low, M., Machado, P. A. N., Mahmoudi, F., Marrouche, J., Martin, A., Mohan, K., Mohapatra, R. N., Nardini, G., Olive, K. A., Ostdiek, B., Panico, G., Plehn, T., Proudfoot, J., Qian, Z., Reece, M., Rizzo, T., Roskas, C., Ruderman, J., Ruiz, R., Sala, F., Salvioni, E., Saraswat, P., Schell, T., Schmidt-Hoberg, K., Serra, J., Shadmi, Y., Shelton, J., Solans, C., Spannowsky, M., Srivastava, T., Stolarski, D., Szafron, R., Taoso, M., Tarem, S., Thalapillil, A., Thamm, A., Tsai, Y., Verhaaren, C., Vignaroli, N., Walsh, J. R., Wang, L. T., Weiland, C., Wells, J., Williams, C., Wulzer, A., Xue, W., Yu, F., Zheng, B., and Zheng, J.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This report summarises the physics opportunities in the search and study of physics beyond the Standard Model at a 100 TeV pp collider., Comment: 196 pages, 114 figures. Chapter 3 of the "Physics at the FCC-hh" Report
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- 2016
243. A unified explanation for dark matter and electroweak baryogenesis with direct detection and gravitational wave signatures
- Author
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Chala, Mikael, Nardini, Germano, and Sobolev, Ivan
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
A minimal extension of the Standard Model that provides both a dark matter candidate and a strong first-order electroweak phase transition (EWPT) consists of two additional Lorentz and gauge singlets. In this paper we work out a composite Higgs version of this scenario, based on the coset $SO(7)/SO(6)$. We show that by embedding the elementary fermions in appropriate representations of $SO(7)$, all dominant interactions are described by only three free effective parameters. Within the model dependencies of the embedding, the theory predicts one of the singlets to be stable and responsible for the observed dark matter abundance. At the same time, the second singlet introduces new $CP$-violation phases and triggers a strong first-order EWPT, making electroweak baryogenesis feasible. It turns out that this scenario does not conflict with current observations and it is promising for solving the dark matter and baryon asymmetry puzzles. The tight predictions of the model will be accessible at the forthcoming dark matter direct detection and gravitational wave experiments., Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. V2: discussion on runaway condition clarified, refs added, typos fixed
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- 2016
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244. Sentiment-enhanced Multidimensional Analysis of Online Social Networks: Perception of the Mediterranean Refugees Crisis
- Author
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Coletto, Mauro, Lucchese, Claudio, Muntean, Cristina Ioana, Nardini, Franco Maria, Esuli, Andrea, Renso, Chiara, and Perego, Raffaele
- Subjects
Computer Science - Social and Information Networks - Abstract
We propose an analytical framework able to investigate discussions about polarized topics in online social networks from many different angles. The framework supports the analysis of social networks along several dimensions: time, space and sentiment. We show that the proposed analytical framework and the methodology can be used to mine knowledge about the perception of complex social phenomena. We selected the refugee crisis discussions over Twitter as the case study. This difficult and controversial topic is an increasingly important issue for the EU. The raw stream of tweets is enriched with space information (user and mentioned locations), and sentiment (positive vs. negative) w.r.t. refugees. Our study shows differences in positive and negative sentiment in EU countries, in particular in UK, and by matching events, locations and perception it underlines opinion dynamics and common prejudices regarding the refugees.
