19,267,904 results on '"B. The"'
Search Results
2. Thermodynamic effects of temperature during roasting of chromite for sodium chromate salts formation
- Author
-
M. J. Mvita, N. G. Zulu, B. Thethwayo, and S. Makhamisa
- Subjects
thermodynamics, Na2CrO4, roasting, equilibrium, x- ray research ,Mining engineering. Metallurgy ,TN1-997 - Abstract
This paper aims to assess the potential effects of roasting temperature on the formation of sodium chromate (Na2CrO4). To perform this task, chromite samples were complexed with NaCl at temperatures ranging from 900 °C to 1 200 °C in the presence of excess oxygen. These experimental conditions were set and assessed based on the predicted phase transformations using Facstage as a prediction tool. The scanning electron microscopy and energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS) have revealed the roasting behaviour of chromite to be governed by a fully reacted outside layer and an unreacted core. As per the x-ray diffraction (XRD) results, at lower temperature settings, mineral phases such as hematite and chromium oxide reported as an indication of predicted oxidation of chromite. The key results indicate that the addition of NaCl reduces the equilibrium temperature, thereby fully decomposing the stable and refractory spinel structure of chromite at 1 200 °C.
- Published
- 2024
3. Deans of Instruction and Faculty Development in Four Small Rural Junior Colleges in Texas.
- Author
-
Golemon, R. B.
- Abstract
Four deans of instruction in small, rural junior colleges and four deans of instruction in large, urban junior colleges were interviewed, and faculty members from the small junior colleges were surveyed, in order to ascertain their opinions regarding faculty development procedures. It was found that: (1) deans felt in-service workshops to be essential while faculty were generally unconvinced as to the usefulness of such workshops; (2) consultants were felt to be useful by both deans and faculty; (3) varying methods of faculty evaluation were used, and in the small colleges the deans played a personal role in the evaluation process while in the large colleges where evaluation procedures were more systematic the deans' role was less important; (4) deans in small colleges tended to favor faculty exchange programs while deans in large colleges had reservations as to the utility of such a practice; (5) tangible recognition for teaching excellence or outstanding service was almost unanimously approved by both faculty and deans; (6) faculty and deans approved of community involvement/service as a means of faculty development; and (7) overall, while there was no great difference in the opinions of faculty members and deans' perceptions as to the deans' role in the faculty development process, there seemed to be a nominal breakdown in communications resulting in some unnecessary misunderstandings. An extensive bibliography and the survey instruments are appended. (JDS)
- Published
- 2024
4. Teacher Education Candidates' Perceptions of Students.
- Author
-
Whetstone, B. D.
- Abstract
The Ideal Student Description Q-Sort was developed originally as a predictive instrument to determine probable success rates as teachers based upon the teacher candidate's perceptions of students in general. The Q-Sort consists of 84 items describing "openness" and "closedness" in a student and reveals the extent to which a teacher perceives students as either flexible (positive) or rigid (negative) in their interpersonal relationships, and also suggests whether the teacher is more open in his/her perceptions of students. Results of administering the Q-Sort over a four-year period indicated that participants in secondary education programs had a more negative perception of students at the outset, remained more rigid in their views, and tended to become increasingly negative over the four-year period and into their first year of teaching. The opposite was found true for students in the elementary education programs. It became apparent to the investigator that measuring student characteristics for screening purposes at a definite point in time was contrary to the concept of developmental teaching and learning, and that perceptions can be changed over a period of time provided sequences of learning activities are made available (even though secondary teaching candidates are more inflexible). The ISD Q-Sort, instead of becoming a screening device, may evolve into a counseling instrument used in planning the sequence of interpersonal relationships in teacher education indicated by the candidate's individual needs. (MB)
- Published
- 2024
5. The Sufficiency of Different Approaches to Constructing Behavioral Objectives for the Improvement of Instruction.
- Author
-
Smith, Richard B. and Smith, Richard B.
- Abstract
Ways of utilizing behavioral objectives to their best advantage are specified. The purpose of the study is to help educators improve instruction through examination of different approaches to constructing behavioral objectives. Classroom teachers have been convinced that behavioral objectives are "necessary" for the functioning of the "general model of instruction" and that the "general model of instruction" is "necessary" for the improvement of instruction. Five suggestions for properly constructing behavioral objectives are given: (1) making possible the more efficient attainment of the broad general goals of instruction; (2) making it possible for the teacher to use results of learning research in designing instructional experiences; (3) making it possible for the teacher to test hypotheses regarding the effectiveness of different learning experiences for the attainment of the objective; (4) making it possible for teachers to produce findings which can be generalized to facilitate the attainment of similar objectives; and (5) making it possible for the teacher to diagnose and remediate the learning difficulties encountered by students. References are included in the document. (Author/DB)
- Published
- 2024
6. A Proposal to the Massachusetts Board of Regional Community Colleges for a New Occupational Program.
- Author
-
Middlesex Community Coll., Bedford, MA. and Viaux, Frederic B.
- Abstract
The development of a Mental Health Technology Program at Middlesex Community College is proposed. The 2-year program would train the student to become a middle-level generalist in the field of mental health with special abilities as a communicator. On successfully completing the program, the student would receive an Associate Degree in Mental Health Technology. The sections of the proposal are: 1. Purpose of the Program (Major Objectives, Job Performance, Specific Agencies to Be Served); 2. Need for the Program; 3. Program Design (Curriculum, Course Descriptions); 4. Clinical Affiliations; 5. Potential Enrollment; 6. Similar Programs; 7. Faculty Requirements; 8. Physical Plant and Equipment; 9. Cost Analysis; 10. Cover Letter and Attachments. (DB)
- Published
- 2024
7. Resource Unit for Levels Seven and Eight Using the Occupational Clusters in Career Orientation. Lincoln County Exemplary Program in Vocational Education.
- Author
-
Lincoln County Schools, Hamlin, WV. and Holstein, Herbert B.
- Abstract
The occupational resource unit, one of a series encompassing grade levels 1-10, was prepared by the Lincoln County (West Virginia) Exemplary Project staff to provide career exploration learning activities for the seventh and eighth grades. The career orientation materials are designed to give students a broad knowledge of the characteristics and functions, as well as the duties and rewards, of specific occupations within a broad spectrum of occupational families and to assist the student in understanding himself. The guide contains a synopsis of the entire unit, general objectives, behavioral objectives, teaching strategies, evaluation techniques, guidelines for correlating subject matter, and suggestions for field trips. Instructional materials include an occupational questionnaire, personality profile, and an outline of interview techniques. An extended resource bibliography stresses interpersonal competence and occupational information. Organized around a random selection of occupations within 15 occupational clusters, student involvement and participation is encouraged through suggestions for the use of simulated work experiences. Occupations within each cluster are categorized according to the following levels: professional, semiprofessional and managerial, technical and skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled. (MW)
- Published
- 2024
8. 'US': Primary Prevention, Para-Counseling, Research Project.
- Author
-
Rogue Valley Council on Aging, Medford, OR. and Lynch, Mallory B.
- Abstract
This report provides both a focal (part) and a subsidiary (whole) description of the process and results of a primary prevention, paracounseling, research project, funded for two years by the National Institute on Drug Abuse to create and research a "model" program which could be used nation-wide to help prevent drug abuse. Adolescents, young adults, and senior citizens were selected and trained for a period of 200 hours. Training combined didactics and experiential learning and emphasized high synergy; positive, healthy self-development, and project development as the most important training outcome. After training, the youth and senior paracounselors were paired with one or two fifth and sixth grade children who had volunteered to join the program. Most of these children had demonstrated problem behavior in school and home. Through one-to-one and group sharing, the use of complementary alternatives such as crafts and sports, and emphasis on mental health and development of positive potential, a program uniting all ages (generations) was created. As a result, significant increases were noted in the children's self-concept, positive behavior at home and school, in teacher and parent sentiment toward the children, positive attitude of the child toward family; as well as in many factors measured by the children's personality questionnaire such as intellignece, enthusiasm, conscientiousness, self-reliance, confidence, extroversion, and factors predicting better academic performance. (Author)
- Published
- 2024
9. Rural Community Colleges: A Pennsylvania Case Study.
- Author
-
Woodbury, Kenneth B.
