14,867 results on '"A. Adriani"'
Search Results
2. The temporal variability of Io’s hotspots
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A. Mura, F. Zambon, F. Tosi, R. M. C. Lopes, J. Rathbun, M. Pettine, A. Adriani, F. Altieri, M. Ciarniello, A. Cicchetti, G. Filacchione, D. Grassi, R. Noschese, A. Migliorini, G. Piccioni, C. Plainaki, R. Sordini, G. Sindoni, and D. Turrini
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Io ,Galilean moons of Jupiter ,volcanism ,infrared-IR ,Juno ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
We investigate the variability of the power emission of Io’s hotspots by using recent Juno/JIRAM infrared observations. The Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) is an imaging spectrometer which began observing Jupiter in August 2016. Although observing Jupiter’s moons is not its primary objective, JIRAM can use the frequent opportunities to observe Io (up to once per orbit) to gather infrared images and spectra of its surface. The present study uses the data acquired by JIRAM during the last 2 years, including the location and morphology of Io’s hotspots, and the temporal variability of the total output. A new photometric model for the hotspots and the dayside surface has been developed, which permits us to disentangle the temporal variability from the changes in the observation geometry. While the latitudinal dependence of the power output is not well constrained, low-latitude hotspots show a significantly more intense temporal variability and greater temperature.
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- 2024
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3. Io Hot Spot Distribution Detected by Juno/JIRAM
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F. Zambon, A. Mura, R. M. C. Lopes, J. Rathbun, F. Tosi, R. Sordini, R. Noschese, M. Ciarniello, A. Cicchetti, A. Adriani, L. Agostini, G. Filacchione, D. Grassi, G. Piccioni, C. Plainaki, G. Sindoni, D. Turrini, S. Brooks, C. Hansen‐Koharcheck, and S. Bolton
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Io ,planetary volcanism ,hotspots ,remote sensing ,surfaces ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract In this work, we present the most updated catalog of Io hot spots based on Juno/JIRAM data. We find 242 hot spots, including 23 previously undetected. Over the half of the new hot spots identified, are located at high northern and southern latitudes (>70°). We observe a latitudinal variability and a larger concentration of hot spots in the polar regions, in particular in the North. The comparison between JIRAM and the most recent Io hot spot catalogs listing power output (Veeder et al., 2015, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2014.07.028; de Kleer, de Pater, et al., 2019, https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-3881/ab2380), shows JIRAM detected 63% and 88% of the total number of hot spots, respectively. Furthermore, JIRAM observed 16 of the 34 faint hot spots previously identified. JIRAM data revealed thermal emission from 5 dark pateræ inferred to be active from color ratio images, thus confirming that these are hot spots.
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- 2023
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4. Vertical and temporal H3+ structure at the auroral footprint of Io
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Mura, A., Moirano, A., Hue, V., Castagnoli, C., Migliorini, A., Altieri, A., Adriani, A., Cicchetti, A., Plainaki, C., Piccioni, G., Noschese, R., Sindoni, G., and Sordini, R.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the first observation of the vertical and temporal structure of the H3+ emission at the auroral footprint of Io, as observed by Juno/JIRAM. The brightness vertical profile shows a maximum at 600 km above 1 bar, with no apparent difference between the Main Alfv\'en Wing spot emission and the tail of the footprint. This observation is more compatible with a broadband energy distribution of the precipitating electrons, than a monoenergetic one. The temporal profile of H3+ column density has been observed after the passage of the MAW and shows a hyperbolic decrease. A model of H3+ decay is proposed, which takes into account the second-order kinetic of dissociative recombination of H3+ ions with electrons. The model is found to be in very good agreement with Juno observation. The conversion factor from radiance to column density has been derived, as well as the half-life for H3+, which is not constant but inversely proportional to the H3+ column density. This explains the wide range of H3+ lifetimes proposed before.
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- 2024
5. Widespread occurrence of lava lakes on Io observed from Juno
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Mura, Alessandro, Tosi, Federico, Zambon, Francesca, Lopes, Rosaly M. C., Mouginis-Mark, Pete J., Radebaugh, Jani, Adriani, Alberto, Bolton, Scott, Rathbun, Julie, Cicchetti, Andrea, Grassi, Davide, Noschese, Raffaella, Piccioni, Giuseppe, Plainaki, Christina, Sordini, Roberto, and Sindoni, Giuseppe
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report recent observations of lava lakes within patera on Io made by the JIRAM imager/spectrometer on board the Juno spacecraft, taken during close observation occurred in the extended mission. At least 40 lava lakes have been identified from JIRAM observations. The majority (>50%) of paterae have elevated thermal signatures when imaged at sufficiently high spatial resolution (a few km/pixel), implying that lava lakes are ubiquitous on Io. The annular width of the spattering region around the margins, a characteristic of lava lakes, is of the order of few meters to tens of meters, the diameter of the observed lava lakes ranges from 10 to 100 km. The thickness of the crust in the center of some lava lakes is of the order of 5-10 m; we estimate that this crust is a few years old. Also, the bulk of the thermal emission comes from the much larger crust and not from the smaller exposed lava, so the total power output cannot be calculated from the 5-um radiance alone. Eight of the proposed lava lakes have never been reported previously as active hotspots.
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- 2024
6. Performance assessment of the HERD calorimeter with a photo-diode read-out system for high-energy electron beams
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Adriani, O., Ambrosi, G., Antonelli, M., Bai, Y., Bai, X., Bao, T., Barbanera, M., Berti, E., Betti, P., Bigongiari, G., Bongi, M., Bonvicini, V., Bottai, S., Cagnoli, I., Cao, W., Casaus, J., Cerasole, D., Chen, Z., Cui, X., D'Alessandro, R., Di Venere, L., Diaz, C., Dong, Y., Detti, S., Duranti, M., Gargano, F., Gao, J., Guo, S., Giovacchini, F., Finetti, N., Formato, V., Jiang, Y., Liang, X., Li, R., Liao, C., Liu, X., Lyu, L., Marin, J., Martinez, G., Mori, N., Oliva, A., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Pillera, R., Pizzolotto, C., Quan, Z., Qin, J. J., Silveri, L., Silvestre, G., Shi, D., Serini, D., Starodubtsev, O., Tang, X., Tiberio, A., Vannuccini, E., Velasco, M., Wang, B., Wang, J., Wang, R., Wang, Z., Xu, M., Yang, X., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., Zhang, S., and Zheng, J.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The measurement of cosmic rays at energies exceeding 100 TeV per nucleon is crucial for enhancing the understanding of high-energy particle propagation and acceleration models in the Galaxy. HERD is a space-borne calorimetric experiment that aims to extend the current direct measurements of cosmic rays to unexplored energies. The payload is scheduled to be installed on the Chinese Space Station in 2027. The primary peculiarity of the instrument is its capability to measure particles coming from all directions, with the main detector being a deep, homogeneous, 3D calorimeter. The active elements are read out using two independent systems: one based on wavelength shifter fibers coupled to CMOS cameras, and the other based on photo-diodes read-out with custom front-end electronics. A large calorimeter prototype was tested in 2023 during an extensive beam test campaign at CERN. In this paper, the performance of the calorimeter for high-energy electron beams, as obtained from the photo-diode system data, is presented. The prototype demonstrated excellent performance, e.g., an energy resolution better than 1% for electrons at 250 GeV. A comparison between beam test data and Monte Carlo simulation data is also presented.