- Published
- 2016
245. Broadband short term variability of the quasar PDS 456
- Author
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Matzeu, G. A., Reeves, J. N., Nardini, E., Braito, V., Costa, M. T., Tombesi, F., and Gofford, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of a recent $500$ ks net exposure \textit{Suzaku} observation, carried out in 2013, of the nearby ($z=0.184$) luminous (L$_{\rm bol}\sim10^{47}$ erg s$^{-1}$) quasar PDS 456 in which the X-ray flux was unusually low. The short term X-ray spectral variability has been interpreted in terms of variable absorption and/or intrinsic continuum changes. In the former scenario, the spectral variability is due to variable covering factors of two regions of partially covering absorbers. We find that these absorbers are characterised by an outflow velocity comparable to that of the highly ionised wind, i.e. $\sim0.25$ c, at the $99.9\%$ $(3.26\sigma)$ confidence level. This suggests that the partially absorbing clouds may be the denser clumpy part of the inhomogeneous wind. Following an obscuration event we obtained a direct estimate of the size of the X-ray emitting region, to be not larger than $20~R_{\rm g}$ in PDS 456., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the 2015 XMM-Newton workshop: "The Extremes of Black Hole Accretion". Published in Astronomische Nachrichten/Astronomical Notes
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- 2016
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246. Discovery of Broad Soft X-ray Absorption Lines from the Quasar Wind in PDS 456
- Author
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Reeves, James, Braito, Valentina, Nardini, Emanuele, Behar, Ehud, O'Brien, Paul, Tombesi, Francesco, Turner, Tracey Jane, and Costa, Michele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
High resolution soft X-ray spectroscopy of the prototype accretion disk wind quasar, PDS 456, is presented. Here, the XMM-Newton RGS spectra are analyzed from the large 2013-2014 XMM-Newton campaign, consisting of 5 observations of approximately 100 ks in length. During the last observation (hereafter OBS. E), the quasar is at a minimum flux level and broad absorption line profiles are revealed in the soft X-ray band, with typical velocity widths of $\sigma_{\rm v}\sim 10,000$ km s$^{-1}$. During a period of higher flux in the 3rd and 4th observations (OBS. C and D, respectively), a very broad absorption trough is also present above 1 keV. From fitting the absorption lines with models of photoionized absorption spectra, the inferred outflow velocities lie in the range $\sim 0.1-0.2c$. The absorption lines likely originate from He and H-like neon and L-shell iron at these energies. Comparison with earlier archival data of PDS 456 also reveals similar absorption structure near 1 keV in a 40 ks observation in 2001, and generally the absorption lines appear most apparent when the spectrum is more absorbed overall. The presence of the soft X-ray broad absorption lines is also independently confirmed from an analysis of the XMM-Newton EPIC spectra below 2 keV. We suggest that the soft X-ray absorption profiles could be associated with a lower ionization and possibly clumpy phase of the accretion disk wind, where the latter is known to be present in this quasar from its well studied iron K absorption profile and where the wind velocity reaches a typical value of 0.3$c$., Comment: 44 pages, including 13 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2016
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247. How far from equilibrium is active matter?
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Fodor, Étienne, Nardini, Cesare, Cates, Mike E., Tailleur, Julien, Visco, Paolo, and van Wijland, Frédéric
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Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter - Abstract
Active matter systems are driven out of thermal equilibrium by a lack of generalized Stokes-Einstein relation between injection and dissipation of energy at the microscopic scale. We consider such a system of interacting particles, propelled by persistent noises, and show that, at small but finite persistence time, their dynamics still satisfy a time-reversal symmetry. To do so, we compute perturbatively their steady-state measure and show that, for short persistent times, the entropy production rate vanishes. This endows such systems with an effective Fluctuation-Dissipation theorem akin to that of thermal equilibrium systems. Last we show how interacting particle systems with viscous drags and correlated noises can be seen as in equilibrium with a visco-elastic bath but driven out of equilibrium by non-conservative forces, hence providing an energetic insight on the departure of active systems from equilibrium., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures
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- 2016
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248. Fluctuations of large-scale jets in the stochastic 2D Euler equation
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Nardini, Cesare and Tangarife, Tomás
- Subjects
Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics - Abstract
Two-dimensional turbulence in a rectangular domain self-organises into large-scale unidirectional jets. While several results are present to characterize the mean jets velocity profile, much less is known about the fluctuations. We study jets dynamics in the stochastically forced two-dimensional Euler equations. In the limit where the average jets velocity profile evolves slowly with respect to turbulent fluctuations, we employ a multi-scale (kinetic theory) approach, which relates jet dynamics to the statistics of Reynolds stresses. We study analytically the Gaussian fluctuations of Reynolds stresses and predict the spatial structure of the jets velocity covariance. Our results agree qualitatively well with direct numerical simulations, clearly showing that the jets velocity profile are enhanced away from the stationary points of the average velocity profile. A numerical test of our predictions at quantitative level seems out of reach at the present day.