- Abstract
This report describes the development, functions, and operations of the Delaware Valley Community College Service Center in Pike County, Pennsylvania, which is designed to provide diversified and comprehensive two-year postsecondary education to residents of a large, rural area without a postsecondary institution. The Center is sponsored by the Delaware Valley School District and operated through a contract with Northampton County Area Community College (NCACC), the nearest community college. The policies, procedures, programs and courses of NCACC apply to the Center and its director is responsible to the NCACC president, but the Center retains local control and initiative through its own Operating Board. Funding is provided by the school district, student tuition and state reimbursement. The Center has no facilities of its own but provides a wide range of associate degree and certificate programs in liberal arts and occupational areas and non-credit adult education courses utilizing leased and borrowed facilities and part-time faculty. The Center's Cooperative Commuting College Division makes available specialized high-cost career programs through contractual arrangements with neighboring colleges in New York State. The Center is not offered as a model, but components may serve as a guide to be adapted by other rural areas. (JDS)
- Published
- 2024
10. A Novel Model for the MeV Emission Line in GRB 221009A
- Author
-
Yu-Jia Wei, Jia Ren, Hao-Ning He, Yuan-Pei Yang, Da-Ming Wei, Zi-Gao Dai, and B. Theodore Zhang
- Subjects
Gamma-ray bursts ,Gamma-ray lines ,Particle astrophysics ,Cosmic ray sources ,High-energy cosmic radiation ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have long been considered potential sources of ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs; with energy ≳10 ^18 eV). In this work, we propose a novel model generating MeV emission lines in GRBs, which can constrain the properties of heavy nuclei that potentially exist in GRB jets. Specifically, we find that relativistic hydrogen-like high-atomic-number ions originating from the β decay of unstable nuclei and/or the recombination entrained in the GRB jet can generate narrow MeV emission lines through the de-excitation of excited electrons. This model can successfully explain the MeV emission line observed in the most luminous GRB ever recorded, GRB 221009A, with suitable parameters including a Lorentz factor γ ∼ 820–1700 and a total mass of heavy nuclei M _tot ∼ 10 ^23 –10 ^26 g. Especially, the emission line broadening can be reasonably attributed to both the expansion of the jet shell and the thermal motion of nuclei, naturally resulting in a narrow width ( σ _line / E _line ≲ 0.2) consistent with the observation. Furthermore, we predict that different GRBs can exhibit lines in different bands with various evolving behaviors, which might be confirmed with further observations. Finally, our model provides indirect evidence that GRBs may be one of the sources of UHECRs.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Evaluation of NTP42, a novel thromboxane receptor antagonist, in a first-in-human phase I clinical trial
- Author
-
Helen M. Reid, Mark Maginn, C. Michael Perkins, Eamon P. Mulvaney, Malcolm Boyce, Takahiro Yamamoto, and B. Therese Kinsella
- Subjects
thromboxane ,safety ,thromboxane receptor ,NTP42 ,thromboxane receptor antagonist ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Background: The thromboxane receptor (TP) antagonist NTP42 is in clinical development for treatment of cardiopulmonary diseases, such as pulmonary arterial hypertension. In this randomized, placebo-controlled Phase I clinical trial, NTP42, administered as the oral formulation NTP42:KVA4, was evaluated for safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), and pharmacodynamics (PD) in healthy males.Methods: The first-in-human trial had three Parts: A, single ascending dose (SAD) study with seven groups given 0.25–243 mg NTP42:KVA4 or placebo; B, food effect study where one SAD group (9 mg) was also given NTP42:KVA4 or placebo after a high-fat breakfast; C, multiple ascending dose study with three groups given 15–135 mg NTP42:KVA4 or placebo once-daily for 7 days.Results: Seventy-nine volunteers participated. No serious adverse events occurred, where any drug- or placebo-related adverse events were mild to moderate, with no correlation to NTP42:KVA4 dose. NTP42 was rapidly absorbed, yielding dose proportional increases in exposure after single and repeat dosing. PK confirmed that, with a clearance (T1/2) of 18.7 h, NTP42:KVA4 is suited to once-daily dosing, can be taken with or without food, and does not accumulate on repeat dosing. At doses ≥1 mg, NTP42 led to complete and sustained inhibition of thromboxane-, but not ADP-, induced platelet aggregation ex vivo, with direct correlation between NTP42 exposure and duration of PD effects.Conclusion: Orally administered NTP42:KVA4 was well tolerated, with favorable PK/PD profiles and evidence of specific TP target engagement. These findings support continued clinical development of NTP42:KVA4 for cardiopulmonary or other relevant diseases with unmet needs.Clinical Trial Registration:clinicaltrials.gov, identifier NCT04919863.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Radiance Simulations in Support of Climate Services
- Author
-
P. Poli, R. Roebeling, V. O. John, M. Doutriaux‐Boucher, J. Schulz, A. Lattanzio, K. Petraityte, M. Grant, T. Hanschmann, J. Onderwaater, O. Sus, R. Huckle, D. Coppens, B. Theodore, T. August, A. J. Simmons, B. Bell, J. Mittaz, T. Hall, J. Vidot, P. Brunel, J. E. Johnson, E. B. Zamkoff, A. F. Al‐Jazrawi, A. E. Esfandiari, I. V. Gerasimov, and S. Kobayashi
- Subjects
Astronomy ,QB1-991 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Abstract Climate services are largely supported by climate reanalyses and by satellite Fundamental (Climate) Data Records (F(C)DRs). This paper demonstrates how the development and the uptake of F(C)DR benefit from radiance simulations, using reanalyses and radiative transfer models. We identify three classes of applications, with examples for each application class. The first application is to validate assumptions during F(C)DR development. Hereto we show the value of applying advanced quality controls to geostationary European (Meteosat) images. We also show the value of a cloud mask to study the spatio‐temporal coherence of the impact of the Mount Pinatubo volcanic eruption between Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and the High‐resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder (HIRS) data. The second application is to assess the coherence between reanalyses and observations. Hereto we show the capability of reanalyses to reconstruct spectra observed by the Spektrometer Interferometer (SI‐1) flown on a Soviet satellite in 1979. We also present a first attempt to estimate the random uncertainties from this instrument. Finally, we investigate how advanced bias correction can help to improve the coherence between reanalysis and Nimbus‐3 Medium‐Resolution Infrared Radiometer (MRIR) in 1969. The third application is to inform F(C)DR users about particular quality aspects. We show how simulations can help to make a better‐informed use of the corresponding F(C)DR, taking as examples the Nimbus‐7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR), the Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) imager, and the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) Special Sensor Microwave Water Vapor Profiler (SSM/T‐2).
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Perinatal origins of bronchopulmonary dysplasia—deciphering normal and impaired lung development cell by cell
- Author
-
I. Mižíková and B. Thébaud
- Subjects
BPD ,Prematurity ,Lung development ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 - Abstract
Abstract Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a multifactorial disease occurring as a consequence of premature birth, as well as antenatal and postnatal injury to the developing lung. BPD morbidity and severity depend on a complex interplay between prenatal and postnatal inflammation, mechanical ventilation, and oxygen therapy as well as associated prematurity-related complications. These initial hits result in ill-explored aberrant immune and reparative response, activation of pro-fibrotic and anti-angiogenic factors, which further perpetuate the injury. Histologically, the disease presents primarily by impaired lung development and an arrest in lung microvascular maturation. Consequently, BPD leads to respiratory complications beyond the neonatal period and may result in premature aging of the lung. While the numerous prenatal and postnatal stimuli contributing to BPD pathogenesis are relatively well known, the specific cell populations driving the injury, as well as underlying mechanisms are still not well understood. Recently, an effort to gain a more detailed insight into the cellular composition of the developing lung and its progenitor populations has unfold. Here, we provide an overview of the current knowledge regarding perinatal origin of BPD and discuss underlying mechanisms, as well as novel approaches to study the perturbed lung development.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Open Resources for Biology Education (ORBE): A Resource Collection
- Author
-
Sanah Ahm, Tiffany Adjei-Opong, Ashley B. Heim, Keenan Noyes, Kelly Schmid, Brian A. Couch, MacKenzie R. Stetzer, Lillian G. Senn, Erin Vinson, Michelle K. Smith, and Kira Treibergs
- Abstract
In undergraduate life sciences education, open educational resources (OERs) increase accessibility and retention for students, reduce costs, and save instructors time and effort. Despite increasing awareness and utilization of these resources, OERs are not centrally located, and many undergraduate instructors describe challenges in locating relevant materials for use in their classes. To address this challenge, we have designed a resource collection (referred to as Open Resources for Biology Education, ORBE) with 89 unique resources that are primarily relevant to undergraduate life sciences education. To identify the resources in ORBE, we asked undergraduate life sciences instructors to list what OERs they use in their teaching and curated their responses. Here, we summarize the contents of the ORBE and describe how educators can use this resource as a tool to identify suitable materials to use in their classroom context. By highlighting the breadth of unique resources openly available for undergraduate biology education, we intend for the ORBE to increase instructors' awareness and use of OERs.
- Published
- 2024
15. Breaking the Habit: Isolating Nicotine-Degrading Bacteria in Undergraduate Microbiology Teaching Labs
- Author
-
J. Mastenbrook, E. Pathak, C. Beaver, F. Stull, and B. J. Koestler
- Abstract
Nicotine is a major alkaloid in tobacco plants and an addictive component of tobacco products. Some bacteria grow on tobacco plants and have evolved the ability to metabolize nicotine. As part of our microbiology teaching lab, we used minimal media with nicotine as the sole carbon source to isolate nicotine-degrading bacteria from tobacco leaves and commercial tobacco products. Students then identified these bacteria using 16S rRNA sequencing and biochemical assays and assessed their ability to catabolize nicotine using UV spectroscopy. Students were able to isolate and identify 14 distinct genera that can metabolize nicotine. This modification of the commonly used unknown project gave students firsthand experience using selective media, and students got the opportunity to work with largely uncharacterized microbes with a real-world connection to public health, which increased student engagement. Students had the opportunity to think critically about why nicotine-degrading microorganisms associate with tobacco plants, why there are different bacteria that use the same specialized metabolism, and how these organisms are isolated from other bacteria using selective media.