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- 2024
7. Block structured matrix-sequences and their spectral and singular value canonical distributions: a general theory
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Furci, Isabella, Adriani, Andrea, and Serra-Capizzano, Stefano
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,15A18, 34L20, 35P20, 15A69, 15B05 - Abstract
In recent years more and more involved block structures appeared in the literature in the context of numerical approximations of complex infinite dimensional operators modeling real-world applications. In various settings, thanks the theory of generalized locally Toeplitz matrix-sequences, the asymptotic distributional analysis is well understood, but a general theory is missing when general block structures are involved. The central part of the current work deals with such a delicate generalization when blocks are of (block) unilevel Toeplitz type, starting from a problem of recovery with missing data. Visualizations, numerical tests, and few open problems are presented and critically discussed.
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- 2024
8. Producing treatment hierarchies in network meta-analysis using probabilistic models and treatment-choice criteria
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Evrenoglou, Theodoros, Nikolakopoulou, Adriani, Schwarzer, Guido, Rücker, Gerta, and Chaimani, Anna
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Statistics - Methodology ,Statistics - Applications ,Statistics - Other Statistics - Abstract
A key output of network meta-analysis (NMA) is the relative ranking of the treatments; nevertheless, it has attracted a lot of criticism. This is mainly due to the fact that ranking is an influential output and prone to over-interpretations even when relative effects imply small differences between treatments. To date, common ranking methods rely on metrics that lack a straightforward interpretation, while it is still unclear how to measure their uncertainty. We introduce a novel framework for estimating treatment hierarchies in NMA. At first, we formulate a mathematical expression that defines a treatment choice criterion (TCC) based on clinically important values. This TCC is applied to the study treatment effects to generate paired data indicating treatment preferences or ties. Then, we synthesize the paired data across studies using an extension of the so-called "Bradley-Terry" model. We assign to each treatment a latent variable interpreted as the treatment "ability" and we estimate the ability parameters within a regression model. Higher ability estimates correspond to higher positions in the final ranking. We further extend our model to adjust for covariates that may affect treatment selection. We illustrate the proposed approach and compare it with alternatives in two datasets: a network comparing 18 antidepressants for major depression and a network comparing 6 antihypertensives for the incidence of diabetes. Our approach provides a robust and interpretable treatment hierarchy which accounts for clinically important values and is presented alongside with uncertainty measures. Overall, the proposed framework offers a novel approach for ranking in NMA based on concrete criteria and preserves from over-interpretation of unimportant differences between treatments.
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- 2024
9. Digestibility, Milk Yields, and Milk Quality of Ettawa Crossbred Goats Fed Coleus amboinicus L. Leaf Extract
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M. Afdal, D. Darlis, and A. Adriani
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Coleus amboinicus ,digestibility ,Ettawa crossbred ,milk yields ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
Coleus amboinicus L. leaf (CAL) could reduce the rate of amino acid deamination and protein degradation within the rumen. This phenomenon would hopefully increase the amount of protein that passes through the rumen to the abomasum. Therefore, it might improve the digestibility of the ration and then influence the milk yield and quality. The objective of this experiment was to evaluate the effect of extracted CAL within the ration on the ration digestibility, milk yield, and milk quality of Ettawa crossbred (EC) goats. This study used sixteen EC with an average weight of 32.25 ± 3.31 kg and aged 1.5–2.5 years. Experimental goats were fed diets with different CAL extracts: P0, 0% (control); P1, 2% powdered CAL; P2, 2% ethanol-extracted CAL; and P3, 2% water-extracted CAL. The experiment was conducted in a randomized block design with four replication blocks. All variables were statistically analyzed with ANOVA and significances were followed by Duncan’s test. P3 treatment significantly (p
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- 2021
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10. Can the a.c.s. notion and the GLT theory handle approximated PDEs/FDEs with either moving or unbounded domains?
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Adriani, Andrea, Schiavoni-Piazza, Alec Jacopo Almo, Serra-Capizzano, Stefano, and Tablino-Possio, Cristina
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis - Abstract
In the current note we consider matrix-sequences $\{B_{n,t}\}_n$ of increasing sizes depending on $n$ and equipped with a parameter $t>0$. For every fixed $t>0$, we assume that each $\{B_{n,t}\}_n$ possesses a canonical spectral/singular values symbol $f_t$ defined on $D_t\subset \R^{d}$ of finite measure, $d\ge 1$. Furthermore, we assume that $ \{ \{ B_{n,t}\} : \, t > 0 \} $ is an approximating class of sequences (a.c.s.) for $ \{ A_n \} $ and that $ \bigcup_{t > 0} D_t = D $ with $ D_{t + 1} \supset D_t $. Under such assumptions and via the notion of a.c.s, we prove results on the canonical distributions of $ \{ A_n \} $, whose symbol, when it exists, can be defined on the, possibly unbounded, domain $D$ of finite or even infinite measure. We then extend the concept of a.c.s. to the case where the approximating sequence $ \{ B_{n,t}\}_n $ has possibly a different dimension than the one of $ \{ A_n\} $. This concept seems to be particularly natural when dealing, e.g., with the approximation both of a partial differential equation (PDE) and of its (possibly unbounded, or moving) domain $D$, using an exhausting sequence of domains $\{ D_t \}$. Examples coming from approximated PDEs/FDEs with either moving or unbounded domains are presented in connection with the classical and the new notion of a.c.s., while numerical tests and a list of open questions conclude the present work., Comment: 57 pages, 64 figures
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- 2024
11. Are Dawn Storms Jupiter's Auroral Substorms?
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B. Bonfond, Z. H. Yao, G. R. Gladstone, D. Grodent, J.‐C. Gérard, J. Matar, B. Palmaerts, T. K. Greathouse, V. Hue, M. H. Versteeg, J. A. Kammer, R. S. Giles, C. Tao, M. F. Vogt, A. Mura, A. Adriani, B. H. Mauk, W. S. Kurth, and S. J. Bolton
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aurora ,dawn storms ,Juno ,Jupiter ,substorms ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 ,Geophysics. Cosmic physics ,QC801-809 - Abstract
Abstract Dawn storms are among the brightest events in the Jovian aurorae. Up to now, they had only been observed from Earth‐based observatories, only showing the Sun‐facing side of the planet. Here, we show for the first time global views of the phenomenon, from its initiation to its end and from the nightside of the aurora onto the dayside. Based on Juno's first 20 orbits, some patterns now emerge. Small short‐lived spots are often seen a couple of hours before the main emission starts to brighten and evolve from a straight arc to a more irregular one in the midnight sector. As the whole feature rotates dawn‐ward, the arc then separates into two arcs with a central initially void region that is progressively filled with emissions. A gap in longitude then often forms before the whole feature dims. Finally, it transforms into an equatorward‐moving patch of auroral emissions associated with plasma injection signatures. Some dawn storms remain weak and never fully develop. We also found cases of successive dawn storms within a few hours. Dawn storms thus share many fundamental features with the auroral signatures of the substorms at Earth, despite the substantial differences between the dynamics of the magnetosphere at the two planets.