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- 2016
249. Short term X-ray spectral variability of the quasar PDS 456 observed in a low flux state
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Matzeu, Gabriele A., Reeves, James N., Nardini, Emanuele, Braito, Valentina, Costa, Michele T, Tombesi, Francesco, and Gofford, Jason
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present an analysis of the 2013 Suzaku campaign on the nearby luminous quasar PDS 456, covering a total duration of ~1 Ms and a net exposure of 455 ks. During these observations, the X-ray flux was suppressed by a factor of >10 in the soft X-ray band when compared to other epochs. We investigated the broadband continuum by constructing a spectral energy distribution, making use of the optical/UV photometry and hard X-ray spectra from the later XMM-Newton/NuSTAR campaign in 2014. The high energy part of this low flux state cannot be accounted for by self-consistent accretion disc and corona models without attenuation by absorbing gas, which partially covers a substantial fraction of the line of sight towards the X-ray source. Two absorption layers are required, of column density $\log (N_{\rm{H,low}}/{\rm cm^{-2}})=22.3\pm0.1$ and $\log (N_{\rm{H,high}}/{\rm cm^{-2}})=23.2\pm0.1$, with average covering factors of ~80% (with typical 5% variations) and 60% ($\pm$10-15%), respectively. In these observations PDS 456 displays significant short term X-ray spectral variability, on timescales of ~100 ks, which can be accounted for by variable covering of the absorbing gas. The partial covering absorber prefers an outflow velocity of $v_{\rm pc} = 0.25^{+0.01}_{-0.05}c$ at the >99.9% confidence level over the case where $v_{\rm pc}=0$. This is consistent with the velocity of the highly ionised outflow responsible for the blueshifted iron K absorption profile. We therefore suggest that the partial covering clouds could be the denser, or clumpy part of an inhomogeneous accretion disc wind. Finally we estimate the size-scale of the X-ray source from its variability. The radial extent of the X-ray emitter is found to be of the order ~15-20 $R_{\rm g}$, although the hard X-ray (>2 keV) emission may originate from a more compact or patchy corona of hot electrons, which is ~6-8 $R_{\rm g}$ in size., Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2016
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250. Kinetic theory and quasilinear theories of jet dynamics
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Bouchet, F, Nardini, C, and Tangarife, T
- Subjects
Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
We review progress that has been made to constructa theory for the jet formation and maintenance in planetary atmospheres. The theory is built in the regime where velocityfluctuations around the base jet are very small compared to the zonaljet velocity itself. Such situations are frequent in many naturaljets, for instance in the atmosphere of outer planets, the most prominentexample being probably Jupiter's troposphere jets. As discussed inother chapters of this book, fluctuations close to Jupiter zonaljets are smaller than the zonal jets themselves. In such a regime, it is natural and often justified to treat the non-zonalpart of the dynamics with a quasi-linear approximation: at leadingorder the dynamics of the non-zonal flow is described by theequation linearized close to the quasi-stationary zonal jets. The theory, based on a multi-scale method called stochastic averaging, share similarities with Stochastic Structural Stability Theory (S3T) and with second order closure(CE2), also discussed in other chapters of the book.The aim of this contribution is to discuss the theoretical aspects of sucha quasilinear description of statistically stationary jets. The basicquestions are: when does such an approach is expected to be valid,why, what are the limitations and the expected errors done doing suchapproximations?, Comment: to appear as a chapter in "Zonal Jets" edited by B. Galperin and P. Read, Cambridge University Press
- Published
- 2016
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