- Published
- 2024
16. Teaching Proficiency of Pre-Service Secondary Teachers in Eastern Samar State University-Salcedo Campus
- Author
-
Rovinson D. Gaganao and Ma. Gracelda B. Odon
- Abstract
Competent teachers are attributed to student performance, school effectiveness, and the efficiency of an entire education system. Hence, this study compares the respondents' teaching proficiency across their profiles and correlates to their academic performance. The study utilized 30 pre-service secondary teachers of Eastern Samar State University Salcedo selected by complete enumeration, a descriptive comparative and correlational research design, and a questionnaire. Frequency, percentage, mean, and standard deviation were applied for descriptive analysis; t-test for comparison of respondents' teaching proficiency; and Pearson's correlation coefficient for the relationship between academic performance and teaching proficiency. The study revealed that respondents had a proficient teaching proficiency. Specifically, they were proficient in subject matter knowledge, lesson planning, classroom management, instructional strategies and motivation, communication skills, questioning skills, and professionalism. They have a very good academic performance in both professional education and major field of specialization. Furthermore, the study found no significant difference in the teaching proficiency across the respondents' sex and age. However, a significant relationship was found between academic performance and teaching proficiency. Based on the findings, it is recommended that remedial classes on contents, pedagogies, and principles be provided especially for those respondents with low academic performance, to improve their teaching proficiency.
- Published
- 2024
17. Data Analytics Position Description Analysis: Skills Review and Implications for Data Analytics Curricula
- Author
-
Queen E. Booker, Carl M. Rebman, Hayden Wimmer, Steve B. Levkoff, Loreen Powell, and Jennifer L. Breese
- Abstract
The focus of this study was to assess the skill requirements for data analytics positions and to understand data analysis employment expectations for new graduates. Furthermore, this work seeks to highlight issues relevant to curriculum management in university degree programs. 786 job postings were analyzed for domain-related, soft skills, as well as degree requirements. Soft skills, often referred to as people skills, comprised the largest part of the results (11 of the top 21 skills). Results revealed the most frequent soft skills were related to communication and teams or teamwork. The most frequent domain skills were related to visualization, data cleaning, data extraction and programming. Implications for curriculum based on results are discussed, and suggestions for future research are provided.
- Published
- 2024
18. Mock Board Examination Results as Predictors in the Licensure Examination for Certified Public Accountants
- Author
-
Yzekeil P. Camacho, Micah Pea B. Oberes, Danica Mae R. Tina, Artchelene D. Pepania, Mylene P. Alfanta, and Eligen H. Sumicad
- Abstract
This study was conducted to determine whether the mock board examination performance can predict a candidate's performance in the Licensure Examination for Certified Public Accountants (LECPA). It covered the Bachelor of Science in Accountancy (BSA) graduates from a higher education institution in Pagadian City, Zamboanga del Sur, Philippines, who took the mock board examination and were first-time LECPA takers from the October 2022 to May 2023 batches. Participants were directly included in the study. A simple linear regression analysis was utilized to determine whether a candidate's performance on the mock board could predict their LECPA performance. The model summary revealed a value of 0.474, which is below 0.5. Therefore, the study concluded that the mock board examination can predict overall LECPA performance. This result implied that higher scores on the mock board examination correlate with a higher probability of passing the LECPA. Based on these findings, the learning institution should regularly improve the mock board examinations. Suggestions include aligning the difficulty level of the mock board with the LECPA and having the assessment conducted by a Certified Public Accountant (CPA) examiner other than the mock board lecturer.
- Published
- 2024
19. Ohio Charter Schools after the Pandemic: Are Their Students Still Learning More than They Would in District Schools? Research Brief
- Author
-
Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Stéphane Lavertu
- Abstract
Over the past two decades, researchers have spent countless hours studying the impacts of public charter schools--independently-run, tuition-free schools of choice that serve some 3.7 million U.S. students today. Just prior to the pandemic, studies from Ohio and nationally indicated that charters on average delivered superior academic outcomes compared to traditional districts. And the very finest charters in Ohio and around the nation were driving learning gains that gave disadvantaged students the edge needed to succeed in college and career. The pandemic scrambled most everything about K-12 education. But did it upend what we know about charter school performance? The present study examines the post-pandemic performance of Ohio's brick-and-mortar charter schools, which enrolled 81,000 students--mostly from urban communities--during the 2022-23 school year. The results reveal that, in terms of student achievement growth, Ohio's charter schools remain a better educational option for the average charter student.
- Published
- 2024
20. What Is a College 'Promise' Program? The Creation and Transformation of a Concept, 2005-2022. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-985
- Author
-
Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, David B. Monaghan, Crystal Almanzar, Madison Laughman, and Allyson Ritchey
- Abstract
Promise programs are discussed as a policy movement that began with the 2005 launch of the Kalamazoo Promise. Since then, programs bearing the Promise label or sharing similar features have spread across the higher educational landscape, appearing in most states and across postsecondary sectors. Simultaneously, scholarly literature discussing these programs has burgeoned. And yet, scholars and others are unable to formulate a clear conception of what a Promise program is and what if anything sets such a program apart from other scholarship programs (e.g., state need-based grants). In this paper, we examine how scholars have discussed these programs over time. We begin with the initial theorization of the Kalamazoo Promise as a case and observe its use as a prototype in the formulation of a general model once "Promise program" was established as a category. We follow how the spread and transformation of "Promise programs" was reflected in repeated partial reconceptualization. We find three competing conceptual models emerging in sequence: 1) a thick, place-based causal model derived as a generalization of the Kalamazoo Promise, 2) a thin empirical model crafted in the aftermath of the launch of the Tennessee Promise, and 3) a partially acknowledged minimal or symbolic model advanced haltingly in response to critiques of last-dollar community college state programs. Scholarly conceptualization is largely reactive to empirical program diffusion and transformation, though scholarly idealization may have played a role in this diffusion itself.
- Published
- 2024
21. How Powerful Are Promises? A Systematic Review of the Causal Mechanisms and Outcomes of 'Free College' Programs in the United States. EdWorkingPaper No. 24-988
- Author
-
Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University and David B. Monaghan
- Abstract
"Free college" (sometimes called Promise) programs are common in U.S. higher education. Reviewing 88 studies of 25 state and local programs, I provide a nuanced picture of the mechanisms through which these programs may work and their likely effects on students, communities, and colleges. Some commonly-claimed mechanisms for these effects--e.g., improving secondary school environments or impacting residential decisions--lack empirical support or are implausible for most existing programs. Programs are consistently found to shift college-bound students to colleges where they can use more scholarship dollars, increase enrollment at eligible colleges, and (for generous local programs only) increase community school district enrollment. Less consistently, programs boost college participation and thereby degree attainment, but evidence for direct effects on college performance, persistence or completion net of enrollment is weak. There is insufficient or inconsistent evidence for program effects on secondary school performance and graduation, post-college income and debt, community population or property values, and inequality reduction according to gender, race, or socioeconomic status.
- Published
- 2024
22. Some College, No Credential: A 2024 Snapshot for the Nation and the States. Fifth in the Series 'Some College, No Credential'
- Author
-
National Student Clearinghouse Research Center, B. Berg, J. Causey, J. Cohen, M. Ibrahim, M. Holsapple, and D. Shapiro
- Abstract
The fall 2023 and spring 2024 undergraduate enrollment increases, marking the first growth since the COVID-19 pandemic, show signs of a post-pandemic turnaround for higher education. However, a significant share of current undergraduates will eventually disengage from college before earning a degree or other credential. They will join tens of millions of other adult Americans who are Some College, No Credential (SCNC). The SCNC population has been consistently rising over time. Re-engaging those who stop out remains a persistent challenge and a priority for the forty states that have set ambitious postsecondary attainment goals. This report aims to provide timely insights into the SCNC population, offering state leaders and policymakers accurate data on its current status, along with tracking progress and outcome measures for SCNC students. The first section of this report describes who makes up the SCNC population and how it has changed since the last report. In this section, the authors pay particular attention to Recent Stopouts, who joined the SCNC population after being stopped out between January 2021 and July 2022. In the second section, the authors report on SCNC re-enrollment in the 2022-23 academic year as well as first-year credential earning for re-enrollees. The authors also provide new updates on continued enrollment and second-year credential earning for SCNC re-enrollees in the 2021-22 academic year, whom were first reported on last year.