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- 2021
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12. Development of protective egg yolk immunoglobulins (IgY) targeting CfaB, LTB, and EtpA recombinant proteins of Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) for inhibiting toxin activity and bacterial adherence
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Mafi, Maryam, Rezaei Adriani, Razieh, Mohammadkhani, Fatemeh, and Mousavi Gargari, Seyed Latif
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- 2024
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13. Asymptotic spectral properties and preconditioning of an approximated nonlocal Helmholtz equation with Caputo fractional Laplacian and variable coefficient wave number $\mu$
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Adriani, Andrea, Sormani, Rosita Luisa, Tablino-Possio, Cristina, Krause, Rolf, and Serra-Capizzano, Stefano
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,65F08, 35R11, 65N22, 15A18, 47B35 - Abstract
The current study investigates the asymptotic spectral properties of a finite difference approximation of nonlocal Helmholtz equations with a Caputo fractional Laplacian and a variable coefficient wave number $\mu$, as it occurs when considering a wave propagation in complex media, characterized by nonlocal interactions and spatially varying wave speeds. More specifically, by using tools from Toeplitz and generalized locally Toeplitz theory, the present research delves into the spectral analysis of nonpreconditioned and preconditioned matrix-sequences. We report numerical evidences supporting the theoretical findings. Finally, open problems and potential extensions in various directions are presented and briefly discussed., Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2206.05171 by other authors
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- 2024
14. Exploring new fuzzy fractional integral operators with applications over fuzzy number convex and harmonic convex mappings
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Shi, Xiangting, Ahmadi, Ahmad Aziz Al, David, Sergio Adriani, Khan, Muhammad Bilal, and HadiHakami, Khalil
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- 2024
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15. Direct Measurement of the Spectral Structure of Cosmic-Ray Electrons+Positrons in the TeV Region with CALET on the International Space Station
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., de Nolfo, G. A., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, 3 T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Detailed measurements of the spectral structure of cosmic-ray electrons and positrons from 10.6 GeV to 7.5 TeV are presented from over 7 years of observations with the CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) on the International Space Station. Because of the excellent energy resolution (a few percent above 10 GeV) and the outstanding e/p separation (10$^5$), CALET provides optimal performance for a detailed search of structures in the energy spectrum. The analysis uses data up to the end of 2022, and the statistics of observed electron candidates has increased more than 3 times since the last publication in 2018. By adopting an updated boosted decision tree analysis, a sufficient proton rejection power up to 7.5 TeV is achieved, with a residual proton contamination less than 10%. The observed energy spectrum becomes gradually harder in the lower energy region from around 30 GeV, consistently with AMS-02, but from 300 to 600 GeV it is considerably softer than the spectra measured by DAMPE and Fermi-LAT. At high energies, the spectrum presents a sharp break around 1 TeV, with a spectral index change from -3.15 to -3.91, and a broken power law fitting the data in the energy range from 30 GeV to 4.8 TeV better than a single power law with 6.9 sigma significance, which is compatible with the DAMPE results. The break is consistent with the expected effects of radiation loss during the propagation from distant sources (except the highest energy bin). We have fitted the spectrum with a model consistent with the positron flux measured by AMS-02 below 1 TeV and interpreted the electron + positron spectrum with possible contributions from pulsars and nearby sources. Above 4.8 TeV, a possible contribution from known nearby supernova remnants, including Vela, is addressed by an event-by-event analysis providing a higher proton-rejection power than a purely statistical analysis., Comment: main text: 7 pages, 4 figures; supplemental material: 10 pages, 8 figures, 1 table
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- 2023
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16. Measurement of the transverse single-spin asymmetry for forward neutron production in a wide $p_T$ range in polarized $p+p$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 510$ GeV
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Kim, M. H., Adriani, O., Berti, E., Bonechi, L., D'Alessandro, R., Goto, Y., Hong, B., Itow, Y., Kasahara, K., Kim, Y., Lee, J. H., Lee, S. H., Ljubicic, T., Menjo, H., Mitsuka, G., Nakagawa, I., Ogawa, A., Oh, S., Sako, T., Sakurai, N., Sato, K., Seidl, R., Tanida, K., Torii, S., and Tricomi, A.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Transverse single-spin asymmetries $A_{\textrm{N}}$ of forward neutrons at pseudorapidities larger than 6 had only been studied in the transverse momentum range of $p_{\textrm{T}} < 0.4$ GeV/$c$. The RHICf Collaboration has extended the previous measurements up to 1.0 GeV/$c$ in polarized $p+p$ collisions at $\sqrt{s}~=~510$GeV, using an electromagnetic calorimeter installed in the zero-degree area of the STAR detector at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider. The resulting $A_{\textrm{N}}$s increase in magnitude with $p_{\textrm{T}}$ in the high longitudinal momentum fraction $x_{\textrm{F}}$ range, but reach a plateau at lower $p_{\textrm{T}}$ for lower $x_{\textrm{F}}$. For low transverse momenta the $A_{\textrm{N}}$s show little $x_{\textrm{F}}$ dependence and level off from intermediate values. For higher transverse momenta the $A_{\textrm{N}}$s show also an indication to reach a plateau at increased magnitudes. The results are consistent with previous measurements at lower collision energies, suggesting no $\sqrt{s}$ dependence of the neutron asymmetries. A theoretical model based on the interference of $\pi$ and $a_1$ exchange between two protons could partially reproduce the current results, however an additional mechanism is necessary to describe the neutron $A_{\textrm{N}}$s over the whole kinematic region measured., Comment: Submitted to PRD
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- 2023
17. Shortest path or random walks? A framework for path weights in network meta-analysis
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Rücker, Gerta, Papakonstantinou, Theodoros, Nikolakopoulou, Adriani, Schwarzer, Guido, Galla, Tobias, and Davies, Annabel L.
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Physics - Physics and Society ,Statistics - Methodology - Abstract
Quantifying the contributions, or weights, of comparisons or single studies to the estimates in a network meta-analysis (NMA) is an active area of research. We extend this to the contributions of paths to NMA estimates. We present a general framework, based on the path-design matrix, that describes the problem of finding path contributions as a linear equation. The resulting solutions may have negative coefficients. We show that two known approaches, called shortestpath and randomwalk, are special solutions of this equation, and both meet an optimization criterion, as they minimize the sum of absolute path contributions. In general, there is an infinite space of solutions, which can be identified using the generalized inverse (Moore-Penrose pseudoinverse). We consider two further special approaches. For complex networks we find that shortestpath is superior with respect to run time and variability, compared to the other approaches, and is thus recommended in practice. The path-weights framework also has the potential to answer more general research questions in network meta-analysis., Comment: Preprint, 17 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to Statistics in Medicine
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- 2023
18. Hot rings on Io observed by Juno/JIRAM
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Mura, Alessandro, Tosi, Federico, Zambon, Francesca, Lopes, Rosaly M. C., Mouginis-Mark, Peter J., Becker, Heidi, Filacchione, Gianrico, Migliorini, Alessandra, Hansen, Candice. J., Adriani, Alberto, Altieri, Francesca, Bolton, Scott, Cicchetti, Andrea, Di Mico, Elisa, Grassi, Davide, Noschese, Raffaella, Moirano, Alessandro, Pettine, Madeline, Piccioni, Giuseppe, Plainaki, Christina, Rathbun, Julie, Sordini, Roberto, and Sindoni, Giuseppe
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- 2024
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19. Biochemical characterization of an esterase from Thermobifida fusca YX with acetyl xylan esterase activity
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da Silva, Adriana S., Adriani, Patricia P., de Oliveira, Gabriel S., Rocha, Adriana Rios Lopes, Perpétuo, Elen A., Dias, Marcio V. B., and Chambergo, Felipe S.