- Published
- 2024
23. Attitudes of Elementary Teachers towards Inclusive Education of Learners with Special Education Needs in a Public School
- Author
-
Michelle B. Jugan, Niña Rozanne T. Delos Reyes, Joseph C. Pepito, Reylan G. Capuno, Lilibeth C. Pinili, Ann Frances P. Cabigon, Regina E. Sitoy, and Irene O. Mamites
- Abstract
This study examined the inclusion teachers' attitudes towards inclusive education in the public schools of Liloan District, Cebu Province Division. A descriptive-correlational design was utilized to collect data from purposively sampled 30 elementary teacher respondents through the M STATIC structured questionnaire. Most teachers were experienced females aged 34-43 years, married with some graduate studies. They had 1-5 years of teaching experience in inclusion yet only 1-2 inclusive education training sessions. Results found teachers generally supported inclusive philosophies and recognized social benefits but had concerns regarding training, resources, and support. While philosophically positive, worries existed about the support and resources needed in the classrooms. Pearson's r correlations and one-way ANOVA found no significant relationships between demographic profiles and attitudes. Based on these findings, a Teacher Inclusion Support Plan was recommended and customized for each school to enhance the long-term implementation of high-quality inclusion practices through ongoing, evidence-driven capacity building and professional development.
- Published
- 2024
24. A comparison of approaches to teaching clinical skills
- Author
-
Gilligan, Conor, Jones, N, Leopardi, E, Dabson, A, Julien, B, and Jolly, B
- Published
- 2024
25. Injurious pecking in organic turkey fattening—effects of husbandry and feeding on injuries and plumage damage of a slow- (Auburn) and a fast-growing (B.U.T.6) genotype
- Author
-
D. Haug, R. Schreiter, B. Thesing, L. Rathmann, C. Lambertz, P. Hofmann, M. Erhard, G. Bellof, and E. Schmidt
- Subjects
organic turkey fattening ,injurious pecking ,severe feather pecking ,animal welfare ,plumage damage ,Animal culture ,SF1-1100 - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Injuries and plumage damage (PD) are important indicators of welfare. First priority in turkey fattening is to reduce injurious pecking, which includes aggressive pecking (agonistic behavior) and additionally severe feather pecking (SFP) and cannibalism with their multifactorial reasons. Still, there are few studies available evaluating different genotypes for their welfare status under organic conditions. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of genotype and husbandry with 100% organic feeding (2 variants with different riboflavin content: V1 and V2) on injuries and PD. During rearing nonbeaktrimmed male turkeys of a slow- (Auburn, n = 256) and fast-growing (B.U.T.6, n = 128) genotype were kept in 2 indoor housing systems (without environmental enrichment (EE) = H1−, n = 144 and with EE = H2+, n = 240). During fattening 13 animals per pen of H2+ were relocated to a free-range system (H3 MS, n = 104). EE included pecking stones, elevated seating platforms and silage feeding. The study included five 4-wk feeding phases. At the end of each phase, injuries and PD were scored to assess animal welfare. Injury scores ranged from 0 (=no damage) to 3 (=severe damage) and PD from 0 to 4. Injurious pecking was observed from the 8th week onward (injuries: 16.5% and PD: 31.4%). Binary logistic regression models showed that both indicators were affected by genotype (each P < 0.001), husbandry (each P < 0.001), feeding (injuries P = 0.004; PD P = 0.003), and age (each P < 0.001). Auburn showed less injuries and PD than B.U.T.6. H1− had the fewest injuries and PD for Auburn animals compared to H2+ or H3 MS. In summary, the use of alternative genotypes (Auburn) in organic fattening improved welfare, but keeping them in free-range systems or in husbandry with EE, does not lead to a reduction of injurious pecking. Therefore, further studies are needed with more and changing enrichment materials, further management measures, changes in housing structure, and even more intensive animal care.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Structured Jet Model for Multiwavelength Observations of the Jetted Tidal Disruption Event AT 2022cmc
- Author
-
Chengchao Yuan, B. Theodore Zhang, Walter Winter, and Kohta Murase
- Subjects
Tidal disruption ,Transient sources ,Radiative processes ,Relativistic jets ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
AT 2022cmc is a recently documented tidal disruption event that exhibits a luminous jet, accompanied by fast-declining X-ray and long-lasting radio and millimeter emission. Motivated by the distinct spectral and temporal signatures between the X-ray and radio observations, we propose a multizone model involving relativistic jets with different Lorentz factors. We systematically study the evolution of faster and slower jets in an external density profile, considering the continuous energy injection rate associated with time-dependent accretion rates before and after the mass fallback time. We investigate time-dependent multiwavelength emission from both the forward shock (FS) and reverse shock (RS) regions of the fast and slow jets, in a self-consistent manner. Our analysis demonstrates that the energy injection rate can significantly impact the jet evolution and subsequently influence the lightcurves. We find that the X-ray spectra and lightcurves could be described by electron synchrotron emission from the RS of the faster jet, in which the late-time X-ray upper limits, extending to 400 days after the disruption, could be interpreted as a jet break. Meanwhile, the radio observations can be interpreted as a result of synchrotron emission from the FS region of the slower jet. We also discuss prospects for testing the model with current and future observations.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Revealing the Production Mechanism of High-energy Neutrinos from NGC 1068
- Author
-
Abhishek Das, B. Theodore Zhang, and Kohta Murase
- Subjects
Active galaxies ,Galaxy jets ,Neutrino astronomy ,Non-thermal radiation sources ,Particle astrophysics ,Gamma-ray astronomy ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
The detection of high-energy neutrino signals from the nearby Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068 provides us with an opportunity to study nonthermal processes near the center of supermassive black holes. Using the IceCube and latest Fermi-LAT data, we present general multimessenger constraints on the energetics of cosmic rays and the size of neutrino emission regions. In the photohadronic scenario, the required cosmic-ray luminosity should be larger than ∼1%−10% of the Eddington luminosity and the emission radius should be ≲15 R _S in low- β plasma and ≲3 R _S in high- β plasma. The leptonic scenario overshoots the NuSTAR or Fermi-LAT data for any emission radii we consider, and the required gamma-ray luminosity is much larger than the Eddington luminosity. The beta-decay scenario also violates not only the energetics requirement but also gamma-ray constraints, especially when the Bethe–Heitler and photomeson production processes are consistently considered. Our results rule out the leptonic and beta-decay scenarios in a nearly model-independent manner and support hadronic mechanisms in magnetically powered coronae if NGC 1068 is a source of high-energy neutrinos.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A Detectable Ultra-high-energy Cosmic-Ray Outburst from GRB 221009A
- Author
-
Hao-Ning He, B. Theodore Zhang, and Yi-Zhong Fan
- Subjects
Gamma-ray bursts ,Cosmic rays ,Extragalactic magnetic fields ,Cosmic ray sources ,High energy astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,QB460-466 - Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) have been proposed as one of the promising sources of ultra-high-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs), but observational evidence is still lacking. The nearby brightest of all time GRB 221009A, a once in 1000 yr event, is able to accelerate protons to ∼10 ^3 EeV, and then generate extremly energetic neutrons via the photomeson production interaction. Protons arriving at the Milky Way are dominated by neutron-decay-induced protons. The intergalactic magnetic fields would not yield a sizable delay of the ≥10 EeV cosmic rays if its strength is ≲10 ^−13 G, while Galactic magnetic fields would cause a significant time delay. We predict that a UHECR burst from GRB 221009A would be detectable by the Pierre Auger Observatory and the TA×4, within ∼10 yr. The detection of such a UHECR outburst will provide the direct evidence for UHECR acceleration in GRBs.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Measurement of the $\psi(2S)$ to $J/\psi$ cross-section ratio as a function of centrality in PbPb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\text{NN}}}$ = 5.02 TeV
- Author
-
LHCb collaboration, Aaij, R., Abdelmotteleb, A. S. W., Beteta, C. Abellan, Abudinén, F., Ackernley, T., Adefisoye, A. A., Adeva, B., Adinolfi, M., Adlarson, P., Agapopoulou, C., Aidala, C. A., Ajaltouni, Z., Akar, S., Akiba, K., Albicocco, P., Albrecht, J., Alessio, F., Alexander, M., Aliouche, Z., Cartelle, P. Alvarez, Amalric, R., Amato, S., Amey, J. L., Amhis, Y., An, L., Anderlini, L., Andersson, M., Andreianov, A., Andreola, P., Andreotti, M., Andreou, D., Anelli, A., Ao, D., Archilli, F., Argenton, M., Cuendis, S. Arguedas, Artamonov, A., Artuso, M., Aslanides, E., Da Silva, R. Ataíde, Atzeni, M., Audurier, B., Bacher, D., Perea, I. Bachiller, Bachmann, S., Bachmayer, M., Back, J. J., Rodriguez, P. Baladron, Balagura, V., Balboni, A., Baldini, W., Balzani, L., Bao, H., Leite, J. Baptista de Souza, Pretel, C. Barbero, Barbetti, M., Barbosa, I. R., Barlow, R. J., Barnyakov, M., Barsuk, S., Barter, W., Bartolini, M., Bartz, J., Basels, J. M., Bashir, S., Bassi, G., Batsukh, B., Battista, P. B., Bay, A., Beck, A., Becker, M., Bedeschi, F., Bediaga, I. B., Behling, N. A., Belin, S., Belous, K., Belov, I., Belyaev, I., Benane, G., Bencivenni, G., Ben-Haim, E., Berezhnoy, A., Bernet, R., Andres, S. Bernet, Bertolin, A., Betancourt, C., Betti, F., Bex, J., Bezshyiko, Ia., Bhom, J., Bieker, M. S., Biesuz, N. V., Billoir, P., Biolchini, A., Birch, M., Bishop, F. C. R., Bitadze, A., Bizzeti, A., Blake, T., Blanc, F., Blank, J. E., Blusk, S., Bocharnikov, V., Boelhauve, J. A., Garcia, O. Boente, Boettcher, T., Bohare, A., Boldyrev, A., Bolognani, C. S., Bolzonella, R., Bonacci, R. B., Bondar, N., Bordelius, A., Borgato, F., Borghi, S., Borsato, M., Borsuk, J. T., Bouchiba, S. A., Bovill, M., Bowcock, T. J. V., Boyer, A., Bozzi, C., Rodriguez, A. Brea, Breer, N., Brodzicka, J., Gonzalo, A. Brossa, Brown, J., Brundu, D., Buchanan, E., Buonaura, A., Buonincontri, L., Burke, A. T., Burr, C., Butter, J. S., Buytaert, J., Byczynski, W., Cadeddu, S., Cai, H., Caillet, A. C., Calabrese, R., Ramirez, S. Calderon, Calefice, L., Cali, S., Calvi, M., Gomez, M. Calvo, Magalhaes, P. Camargo, Bouzas, J. I. Cambon, Campana, P., Perez, D. H. Campora, Quezada, A. F. Campoverde, Capelli, S., Capriotti, L., Caravaca-Mora, R., Carbone, A., Salgado, L. Carcedo, Cardinale, R., Cardini, A., Carniti, P., Carus, L., Vidal, A. Casais, Caspary, R., Casse, G., Cattaneo, M., Cavallero, G., Cavallini, V., Celani, S., Cervenkov, D., Cesare, S., Chadwick, A. J., Chahrour, I., Charles, M., Charpentier, Ph., Chatzianagnostou, E., Chefdeville, M., Chen, C., Chen, S., Chen, Z., Chernov, A., Chernyshenko, S., Chiotopoulos, X., Chobanova, V., Cholak, S., Chrzaszcz, M., Chubykin, A., Chulikov, V., Ciambrone, P., Vidal, X. Cid, Ciezarek, G., Cifra, P., Clarke, P. E. L., Clemencic, M., Cliff, H. V., Closier, J., Toapaxi, C. Cocha, Coco, V., Cogan, J., Cogneras, E., Cojocariu, L., Collaviti, S., Collins, P., Colombo, T., Colonna, M., Comerma-Montells, A., Congedo, L., Contu, A., Cooke, N., Corredoira, I., Correia, A., Corti, G., Meldrum, J. J. Cottee, Couturier, B., Craik, D. C., Torres, M. Cruz, Rivera, E. Curras, Currie, R., Da Silva, C. L., Dadabaev, S., Dai, L., Dai, X., Dall'Occo, E., Dalseno, J., D'Ambrosio, C., Daniel, J., Danilina, A., d'Argent, P., Darze, G., Davidson, A., Davies, J. E., Davis, A., Francisco, O. De Aguiar, De Angelis, C., De Benedetti, F., de Boer, J., De Bruyn, K., De Capua, S., De Cian, M., Da Graca, U. De Freitas Carneiro, De Lucia, E., De Miranda, J. M., De Paula, L., De Serio, M., De Simone, P., De Vellis, F., de Vries, J. A., Debernardis, F., Decamp, D., Dedu, V., Dekkers, S., Del Buono, L., Delaney, B., Dembinski, H. -P., Deng, J., Denysenko, V., Deschamps, O., Dettori, F., Dey, B., Di Nezza, P., Diachkov, I., Didenko, S., Ding, S., Dittmann, L., Dobishuk, V., Docheva, A. D., Dong, C., Donohoe, A. M., Dordei, F., Reis, A. C. dos, Dowling, A. D., Duan, W., Duda, P., Dudek, M. W., Dufour, L., Duk, V., Durante, P., Duras, M. M., Durham, J. M., Durmus, O. D., Dziurda, A., Dzyuba, A., Easo, S., Eckstein, E., Egede, U., Egorychev, A., Egorychev, V., Eisenhardt, S., Ejopu, E., Eklund, L., Elashri, M., Ellbracht, J., Ely, S., Ene, A., Eschle, J., Esen, S., Evans, T., Fabiano, F., Falcao, L. N., Fan, Y., Fang, B., Fantini, L., Faria, M., Farmer, K., Fazzini, D., Felkowski, L., Feng, M., Feo, M., Casani, A. Fernandez, Gomez, M. Fernandez, Fernez, A. D., Ferrari, F., Rodrigues, F. Ferreira, Ferrillo, M., Ferro-Luzzi, M., Filippov, S., Fini, R. A., Fiorini, M., Firlej, M., Fischer, K. L., Fitzgerald, D. S., Fitzpatrick, C., Fiutowski, T., Fleuret, F., Fontana, M., Foreman, L. F., Forty, R., Foulds-Holt, D., Lima, V. Franco, Sevilla, M. Franco, Frank, M., Franzoso, E., Frau, G., Frei, C., Friday, D. A., Fu, J., Führing, Q., Fujii, Y., Fulghesu, T., Gabriel, E., Galati, G., Galati, M. D., Torreira, A. Gallas, Galli, D., Gambetta, S., Gandelman, M., Gandini, P., Ganie, B., Gao, H., Gao, R., Gao, T. Q., Gao, Y., Martin, L. M. Garcia, Moreno, P. Garcia, Pardiñas, J. García, Gardner, P., Garg, K. G., Garrido, L., Gaspar, C., Geertsema, R. E., Gerken, L. L., Gersabeck, E., Gersabeck, M., Gershon, T., Ghizzo, S., Ghorbanimoghaddam, Z., Giambastiani, L., Giasemis, F. I., Gibson, V., Giemza, H. K., Gilman, A. L., Giovannetti, M., Gioventù, A., Girardey, L., Gironell, P. Gironella, Giugliano, C., Giza, M. A., Gkougkousis, E. L., Glaser, F. C., Gligorov, V. V., Göbel, C., Golobardes, E., Golubkov, D., Golutvin, A., Fernandez, S. Gomez, Gomulka, W., Abrantes, F. Goncalves, Goncerz, M., Gong, G., Gooding, J. A., Gorelov, I. V., Gotti, C., Grabowski, J. P., Cardoso, L. A. Granado, Graugés, E., Graverini, E., Grazette, L., Graziani, G., Grecu, A. T., Greeven, L. M., Grieser, N. A., Grillo, L., Gromov, S., Gu, C., Guarise, M., Guerry, L., Guittiere, M., Guliaeva, V., Günther, P. A., Guseinov, A. -K., Gushchin, E., Guz, Y., Gys, T., Habermann, K., Hadavizadeh, T., Hadjivasiliou, C., Haefeli, G., Haen, C., Hajheidari, M., Hallett, G., Halvorsen, M. M., Hamilton, P. M., Hammerich, J., Han, Q., Han, X., Hansmann-Menzemer, S., Hao, L., Harnew, N., Harris, T. H., Hartmann, M., Hashmi, S., He, J., Hemmer, F., Henderson, C., Henderson, R. D. L., Hennequin, A. M., Hennessy, K., Henry, L., Herd, J., Gascon, P. Herrero, Heuel, J., Hicheur, A., Mendizabal, G. Hijano, Horswill, J., Hou, R., Hou, Y., Howarth, N., Hu, J., Hu, W., Hu, X., Huang, W., Hulsbergen, W., Hunter, R. J., Hushchyn, M., Hutchcroft, D., Idzik, M., Ilin, D., Ilten, P., Inglessi, A., Iniukhin, A., Ishteev, A., Ivshin, K., Jacobsson, R., Jage, H., Elles, S. J. Jaimes, Jakobsen, S., Jans, E., Jashal, B. K., Jawahery, A., Jevtic, V., Jiang, E., Jiang, X., Jiang, Y., Jiang, Y. J., John, M., Rajan, A. John