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- 2024
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20. Non-violent communication as a technology in interpersonal relationships in health work: a scoping review
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Adriani, Paula Arquioli, Hino, Paula, Taminato, Mônica, Okuno, Meiry Fernanda Pinto, Santos, Odilon Vieira, and Fernandes, Hugo
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- 2024
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21. Selective alterations of endocannabinoid system genes expression in obsessive compulsive disorder
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Bellia, Fabio, Girella, Antonio, Annunzi, Eugenia, Benatti, Beatrice, Vismara, Matteo, Priori, Alberto, Festucci, Fabiana, Fanti, Federico, Compagnone, Dario, Adriani, Walter, Dell’Osso, Bernardo, and D’Addario, Claudio
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- 2024
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22. Evaluating agreement between evidence from randomised controlled trials and cohort studies in nutrition: a meta-research replication study
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Stadelmaier, Julia, Beyerbach, Jessica, Roux, Isabelle, Harms, Louisa, Eble, Julian, Nikolakopoulou, Adriani, and Schwingshackl, Lukas
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- 2024
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23. Emerging progressive atypical acute kidney injury in young children linked to ethylene glycol and diethylene glycol intoxication
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Hidayati, Eka Laksmi, Fahlevi, Reza, Puspitasari, Henny Adriani, Tartila, Puspaningtyas, Niken Wahyu, Primacakti, Fitri, Saraswati, Meilania, Miranda, Monik Ediana, Prawira, Yogi, Prayitno, Ari, Pardede, Sudung Oloan, and Putri, Nina Dwi
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- 2024
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24. Charge-Sign Dependent Cosmic-Ray Modulation Observed with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., de Nolfo, G. A., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the observation of a charge-sign dependent solar modulation of galactic cosmic rays (GCRs) with the CALorimetric Electron Telescope onboard the International Space Station over 6 yr, corresponding to the positive polarity of the solar magnetic field. The observed variation of proton count rate is consistent with the neutron monitor count rate, validating our methods for determining the proton count rate. It is observed by the CALorimetric Electron Telescope that both GCR electron and proton count rates at the same average rigidity vary in anticorrelation with the tilt angle of the heliospheric current sheet, while the amplitude of the variation is significantly larger in the electron count rate than in the proton count rate. We show that this observed charge-sign dependence is reproduced by a numerical ``drift model'' of the GCR transport in the heliosphere. This is a clear signature of the drift effect on the long-term solar modulation observed with a single detector., Comment: main text: 6 pages, 3 figures, supplemental material: 8 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2023
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25. Measurement of the forward $\eta$ meson production rate in p-p collisions at $\sqrt{s}$=13 TeV with the LHCf-Arm2 detector
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Piparo, Giuseppe, Adriani, Oscar, Berti, Eugenio, Betti, Pietro, Bonechi, Lorenzo, Bongi, Massimo, D'Alessandro, Raffaello, Detti, Sebastiano, Haguenauer, Maurice, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kasahara, Katsuaki, Kitagami, Yuga, Kondo, Moe, Matsubara, Yutaka, Menjo, Hiroaki, Muraki, Yasushi, Ohashi, Ken, Papini, Paolo, Ricciarini, Sergio, Sako, Takashi, Sakurai, Nobuyuki, Scaringella, Monica, Shimizu, Yuki, Tamura, Tadashi, Tiberio, Alessio, Torii, Shoji, Tricomi, Alessia, Turner, William C., and Yoshida, Kenji
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The forward $\eta$ mesons production has been observed by the Large Hadron Collider forward (LHCf) experiment in proton-proton collision at $\sqrt{s}$=13 TeV. This paper presents the measurement of the inclusive production rate of $\eta$ in $p_T<$ 1.1 GeV/c, expressed as a function of the Feynman-x variable. These results are compared with the predictions of several hadronic interaction models commonly used for the modelling of the air showers produced by ultra-high energy cosmic rays. This is both the first measurement of $\eta$ mesons from LHCf and the first time a particle containing strange quarks has been observed in the forward region for high-energy collisions. These results will provide a powerful constraint on hadronic interaction models for the purpose of improving the understanding of the processes underlying the air showers produced in the Earth's atmosphere by ultra-energetic cosmic rays., Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables
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- 2023
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26. The $ L^1 $-Liouville property on graphs
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Adriani, Andrea and Setti, Alberto G.
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Mathematics - Differential Geometry ,Mathematics - Probability - Abstract
In this paper we investigate the $ L^1 $-Liouville property, underlining its connection with stochastic completeness and other structural features of the graph. We give a characterization of the $ L^1 $-Liouville property in terms of the Green function of the graph and use it to prove its equivalence with stochastic completeness on model graphs. Moreover, we show that there exist stochastically incomplete graphs which satisfy the $ L^1 $-Liouville property and prove some comparison theorems for general graphs based on inner-outer curvatures. We also introduce the Dirichlet $L^1$-Liouville property of subgraphs and prove that if a graph has a Dirichlet $L^1$-Liouville subgraph, then it is $L^1$-Liouville itself. As a consequence, we obtain that the $ L^1$-Liouville property is not affected by a finite perturbation of the graph and, just as in the continuous setting, a graph is $ L^1$-Liouville provided that at least one of its ends is Dirichlet $ L^1$-Liouville.
- Published
- 2023
27. Direct Measurement of the Cosmic-Ray Helium Spectrum from 40 GeV to 250 TeV with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., de Nolfo, G. A., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the results of a direct measurement of the cosmic-ray helium spectrum with the CALET instrument in operation on the International Space Station since 2015. The observation period covered by this analysis spans from October 13, 2015 to April 30, 2022 (2392 days). The very wide dynamic range of CALET allowed to collect helium data over a large energy interval, from ~40 GeV to ~250 TeV, for the first time with a single instrument in Low Earth Orbit. The measured spectrum shows evidence of a deviation of the flux from a single power-law by more than 8$\sigma$ with a progressive spectral hardening from a few hundred GeV to a few tens of TeV. This result is consistent with the data reported by space instruments including PAMELA, AMS-02, DAMPE and balloon instruments including CREAM. At higher energy we report the onset of a softening of the helium spectrum around 30 TeV (total kinetic energy). Though affected by large uncertainties in the highest energy bins, the observation of a flux reduction turns out to be consistent with the most recent results of DAMPE. A Double Broken Power Law (DBPL) is found to fit simultaneously both spectral features: the hardening (at lower energy) and the softening (at higher energy). A measurement of the proton to helium flux ratio in the energy range from 60 GeV/n to about 60 TeV/n is also presented, using the CALET proton flux recently updated with higher statistics.