Rubesh, Johnson, D., Jones, C. R., Jones, T. P., Joshi, S., Jost, B., Castella, J. Juan, Jurik, N., Juszczak, I., Kaminaris, D., Kandybei, S., Kane, M., Kang, Y., Kar, C., Karacson, M., Karpenkov, D., Kauniskangas, A., Kautz, J. W., Kazanecki, M. K., Keizer, F., Kenzie, M., Ketel, T., Khanji, B., Kharisova, A., Kholodenko, S., Khreich, G., Kirn, T., Kirsebom, V. S., Kitouni, O., Klaver, S., Kleijne, N., Klimaszewski, K., Kmiec, M. R., Koliiev, S., Kolk, L., Konoplyannikov, A., Kopciewicz, P., Koppenburg, P., Korolev, M., Kostiuk, I., Kot, O., Kotriakhova, S., Kozachuk, A., Kravchenko, P., Kravchuk, L., Kreps, M., Krokovny, P., Krupa, W., Krzemien, W., Kshyvanskyi, O., Kubis, S., Kucharczyk, M., Kudryavtsev, V., Kulikova, E., Kupsc, A., Kutsenko, B. K., Lacarrere, D., Gonzalez, P. Laguarta, Lai, A., Lampis, A., Lancierini, D., Gomez, C. Landesa, Lane, J. J., Lane, R., Lanfranchi, G., Langenbruch, C., Langer, J., Lantwin, O., Latham, T., Lazzari, F., Lazzeroni, C., Gac, R. Le, Lee, H., Lefèvre, R., Leflat, A., Legotin, S., Lehuraux, M., Cid, E. Lemos, Leroy, O., Lesiak, T., Lesser, E. D., Leverington, B., Li, A., Li, C., Li, H., Li, K., Li, L., Li, M., Li, P., Li, P. -R., Li, Q., Li, S., Li, T., Li, Y., Lian, Z., Liang, X., Libralon, S., Lin, C., Lin, T., Lindner, R., Linton, H., Lisovskyi, V., Litvinov, R., Liu, F. L., Liu, G., Liu, K., Liu, S., Liu, W., Liu, Y., Liu, Y. L., Salvia, A. Lobo, Loi, A., Long, T., Lopes, J. H., Huertas, A. Lopez, Soliño, S. López, Lu, Q., Lucarelli, C., Lucchesi, D., Martinez, M. Lucio, Lukashenko, V., Luo, Y., Lupato, A., Luppi, E., Lynch, K., Lyu, X. -R., Ma, G. M., Maccolini, S., Machefert, F., Maciuc, F., Mack, B., Mackay, I., Mackey, L. M., Mohan, L. R. Madhan, Madurai, M. J., Maevskiy, A., Magdalinski, D., Maisuzenko, D., Majewski, M. W., Malczewski, J. J., Malde, S., Malentacca, L., Malinin, A., Maltsev, T., Manca, G., Mancinelli, G., Mancuso, C., Escalero, R. Manera, Manganella, F. M., Manuzzi, D., Marangotto, D., Marchand, J. F., Marchevski, R., Marconi, U., Mariani, E., Mariani, S., Benito, C. Marin, Marks, J., Marshall, A. M., Martel, L., Martelli, G., Martellotti, G., Martinazzoli, L., Martinelli, M., Gomez, D. Martinez, Santos, D. Martinez, Vidal, F. Martinez, Granollers, A. Martorell i, Massafferri, A., Matev, R., Mathad, A., Matiunin, V., Matteuzzi, C., Mattioli, K. R., Mauri, A., Maurice, E., Mauricio, J., Mayencourt, P., de Cos, J. Mazorra, Mazurek, M., McCann, M., Mcconnell, L., McGrath, T. H., McHugh, N. T., McNab, A., McNulty, R., Meadows, B., Meier, G., Melnychuk, D., Meng, F. M., Merk, M., Merli, A., Garcia, L. Meyer, Miao, D., Miao, H., Mikhasenko, M., Milanes, D. A., Minotti, A., Minucci, E., Miralles, T., Mitreska, B., Mitzel, D. S., Modak, A., Mohammed, R. A., Moise, R. D., Mokhnenko, S., Cardenas, E. F. Molina, Mombächer, T., Monk, M., Monteil, S., Gomez, A. Morcillo, Morello, G., Morello, M. J., Morgenthaler, M. P., Moron, J., Morren, W., Morris, A. B., Morris, A. G., Mountain, R., Mu, H., Mu, Z. M., Muhammad, E., Muheim, F., Mulder, M., Müller, K., Muñoz-Rojas, F., Murta, R., Naik, P., Nakada, T., Nandakumar, R., Nanut, T., Nasteva, I., Needham, M., Neri, N., Neubert, S., Neufeld, N., Neustroev, P., Nicolini, J., Nicotra, D., Niel, E. M., Nikitin, N., Niu, Q., Nogarolli, P., Nogga, P., Normand, C., Fernandez, J. Novoa, Nowak, G., Nunez, C., Nur, H. N., Oblakowska-Mucha, A., Obraztsov, V., Oeser, T., Okamura, S., Okhotnikov, A., Okhrimenko, O., Oldeman, R., Oliva, F., Olocco, M., Onderwater, C. J. G., O'Neil, R. H., Osthues, D., Goicochea, J. M. Otalora, Owen, P., Oyanguren, A., Ozcelik, O., Paciolla, F., Padee, A., Padeken, K. O., Pagare, B., Pais, P. R., Pajero, T., Palano, A., Palutan, M., Pan, X., Panshin, G., Paolucci, L., Papanestis, A., Pappagallo, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Pappenheimer, C., Parkes, C., Parmar, D., Passalacqua, B., Passaleva, G., Passaro, D., Pastore, A., Patel, M., Patoc, J., Patrignani, C., Paul, A., Pawley, C. J., Pellegrino, A., Peng, J., Altarelli, M. Pepe, Perazzini, S., Pereima, D., Da Costa, H. Pereira, Castro, A. Pereiro, Perret, P., Perrevoort, A., Perro, A., Peters, M. J., Petridis, K., Petrolini, A., Pfaller, J. P., Pham, H., Pica, L., Piccini, M., Piccolo, L., Pietrzyk, B., Pietrzyk, G., Pinci, D., Pisani, F., Pizzichemi, M., Placinta, V., Casasus, M. Plo, Poeschl, T., Polci, F., Lener, M. Poli, Poluektov, A., Polukhina, N., Polyakov, I., Polycarpo, E., Ponce, S., Popov, D., Poslavskii, S., Prasanth, K., Prouve, C., Provenzano, D., Pugatch, V., Punzi, G., Qasim, S., Qian, Q. Q., Qian, W., Qin, N., Qu, S., Quagliani, R., Trejo, R. I. Rabadan, Rademacker, J. H., Rama, M., García, M. Ramírez, De Oliveira, V. Ramos, Pernas, M. Ramos, Rangel, M. S., Ratnikov, F., Raven, G., De Miguel, M. Rebollo, Redi, F., Reich, J., Reiss, F., Ren, Z., Resmi, P. K., Ribatti, R., Ricart, G. R., Riccardi, D., Ricciardi, S., Richardson, K., Richardson-Slipper, M., Rinnert, K., Robbe, P., Robertson, G., Rodrigues, E., Alvarez, A. Rodriguez, Fernandez, E. Rodriguez, Lopez, J. A. Rodriguez, Rodriguez, E. Rodriguez, Roensch, J., Rogachev, A., Rogovskiy, A., Rolf, D. L., Roloff, P., Romanovskiy, V., Vidal, A. Romero, Romolini, G., Ronchetti, F., Rong, T., Rotondo, M., Roy, S. R., Rudolph, M. S., Diaz, M. Ruiz, Fernandez, R. A. Ruiz, Vidal, J. Ruiz, Ryzhikov, A., Ryzka, J., Saavedra-Arias, J. J., Silva, J. J. Saborido, Sadek, R., Sagidova, N., Sahoo, D., Sahoo, N., Saitta, B., Salomoni, M., Sanderswood, I., Santacesaria, R., Rios, C. Santamarina, Santimaria, M., Santoro, L., Santovetti, E., Saputi, A., Saranin, D., Sarnatskiy, A., Sarpis, G., Sarpis, M., Satriano, C., Satta, A., Saur, M., Savrina, D., Sazak, H., Sborzacchi, F., Smead, L. G. Scantlebury, Scarabotto, A., Schael, S., Scherl, S., Schiller, M., Schindler, H., Schmelling, M., Schmidt, B., Schmitt, S., Schmitz, H., Schneider, O., Schopper, A., Schulte, N., Schulte, S., Schune, M. H., Schwemmer, R., Schwering, G., Sciascia, B., Sciuccati, A., Segal, I., Sellam, S., Semennikov, A., Senger, T., Soares, M. Senghi, Sergi, A., Serra, N., Sestini, L., Seuthe, A., Shang, Y., Shangase, D. M., Shapkin, M., Sharma, R. S., Shchemerov, I., Shchutska, L., Shears, T., Shekhtman, L., Shen, Z., Sheng, S., Shevchenko, V., Shi, B., Shi, Q., Shimizu, Y., Shmanin, E., Shorkin, R., Shupperd, J. D., Coutinho, R. Silva, Simi, G., Simone, S., Skidmore, N., Skwarnicki, T., Slater, M. W., Smallwood, J. C., Smith, E., Smith, K., Smith, M., Snoch, A., Lavra, L. Soares, Sokoloff, M. D., Soler, F. J. P., Solomin, A., Solovev, A., Solovyev, I., Sommerfeld, N. S., Song, R., Song, Y., Song, Y. S., De Almeida, F. L. Souza, De Paula, B. Souza, Norella, E. Spadaro, Spedicato, E., Speer, J. G., Spiridenkov, E., Spradlin, P., Sriskaran, V., Stagni, F., Stahl, M., Stahl, S., Stanislaus, S., Stein, E. N., Steinkamp, O., Stenyakin, O., Stevens, H., Strekalina, D., Su, Y., Suljik, F., Sun, J., Sun, L., Sundfeld, D., Sutcliffe, W., Swallow, P. N., Swientek, K., Swystun, F., Szabelski, A., Szumlak, T., Tan, Y., Tang, Y., Tat, M. D., Terentev, A., Terzuoli, F., Teubert, F., Thomas, E., Thompson, D. J. D., Tilquin, H., Tisserand, V., T'Jampens, S., Tobin, M., Tomassetti, L., Tonani, G., Tong, X., Machado, D. Torres, Toscano, L., Tou, D. Y., Trippl, C., Tuci, G., Tuning, N., Uecker, L. H., Ukleja, A., Unverzagt, D. J., Urbach, B., Ursov, E., Usachov, A., Ustyuzhanin, A., Uwer, U., Vagnoni, V., Cadenas, V. Valcarce, Valenti, G., Canudas, N. Valls, Van Hecke, H., van Herwijnen, E., Van Hulse, C. B., Van Laak, R., van