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- 2023
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28. The methodological influence of European private international law on domestic legal systems: a downstream analysis
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Dori, Adriani, primary
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- 2024
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29. A DIABETES MELLITUS GESTACIONAL COMO UM DESAFIO DE SAÚDE ATUAL
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MIORANZA BIF, SUZANA, primary, EVANGELINE PASTER TEIXEIRA SILVÉRIO, ZENIR, additional, PICHEK DOS SANTOS, HIGOR, additional, MOURA LIMA GOMES, BEATRIZ, additional, GIONGO DA SILVA, GRAZIELA, additional, DENIZE LELO SANTIAGO NETTA, MARIA, additional, BEGA PEIXE, JULINÊS, additional, SANTOS BUSSOLA, AMANDA, additional, JÚLIA OMODEI RODRIGUES MARTIM, ANA, additional, FRANCISCO DE OLIVEIRA SILVEIRA JUNIOR, EDSON, additional, PAULA MARQUETTI, CAROLINE, additional, and CASTRO DE LIMA, ADRIANI, additional
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- 2024
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30. Cosmic-ray Boron Flux Measured from 8.4 GeV$/n$ to 3.8 TeV$/n$ with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., de Nolfo, G. A., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the measurement of the energy dependence of the boron flux in cosmic rays and its ratio to the carbon flux \textcolor{black}{in an energy interval from 8.4 GeV$/n$ to 3.8 TeV$/n$} based on the data collected by the CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) during $\sim 6.4$ years of operation on the International Space Station. An update of the energy spectrum of carbon is also presented with an increase in statistics over our previous measurement. The observed boron flux shows a spectral hardening at the same transition energy $E_0 \sim 200$ GeV$/n$ of the C spectrum, though B and C fluxes have different energy dependences. The spectral index of the B spectrum is found to be $\gamma = -3.047\pm0.024$ in the interval $25 < E < 200$ GeV$/n$. The B spectrum hardens by $\Delta \gamma_B=0.25\pm0.12$, while the best fit value for the spectral variation of C is $\Delta \gamma_C=0.19\pm0.03$. The B/C flux ratio is compatible with a hardening of $0.09\pm0.05$, though a single power-law energy dependence cannot be ruled out given the current statistical uncertainties. A break in the B/C ratio energy dependence would support the recent AMS-02 observations that secondary cosmic rays exhibit a stronger hardening than primary ones. We also perform a fit to the B/C ratio with a leaky-box model of the cosmic-ray propagation in the Galaxy in order to probe a possible residual value $\lambda_0$ of the mean escape path length $\lambda$ at high energy. We find that our B/C data are compatible with a non-zero value of $\lambda_0$, which can be interpreted as the column density of matter that cosmic rays cross within the acceleration region., Comment: main text: 7 pages, 3 figures; supplemental material: 13 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables
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- 2022
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31. Consortium probiotic fermented milk using Bifidobacterium sp. and Lactobacillus acidophilus protects against Salmonella typhimurium and repairs the intestine
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Adriani, Lovita, Latipudin, Diding, Mayasari, Novi, Mushawwir, Andi, Kumalasari, Chitra, and Nabila, Tissiana Irca
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- 2024
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32. Efforts to Prevent Leakage of Cargo Pipes on MT. Anggraini Excellent
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Casmudi, Adi, Setiawan, Bambang, Latuheru, Paulina M., Djari, Janny adriani, Treevansyah, Mayo, Chan, Albert P. C., Series Editor, Hong, Wei-Chiang, Series Editor, Mellal, Mohamed Arezki, Series Editor, Narayanan, Ramadas, Series Editor, Nguyen, Quang Ngoc, Series Editor, Ong, Hwai Chyuan, Series Editor, Sachsenmeier, Peter, Series Editor, Sun, Zaicheng, Series Editor, Ullah, Sharif, Series Editor, Wu, Junwei, Series Editor, Zhang, Wei, Series Editor, Latuheru, Paulina M., editor, Sidharta, Driaskoro Budi, editor, Setiawan, Bambang, editor, Utami, Fisca Dian, editor, Firzatullah, Raden M., editor, and Amrillah, Muhammad Fahmi, editor
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- 2024
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33. Analysis of the Effect of Entrepreneurial Self-Efficacy and Entrepreneurial Education on Social Entrepreneurial Intention
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Permana, Intan, Adiansyah, Adi, Safari, Shabina Meisya Adriani, Hamdani, Nizar Alam, Appolloni, Andrea, Series Editor, Caracciolo, Francesco, Series Editor, Ding, Zhuoqi, Series Editor, Gogas, Periklis, Series Editor, Huang, Gordon, Series Editor, Nartea, Gilbert, Series Editor, Ngo, Thanh, Series Editor, Striełkowski, Wadim, Series Editor, Hurriyati, Ratih, editor, Wibowo, Lili Adi, editor, Sulastri, Sulastri, editor, and Lisnawati, Lisnawati, editor
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- 2024
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34. Graphene-Based Electrocatalysts
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Adriani, Touba Rezaee, Ensafi, Ali A., and Gupta, Ram K., editor
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- 2024
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35. Mapping Research Trends of Library and Information Science in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand
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Mirmani, Anon, Salim, Tamara Adriani, Wijayanti, Luki, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nagar, Atulya K., editor, Jat, Dharm Singh, editor, Mishra, Durgesh, editor, and Joshi, Amit, editor
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- 2024
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36. Observation of Spectral Structures in the Flux of Cosmic-Ray Protons from 50 GeV to 60 TeV with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope on the International Space Station
- Author
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., de Nolfo, G. A., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
A precise measurement of the cosmic-ray proton spectrum with the Calorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) is presented in the energy interval from 50 GeV to 60 TeV, and the observation of a softening of the spectrum above 10 TeV is reported. The analysis is based on the data collected during $\sim$6.2 years of smooth operations aboard the International Space Station and covers a broader energy range with respect to the previous proton flux measurement by CALET, with an increase of the available statistics by a factor of $\sim$2.2. Above a few hundred GeV we confirm our previous observation of a progressive spectral hardening with a higher significance (more than 20 sigma). In the multi-TeV region we observe a second spectral feature with a softening around 10 TeV and a spectral index change from =2.6 to -2.9 consistently, within the errors, with the shape of the spectrum reported by DAMPE. We apply a simultaneous fit of the proton differential spectrum which well reproduces the gradual change of the spectral index encompassing the lower energy power-law regime and the two spectral features observed at higher energies., Comment: main text: 8 pages, 5 figures, supplemental material: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, marked as a PRL Editor's Suggestion
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- 2022
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- View/download PDF
37. Morphology of the tropopause layer and lower stratosphere above a tropical cyclone: a case study on cyclone Davina (1999)
- Author
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F. Cairo, C. Buontempo, A. R. MacKenzie, C. Schiller, C. M. Volk, A. Adriani, V. Mitev, R. Matthey, G. Di Donfrancesco, A. Oulanovsky, F. Ravegnani, V. Yushkov, M. Snels, C. Cagnazzo, and L. Stefanutti
- Subjects
Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
During the APE-THESEO mission in the Indian Ocean the Myasishchev Design Bureau stratospheric research aircraft M55 Geophysica performed a flight over and within the inner core region of tropical cyclone Davina. Measurements of total water, water vapour, temperature, aerosol backscattering, ozone and tracers were made and are discussed here in comparison with the averages of those quantities acquired during the campaign time frame. Temperature anomalies in the tropical tropopause layer (TTL), warmer than average in the lower part and colder than average in the upper TTL were observed. Ozone was strongly reduced compared to its average value, and thick cirrus decks were present up to the cold point, sometimes topped by a layer of very dry air. Evidence for meridional transport of trace gases in the stratosphere above the cyclone was observed and perturbed water distribution in the TTL was documented. The paper discuss possible processes of dehydration induced by the cirrus forming above the cyclone, and change in the chemical tracer and water distribution in the lower stratosphere 400–430 K due to meridional transport from the mid-latitudes and link with Davina. Moreover it compares the data prior and after the cyclone passage to discuss its actual impact on the atmospheric chemistry and thermodynamics.
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- 2008
38. Salts and organics on Ganymede’s surface observed by the JIRAM spectrometer onboard Juno
- Author
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Tosi, Federico, Mura, Alessandro, Cofano, Alessandra, Zambon, Francesca, Glein, Christopher R., Ciarniello, Mauro, Lunine, Jonathan I., Piccioni, Giuseppe, Plainaki, Christina, Sordini, Roberto, Adriani, Alberto, Bolton, Scott J., Hansen, Candice J., Nordheim, Tom A., Moirano, Alessandro, Agostini, Livio, Altieri, Francesca, Brooks, Shawn M., Cicchetti, Andrea, Dinelli, Bianca Maria, Grassi, Davide, Migliorini, Alessandra, Moriconi, Maria Luisa, Noschese, Raffaella, Scarica, Pietro, Sindoni, Giuseppe, Stefani, Stefania, and Turrini, Diego
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- 2024
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39. Composition analysis of liquid particles in the Arctic stratosphere under synoptic conditions
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C. Weisser, K. Mauersberger, J. Schreiner, N. Larsen, F. Cairo, A. Adriani, J. Ovarlez, and T. Deshler
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Synoptic scale polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) that formed without the presence of mountain lee waves were observed in early December 2002 from Kiruna/Sweden using balloon-borne instruments. The physical, chemical, and optical properties of the particles were measured. Within the PSC solid particles existed whenever the temperature was below the equilibrium temperature for nitric acid trihydrate and liquid particles appeared when the temperature fell below an even lower threshold about 3 K above the frost point with solid particles still present. The correlation of liquid supercooled ternary solution aerosols with local temperatures is a pronounced feature observed during this flight; average molar ratios H2O/HNO3 were somewhat higher than predicted by models. In addition HCl has been measured for the first time in liquid aerosols. The chlorine isotope signature served as a unique tool to identify unambiguously HCl dissolved in STS particles. Within a narrow temperature range of about three degrees above the frost point, the measured average amount of HCl in liquid particles is below 1 weight%.
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- 2006
40. Differences in Arctic and Antarctic PSC occurrence as observed by lidar in Ny-Ålesund (79° N, 12° E) and McMurdo (78° S, 167° E)
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M. Maturilli, R. Neuber, P. Massoli, F. Cairo, A. Adriani, M. L. Moriconi, and G. Di Donfrancesco
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
The extent of springtime Arctic ozone loss does not reach Antarctic ``ozone hole'' dimensions because of the generally higher temperatures in the northern hemisphere vortex and consequent less polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) particle surface for heterogeneous chlorine activation. Yet, with increasing greenhouse gases stratospheric temperatures are expected to further decrease. To infer if present Antarctic PSC occurrence can be applied to predict future Arctic PSC occurrence, lidar observations from McMurdo station (78° S, 167° E) and NyÅlesund (79° N, 12° E) have been analysed for the 9 winters between 1995 (1995/1996) and 2003 (2003/2004). Although the statistics may not completely cover the overall hemispheric PSC occurrence, the observations are considered to represent the main synoptic cloud features as both stations are mostly situated in the centre or at the inner edge of the vortex. Since the focus is set on the occurrence frequency of solid and liquid particles, the analysis has been restricted to volcanic aerosol free conditions. In McMurdo, by far the largest part of PSC observations is associated with NAT PSCs. The observed persistent background of NAT particles and their potential ability to cause denoxification and irreversible denitrification is presumably more important to Antarctic ozone chemistry than the scarcely observed ice PSCs. Meanwhile in Ny-Ålesund, ice PSCs have never been observed, while solid NAT and liquid STS clouds both occur in large fraction. Although they are also found solely, the majority of observations reveals solid and liquid particle layers in the same profile. For the Ny-Ålesund measurements, the frequent occurrence of liquid PSC particles yields major significance in terms of ozone chemistry, as their chlorine activation rates are more efficient. The relationship between temperature, PSC formation, and denitrification is nonlinear and the McMurdo and Ny-Ålesund PSC observations imply that for predicted stratospheric cooling it is not possible to directly apply current Antarctic PSC occurrence to the Arctic stratosphere. Future Arctic PSC occurrence, and thus ozone loss, is likely to depend on the shape and barotropy of the vortex rather than on minimum temperature alone.
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- 2005
41. Development of the photo-diode subsystem for the HERD calorimeter double-readout
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Adriani, O., Antonelli, M., Basti, A., Berti, E., Betti, P., Bigongiari, G., Bonechi, L., Bongi, M., Bonvicini, V., Bottai, S., Brogi, P., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Casaus, J., Cui, X., Dong, Y., D'Alessandro, R., Detti, S., Giovacchini, F., Finetti, N., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Liu, X., Marin, J., Martinez, G., Mori, N., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Pizzolotto, C., Ricciarini, S., Spillantini, P., Starodubtsev, O., Stiaccini, L., Tang, Z., Tiberio, A., Vannuccini, E., Velasco, M., Wang, R., Wang, Z., Xu, M., Zampa, G., Zampa, N., and Zhang, L.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The measurement of cosmic-ray individual spectra provides unique information regarding the origin and propagation of astro-particles. Due to the limited acceptance of current space experiments, protons and nuclei around the "knee" region ($\sim1\ PeV$) can only be observed by ground based experiments. Thanks to an innovative design, the High Energy cosmic-Radiation Detection (HERD) facility will allow direct observation up to this energy region: the instrument is mainly based on a 3D segmented, isotropic and homogeneous calorimeter which properly measures the energy of particles coming from each direction and it will be made of about 7500 LYSO cubic crystals. The read-out of the scintillation light is done with two independent systems: the first one based on wave-length shifting fibers coupled to Intensified scientific CMOS cameras, the second one is made of two photo-diodes with different active areas connected to a custom front-end electronics. This photo-diode system is designed to achieve a huge dynamic range, larger than $10^7$, while having a small power consumption, few mW per channel. Thanks to a good signal-to-noise ratio, the capability of a proper calibration, by using signals of both non-interacting and showering particles, is also guaranteed. In this paper, the current design and the performance obtained by several tests of the photo-diode read-out system are discussed.