Veghel, M., Vasquez, G., Gomez, R. Vazquez, Regueiro, P. Vazquez, Sierra, C. Vázquez, Vecchi, S., Velthuis, J. J., Veltri, M., Venkateswaran, A., Verdoglia, M., Vesterinen, M., Benet, D. Vico, Villalba, P. Vidrier, Diaz, M. Vieites, Vilasis-Cardona, X., Figueras, E. Vilella, Villa, A., Vincent, P., Volle, F. C., Bruch, D. vom, Voropaev, N., Vos, K., Vrahas, C., Wagner, J., Walsh, J., Walton, E. J., Wan, G., Wang, C., Wang, G., Wang, H., Wang, J., Wang, M., Wang, N. W., Wang, R., Wang, X., Wang, X. W., Wang, Y., Wang, Y. W., Wang, Z., Ward, J. A., Waterlaat, M., Watson, N. K., Websdale, D., Wei, Y., Wendel, J., Westhenry, B. D. C., White, C., Whitehead, M., Whiter, E., Wiederhold, A. R., Wiedner, D., Wilkinson, G., Wilkinson, M. K., Williams, M., Williams, M. J., Williams, M. R. J., Williams, R., Williams, Z., Wilson, F. F., Winn, M., Wislicki, W., Witek, M., Witola, L., Wormser, G., Wotton, S. A., Wu, H., Wu, J., Wu, X., Wu, Y., Wu, Z., Wyllie, K., Xian, S., Xiang, Z., Xie, Y., Xu, A., Xu, J., Xu, L., Xu, M., Xu, Z., Yang, K., Yang, S., Yang, X., Yang, Y., Yang, Z., Yeroshenko, V., Yeung, H., Yin, H., Yin, X., Yu, C. Y., Yu, J., Yuan, X., Yuan, Y, Zaffaroni, E., Zavertyaev, M., Zdybal, M., Zenesini, F., Zeng, C., Zeng, M., Zhang, C., Zhang, D., Zhang, J., Zhang, L., Zhang, S., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. Z., Zhang, Z., Zhao, Y., Zharkova, A., Zhelezov, A., Zheng, S. Z., Zheng, X. Z., Zheng, Y., Zhou, T., Zhou, X., Zhou, Y., Zhovkovska, V., Zhu, L. Z., Zhu, X., Zhukov, V., Zhuo, J., Zou, Q., Zuliani, D., and Zunica, G.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The dissociation of quarkonium states with different binding energies produced in heavy-ion collisions is a powerful probe for investigating the formation and properties of the quark-gluon plasma. The ratio of production cross-sections of $\psi(2S)$ and $J/\psi$ mesons times the ratio of their branching fractions into the dimuon final state is measured as a function of centrality using data collected by the LHCb detector in PbPb collisions at $\sqrt{s_{\text{NN}}}$ = 5.02 TeV. The measured ratio shows no dependence on the collision centrality, and is compared to the latest theory predictions and to the recent measurements in literature., Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2024-041.html (LHCb public pages)
- Published
- 2024
30. Probing the Galactic neutrino flux at neutrino energies above 200 TeV with the Baikal Gigaton Volume Detector
- Author
-
Allakhverdyan, V. A., Avrorin, A. D., Avrorin, A. V., Aynutdinov, V. M., Bardačová, Z., Belolaptikov, I. A., Bondarev, E. A., Borina, I. V., Budnev, N. M., Chadymov, V. A., Chepurnov, A. S., Dik, V. Y., Domogatsky, G. V., Doroshenko, A. A., Dvornický, R., Dyachok, A. N., Dzhilkibaev, Zh. -A. M., Eckerová, E., Elzhov, T. V., Fomin, V. N., Gafarov, A. R., Golubkov, K. V., Gorshkov, N. S., Gress, T. I., Kebkal, K. G., Kebkal, V. K., Kharuk, I. V., Khramov, E. V., Kleimenov, M. I., Kolbin, M. M., Koligaev, S. O., Konischev, K. V., Korobchenko, A. V., Koshechkin, A. P., Kozhin, V. A., Kruglov, M. V., Kulepov, V. F., Kulikov, A. A., Lemeshev, Y. E., Mirgazov, R. R., Naumov, D. V., Nikolaev, A. S., Perevalova, I. A., Petukhov, D. P., Pliskovsky, E. N., Rozanov, M. I., Ryabov, E. V., Safronov, G. B., Shaybonov, B. A., Shishkin, V. Y., Shirokov, E. V., Šimkovic, F., Sirenko, A. E., Skurikhin, A. V., Solovjev, A. G., Sorokovikov, M. N., Štekl, I., Stromakov, A. P., Suvorova, O. V., Tabolenko, V. A., Tretjak, V. I., Ulzutuev, B. B., Yablokova, Y. V., Zaborov, D. N., Zavyalov, S. I., Zvezdov, D. Y., Kovalev, Y. Y., Plavin, A. V., Semikoz, D. V., and Troitsky, S. V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Recent observations of the Galactic component of the high-energy neutrino flux, together with the detection of the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission up to sub-PeV energies, open new possibilities to study the acceleration and propagation of cosmic rays in the Milky Way. At the same time, both large non-astrophysical backgrounds at TeV energies and scarcity of neutrino events in the sub-PeV band currently limit these analyses. Here we use the sample of cascade events with estimated neutrino energies above 200 TeV, detected by the partially deployed Baikal Gigaton Volume Detector (GVD) in six years of operation, to test the continuation of the Galactic neutrino spectrum to sub-PeV energies. We find that the distribution of the arrival directions of Baikal-GVD cascades above 200 TeV in the sky suggests an excess of neutrinos from low Galactic latitudes. We find the excess above 200 TeV also in the most recent IceCube public data sets, both of cascades and tracks. The significant (3.6 sigma in the combined analysis) flux of Galactic neutrinos above 200 TeV challenges often-used templates for neutrino search based on cosmic-ray simulations., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, revtex 4.2
- Published
- 2024
31. A hidden Active Galactic Nuclei population: the first radio luminosity functions constructed by physical process
- Author
-
Morabito, Leah K., Kondapally, R., Best, P. N., Yue, B. -H., de Jong, J. M. G. H. J., Sweijen, F., Bondi, Marco, Schwarz, Dominik J., Smith, D. J. B., van Weeren, R. J., Röttgering, H. J. A., Shimwell, T. W., and Prandoni, Isabella
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Both star formation (SF) and Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) play an important role in galaxy evolution. Statistically quantifying their relative importance can be done using radio luminosity functions. Until now these relied on galaxy classifications, where sources with a mixture of radio emission from SF and AGN are labelled as either a star-forming galaxy or an AGN. This can cause the misestimation of the relevance of AGN. Brightness temperature measurements at 144 MHz with the International LOFAR telescope can separate radio emission from AGN and SF. We use the combination of sub-arcsec and arcsec resolution imaging of 7,497 sources in the Lockman Hole and ELAIS-N1 fields to identify AGN components in the sub-arcsec resolution images and subtract them from the total flux density, leaving flux density from SF only. We construct, for the first time, radio luminosity functions by physical process, either SF or AGN activity, revealing a hidden AGN population at $L_{\textrm{144MHz}}$$<10^{24}$ W$\,$Hz$^{-1}$ . This population is 1.56$\pm$0.06 more than expected for $0.5
- Published
- 2024
32. Terahertz generation via all-optical quantum control in 2D and 3D materials
- Author
-
Jana, Kamalesh, de Souza, Amanda B. B., Mi, Yonghao, Gholam-Mirzaei, Shima, Ko, Dong Hyuk, Tripathi, Saroj R., Sederberg, Shawn, Gupta, James A., and Corkum, Paul B.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Using optical technology for current injection and electromagnetic emission simplifies the comparison between materials. Here, we inject current into monolayer graphene and bulk gallium arsenide (GaAs) using two-color quantum interference and detect the emitted electric field by electro-optic sampling. We find the amplitude of emitted terahertz (THz) radiation scales in the same way for both materials even though they differ in dimension, band gap, atomic composition, symmetry and lattice structure. In addition, we observe the same mapping of the current direction to the light characteristics. With no electrodes for injection or detection, our approach will allow electron scattering timescales to be directly measured. We envisage that it will enable exploration of new materials suitable for generating terahertz magnetic fields., Comment: 4 figures
- Published
- 2024
33. Orbital Angular Momentum Coherent State Beams
- Author
-
Aguirre-Olivas, D., Mellado-Villaseñor, G., Perez-Garcia, B., and Rodríguez-Lara, B. M.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