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- 2022
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42. Light yield non-proportionality of inorganic crystals and its effect on cosmic-ray measurements
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Adriani, O., Berti, E., Betti, P., Bigongiari, G., Bonechi, L., Bongi, M., Bottai, S., Brogi, P., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Alessandro, R. D, Detti, S., Finetti, N., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Mori, N., Olmi, M., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Poggiali, C., Ricciarini, S., Spillantini, P., Starodubtsev, O., Stolzi, F., Tiberio, A., and Vannuccini, E.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The multi-TeV energy region of the cosmic-ray spectra has been recently explored by direct detection experiments that used calorimetric techniques to measure the energy of the cosmic particles. Interesting spectral features have been observed in both all-electron and nuclei spectra. However, the interpretation of the results is compromised by the disagreements between the data obtained from the various experiments, that are not reconcilable with the quoted experimental uncertainties. Understanding the reason for the discrepancy among the measurements is of fundamental importance in view of the forthcoming high-energy cosmic-ray experiments planned for space, as well as for the correct interpretation of the available results. The purpose of this work is to investigate the possibility that a systematic effect may derive from the non-proportionality of the light response of inorganic crystals, typically used in high-energy calorimetry due to their excellent energy-resolution performance. The main reason for the non-proportionality of the crystals is that scintillation light yield depends on ionisation density. Experimental data obtained with ion beams were used to characterize the light response of various scintillator materials. The obtained luminous efficiencies were used as input of a Monte Carlo simulation to perform a comparative study of the effect of the light-yield non-proportionality on the detection of high-energy electromagnetic and hadronic showers. The result of this study indicates that, if the calorimeter response is calibrated by using the energy deposit of minimum ionizing particles, the measured shower energy might be affected by a significant systematic shift, at the level of few percent, whose sign and magnitude depend specifically on the type of scintillator material used., Comment: to be published in JINST
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- 2022
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43. CALET Search for electromagnetic counterparts of gravitational waves during the LIGO/Virgo O3 run
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., de Nolfo, G. A., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ospina, N., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) on the International Space Station (ISS) consists of a high-energy cosmic ray CALorimeter (CAL) and a lower-energy CALET Gamma ray Burst Monitor (CGBM). CAL is sensitive to electrons up to 20 TeV, cosmic ray nuclei from Z = 1 through Z $\sim$ 40, and gamma rays over the range 1 GeV - 10 TeV. CGBM observes gamma rays from 7 keV to 20 MeV. The combined CAL-CGBM instrument has conducted a search for gamma ray bursts (GRBs) since Oct. 2015. We report here on the results of a search for X-ray/gamma ray counterparts to gravitational wave events reported during the LIGO/Virgo observing run O3. No events have been detected that pass all acceptance criteria. We describe the components, performance, and triggering algorithms of the CGBM - the two Hard X-ray Monitors (HXM) consisting of LaBr$_{3}$(Ce) scintillators sensitive to 7 keV to 1 MeV gamma rays and a Soft Gamma ray Monitor (SGM) BGO scintillator sensitive to 40 keV to 20 MeV - and the high-energy CAL consisting of a CHarge-Detection module (CHD), IMaging Calorimeter (IMC), and fully active Total Absorption Calorimeter (TASC). The analysis procedure is described and upper limits to the time-averaged fluxes are presented., Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2022
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44. Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs): II. Stabilization mechanisms
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B. P. Luo, Th. Peter, H. Wernli, S. Fueglistaler, M. Wirth, C. Kiemle, H. Flentje, V. A. Yushkov, V. Khattatov, V. Rudakov, A. Thomas, S. Borrmann, G. Toci, P. Mazzinghi, J. Beuermann, C. Schiller, F. Cairo, G. Di Don-Francesco, A. Adriani, C. M. Volk, J. Strom, K. Noone, V. Mitev, R. A. MacKenzie, K. S. Carslaw, T. Trautmann, V. Santacesaria, and L. Stefanutti
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Mechanisms by which subvisible cirrus clouds (SVCs) might contribute to dehydration close to the tropical tropopause are not well understood. Recently Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs) with optical depths around 10-4 have been detected in the western Indian ocean. These clouds cover thousands of square kilometers as 200-300 m thick distinct and homogeneous layer just below the tropical tropopause. In their condensed phase UTTCs contain only 1-5% of the total water, and essentially no nitric acid. A new cloud stabilization mechanism is required to explain this small fraction of the condensed water content in the clouds and their small vertical thickness. This work suggests a mechanism, which forces the particles into a thin layer, based on upwelling of the air of some mm/s to balance the ice particles, supersaturation with respect to ice above and subsaturation below the UTTC. In situ measurements suggest that these requirements are fulfilled. The basic physical properties of this mechanism are explored by means of a single particle model. Comprehensive 1-D cloud simulations demonstrate this stabilization mechanism to be robust against rapid temperature fluctuations of +/- 0.5 K. However, rapid warming (Delta T > 2 K) leads to evaporation of the UTTC, while rapid cooling (Delta T < -2 K) leads to destabilization of the particles with the potential for significant dehydration below the cloud
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- 2003
45. Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs): I. Cloud morphology and occurrence
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Th. Peter, B. P. Luo, M. Wirth, C. Kiemle, H. Flentje, V. A. Yushkov, V. Khattatov, V. Rudakov, A. Thomas, S. Borrmann, G. Toci, P. Mazzinghi, J. Beuermann, C. Schiller, F. Cairo, G. Di Donfrancesco, A. Adriani, C. M. Volk, J. Strom, K. Noone, V. Mitev, R. A. MacKenzie, K. S. Carslaw, T. Trautmann, V. Santacesaria, and L. Stefanutti
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Subvisible cirrus clouds (SVCs) may contribute to dehydration close to the tropical tropopause. The higher and colder SVCs and the larger their ice crystals, the more likely they represent the last efficient point of contact of the gas phase with the ice phase and, hence, the last dehydrating step, before the air enters the stratosphere. The first simultaneous in situ and remote sensing measurements of SVCs were taken during the APE-THESEO campaign in the western Indian ocean in February/March 1999. The observed clouds, termed Ultrathin Tropical Tropopause Clouds (UTTCs), belong to the geometrically and optically thinnest large-scale clouds in the Earth's atmosphere. Individual UTTCs may exist for many hours as an only 200--300 m thick cloud layer just a few hundred meters below the tropical cold point tropopause, covering up to 105 km2. With temperatures as low as 181 K these clouds are prime representatives for defining the water mixing ratio of air entering the lower stratosphere.
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- 2003
46. Moons and Jupiter Imaging Spectrometer (MAJIS) on Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE)
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Poulet, F., Piccioni, G., Langevin, Y., Dumesnil, C., Tommasi, L., Carlier, V., Filacchione, G., Amoroso, M., Arondel, A., D’Aversa, E., Barbis, A., Bini, A., Bolsée, D., Bousquet, P., Caprini, C., Carter, J., Dubois, J.-P., Condamin, M., Couturier, S., Dassas, K., Dexet, M., Fletcher, L., Grassi, D., Guerri, I., Haffoud, P., Larigauderie, C., Le Du, M., Mugnuolo, R., Pilato, G., Rossi, M., Stefani, S., Tosi, F., Vincendon, M., Zambelli, M., Arnold, G., Bibring, J.-P., Biondi, D., Boccaccini, A., Brunetto, R., Carapelle, A., Cisneros González, M., Hannou, C., Karatekin, O., Le Cle’ch, J.-C., Leyrat, C., Migliorini, A., Nathues, A., Rodriguez, S., Saggin, B., Sanchez-Lavega, A., Schmitt, B., Seignovert, B., Sordini, R., Stephan, K., Tobie, G., Zambon, F., Adriani, A., Altieri, F., Bockelée, D., Capaccioni, F., De Angelis, S., De Sanctis, M.-C., Drossart, P., Fouchet, T., Gérard, J.-C., Grodent, D., Ignatiev, N., Irwin, P., Ligier, N., Manaud, N., Mangold, N., Mura, A., Pilorget, C., Quirico, E., Renotte, E., Strazzulla, G., Turrini, D., Vandaele, A.-C., Carli, C., Ciarniello, M., Guerlet, S., Lellouch, E., Mancarella, F., Morbidelli, A., Le Mouélic, S., Raponi, A., Sindoni, G., and Snels, M.
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- 2024
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47. Mapping Research Trends of Library and Information Science in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand
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Mirmani, Anon, primary, Salim, Tamara Adriani, additional, and Wijayanti, Luki, additional
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- 2024
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48. O DIVISOR DE ÁGUAS: DESAFIOS E OPORTUNIDADES NA RELAÇÃO TRANSFRONTEIRIÇA ENTRE BRASIL E ARGENTINA PARA O DESENVOLVIMENTO E A INTEGRAÇÃO DAS NAÇÕES
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RICHTER, Scheila Adriani, primary, PUPPIO, Eduardo Omar, additional, and BÜTTENBENDER, Pedro Luisí, additional
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- 2024
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49. Direct Measurement of the Nickel Spectrum in Cosmic Rays in the Energy Range from 8.8 GeV/n to 240 GeV/n with CALET on the International Space Station
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Adriani, O., Akaike, Y., Asano, K., Asaoka, Y., Berti, E., Bigongiari, G., Binns, W. R., Bongi, M., Brogi, P., Bruno, A., Buckley, J. H., Cannady, N., Castellini, G., Checchia, C., Cherry, M. L., Collazuol, G., Ebisawa, K., Ficklin, A. W., Fuke, H., Gonzi, S., Guzik, T. G., Hams, T., Hibino, K., Ichimura, M., Ioka, K., Ishizaki, W., Israel, M. H., Kasahara, K., Kataoka, J., Kataoka, R., Katayose, Y., Kato, C., Kawanaka, N., Kawakubo, Y., Kobayashi, K., Kohri, K., Krawczynski, H. S., Krizmanic, J. F., Maestro, P., Marrocchesi, P. S., Messineo, A. M., Mitchell, J. W., Miyake, S., Moiseev, A. A., Mori, M., Mori, N., Motz, H. M., Munakata, K., Nakahira, S., Nishimura, J., de Nolfo, G. A., Okuno, S., Ormes, J. F., Ospina, N., Ozawa, S., Pacini, L., Papini, P., Rauch, B. F., Ricciarini, S. B., Sakai, K., Sakamoto, T., Sasaki, M., Shimizu, Y., Shiomi, A., Spillantini, P., Stolzi, F., Sugita, S., Sulaj, A., Takita, M., Tamura, T., Terasawa, T., Torii, S., Tsunesada, Y., Uchihori, Y., Vannuccini, E., Wefel, J. P., Yamaoka, K., Yanagita, S., Yoshida, A., Yoshida, K., and Zober, W. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The relative abundance of cosmic ray nickel nuclei with respect to iron is by far larger than for all other trans-iron elements, therefore it provides a favorable opportunity for a low background measurement of its spectrum. Since nickel, as well as iron, is one of the most stable nuclei, the nickel energy spectrum and its relative abundance with respect to iron provide important information to estimate the abundances at the cosmic ray source and to model the Galactic propagation of heavy nuclei. However, only a few direct measurements of cosmic-ray nickel at energy larger than $ \sim$ 3 GeV/n are available at present in the literature and they are affected by strong limitations in both energy reach and statistics. In this paper we present a measurement of the differential energy spectrum of nickel in the energy range from 8.8 to 240 GeV/n, carried out with unprecedented precision by the Calorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET) in operation on the International Space Station since 2015. The CALET instrument can identify individual nuclear species via a measurement of their electric charge with a dynamic range extending far beyond iron (up to atomic number $ Z $ = 40). The particle's energy is measured by a homogeneous calorimeter (1.2 proton interaction lengths, 27 radiation lengths) preceded by a thin imaging section (3 radiation lengths) providing tracking and energy sampling. This paper follows our previous measurement of the iron spectrum [O. Adriani et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 126, 241101 (2021).], and it extends our investigation on the energy dependence of the spectral index of heavy elements. It reports the analysis of nickel data collected from November 2015 to May 2021 and a detailed assessment of the systematic uncertainties. In the region from 20 to 240 GeV$ /n $ our present data are compatible within the errors with a single power law with spectral index $ -2.51 \pm 0.07 $., Comment: main text: 8 pages, 4 figures; supplemental material: 8 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2106.08036
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- 2022
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50. Measurement of forward photon production cross-section in pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 510 GeV with RHICf detector
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Adriani, O., Berti, E., Bonechi, L., D'Alessandro, R., Goto, Y., Hong, B., Itow, Y., Kasahara, K., Lee, J. H., Ljubicic, T., Kim, M. H., Menjo, H., Nakagawa, I., Ogawa, A., Ohashi, K., Pak, R., Sako, T., Sakurai, N., Sato, K., Seidl, R., Tanida, K., Torii, S., and Tricomi, A.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
This study reported the inclusive differential production cross-section of photons in six pseudorapidity regions: 6.1 < $\eta$ < 6.5, 6.5 < $\eta$ < 7.0, 7.0 < $\eta$ <7.5, 7.5 < $\eta$ <8.0, 8.0 < $\eta$ < 8.5, and $\eta$ > 8.5, measured through the RHICf experiment with pp collisions at $\sqrt{s}$ = 510 GeV conducted in June 2017. In addition, the cross-sections in the three regions of the $x_F$-$p_T$ phase space coverage that are same as those of the LHCf results at $\sqrt{s}$ = 7 and 13 TeV were obtained and compared. Considering the uncertainties, the results were observed to be consistent with both the Feynman scaling law and the model predictions of EPOS-LHC, QGSJET-II-04, Sibyll 2.3d, and DPMjet-III 2019.1, although certain models exhibited weak collision energy dependencies., Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2022
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