We explore a family of paraxial beams constructed by the linear superposition of Laguerre-Gaussian beams, representing an optical analogue to generalized $SU(2)$ Lie group coherent states. A single complex parameter controls a smooth transition between Laguerre-Gaussian and Hermite-Gaussian beams, with intermediate beams that merge characteristics of both families. Our beams exhibit propagation-invariant properties, up to a scaling factor, a highly desirable feature for optical applications, validated via holographic experimental results., Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2024
34. Observations of Uranus at High Phase Angle as Seen by New Horizons
- Author
-
Hasler, Samantha N., Mayorga, L. C., Grundy, William M., Simon, Amy A., Benecchi, Susan D., Howett, Carly J. A., Protopapa, Silvia, Hammel, Heidi B., Wenkert, Daniel D., Stern, S. Alan, Singer, Kelsi N., Porter, Simon B., Brandt, Pontus C., Parker, Joel W., Verbiscer, Anne J., Spencer, John R., and Team, the New Horizons Planetary Science Theme
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present flux measurements of Uranus observed at phase angles of 43.9{\deg}, 44.0{\deg}, and 52.4{\deg} by the Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC) on the New Horizons spacecraft during 2023, 2010, and 2019, respectively. New Horizons imaged Uranus at a distance of about 24-70 AU (2023) in four color filters, with bandpasses of 400-550 nm, 540-700 nm, 780-975 nm, and 860-910 nm. High-phase-angle observations are of interest for studying the energy balance of Uranus, constraining the atmospheric scattering behavior, and understanding the planet as an analog for ice giant exoplanets. The new observations from New Horizons provide access to a wider wavelength range and different season compared to previous observations from both Voyager spacecraft. We performed aperture photometry on the New Horizons observations of Uranus to obtain its brightness in each photometric band. The photometry suggests that Uranus may be darker than predicted by a Lambertian phase curve in the Blue and Red filters. Comparison to simultaneous low-phase Hubble WFC3 and ground-based community-led observations indicates a lack of large-scale features at full-phase that would introduce variation in the rotational light curve. The New Horizons reflectance in the Blue (492 nm) and Red (624 nm) filters does not exhibit statistically significant variation and is consistent with the expected error bars. These results place new constraints on the atmospheric model of Uranus and its reflectivity. The observations are analogous to those from future exoplanet direct-imaging missions, which will capture unresolved images of exoplanets at partial phases. These results will serve as a "ground-truth" with which to interpret exo-ice giant data., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Planetary Science Journal, 11 pages, 6 figures
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The GECKOS Survey: Identifying kinematic sub-structures in edge-on galaxies
- Author
-
Fraser-McKelvie, A., van de Sande, J., Gadotti, D. A., Emsellem, E., Brown, T., Fisher, D. B., Martig, M., Bureau, M., Gerhard, O., Battisti, A. J., Bland-Hawthorn, J., Catinella, B., Combes, F., Cortese, L., Croom, S. M., Davis, T. A., Falcón-Barroso, J., Fragkoudi, F., Freeman, K. C., Hayden, M. R., McDermid, R., Ciraulo, B. Mazzilli, Mendel, J. T., Pinna, F., Poci, A., Rutherford, T. H., de Sá-Freitas, C., Silva-Lima, L. A., Valenzuela, L. M., van de Ven, G., Wang, Z., and Watts, A. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The vertical evolution of galactic discs is governed by the sub-structures within them. We examine the diversity of kinematic sub-structure present in the first 12 galaxies observed from the GECKOS survey, a VLT/MUSE large programme providing a systematic study of 35 edge-on, Milky Way-mass disc galaxies. Employing the nGIST analysis pipeline, we derive the mean line-of-sight stellar velocity ($V_{\star}$), velocity dispersion ($\sigma_{\star}$), skew ($h_{3}$), and kurtosis ($h_{4}$) for the sample, and examine 2D maps and 1D line profiles. Visually, the majority of this sample (8/12) are found to possess boxy-peanut bulges and host the corresponding kinematic structure predicted for stellar bars viewed in projection. Four galaxies exhibit strong evidence for the presence of nuclear discs, including central $h_{3}$-$V_{\star}$ anti-correlations, `croissant'-shaped central depressions in $\sigma_{\star}$ maps, strong gradients in $h_{3}$, and positive $h_{4}$ plateaus over the expected nuclear disc extent. The strength of the $h_{3}$ feature corresponds to the size of the nuclear disc, measured from the $h_{3}$ turnover radius. We can explain the features within the kinematic maps of all sample galaxies via disc structure(s) alone. We do not find any need to invoke the existence of dispersion-dominated bulges. Obtaining the specialised data products for this paper and the broader GECKOS survey required significant development of existing integral field spectroscopic (IFS) analysis tools. Therefore, we also present the nGIST pipeline: a modern, sophisticated, and easy-to-use pipeline for the analysis of galaxy IFS data. We conclude that the variety of kinematic sub-structures seen in GECKOS galaxies requires a contemporary view of galaxy morphology, expanding on the traditional view of galaxy structure, and uniting the kinematic complexity observed in the Milky Way with the extragalactic., Comment: 32 pages (9 of which are appendix), 26 figures, submitted to A&A. Comments welcome!
- Published
- 2024
36. Study of $D_{s1}(2460)^{+}\to D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$ in $B\to {\bar{D}}^{(*)}D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$ decays
- Author
-
LHCb collaboration, Aaij, R., Abdelmotteleb, A. S. W., Beteta, C. Abellan, Abudinén, F., Ackernley, T., Adefisoye, A. A., Adeva, B., Adinolfi, M., Adlarson, P., Agapopoulou, C., Aidala, C. A., Ajaltouni, Z., Akar, S., Akiba, K., Albicocco, P., Albrecht, J., Alessio, F., Alexander, M., Aliouche, Z., Cartelle, P. Alvarez, Amalric, R., Amato, S., Amey, J. L., Amhis, Y., An, L., Anderlini, L., Andersson, M., Andreianov, A., Andreola, P., Andreotti, M., Andreou, D., Anelli, A., Ao, D., Archilli, F., Argenton, M., Cuendis, S. Arguedas, Artamonov, A., Artuso, M., Aslanides, E., Da Silva, R. Ataíde, Atzeni, M., Audurier, B., Bacher, D., Perea, I. Bachiller, Bachmann, S., Bachmayer, M., Back, J. J., Rodriguez, P. Baladron, Balagura, V., Balboni, A., Baldini, W., Balzani, L., Bao, H., Leite, J. Baptista de Souza, Pretel, C. Barbero, Barbetti, M., Barbosa, I. R., Barlow, R. J., Barnyakov, M., Barsuk, S., Barter, W., Bartolini, M., Bartz, J., Basels, J. M., Bashir, S., Bassi, G., Batsukh, B., Battista, P. B., Bay, A., Beck, A., Becker, M., Bedeschi, F., Bediaga, I. B., Behling, N. A., Belin, S., Belous, K., Belov, I., Belyaev, I., Benane, G., Bencivenni, G., Ben-Haim, E., Berezhnoy, A., Bernet, R., Andres, S. Bernet, Bertolin, A., Betancourt, C., Betti, F., Bex, J., Bezshyiko, Ia., Bhom, J., Bieker, M. S., Biesuz, N. V., Billoir, P., Biolchini, A., Birch, M., Bishop, F. C. R., Bitadze, A., Bizzeti, A., Blake, T., Blanc, F., Blank, J. E., Blusk, S., Bocharnikov, V., Boelhauve, J. A., Garcia, O. Boente, Boettcher, T., Bohare, A., Boldyrev, A., Bolognani, C. S., Bolzonella, R., Bonacci, R. B., Bondar, N., Bordelius, A., Borgato, F., Borghi, S., Borsato, M., Borsuk, J. T., Bouchiba, S. A., Bovill, M., Bowcock, T. J. V., Boyer, A., Bozzi, C., Rodriguez, A. Brea, Breer, N., Brodzicka, J., Gonzalo, A. Brossa, Brown, J., Brundu, D., Buchanan, E., Buonaura, A., Buonincontri, L., Burke, A. T., Burr, C., Butter, J. S., Buytaert, J., Byczynski, W., Cadeddu, S., Cai, H., Caillet, A. C., Calabrese, R., Ramirez, S. Calderon, Calefice, L., Cali, S., Calvi, M., Gomez, M. Calvo, Magalhaes, P. Camargo, Bouzas, J. I. Cambon, Campana, P., Perez, D. H. Campora, Quezada, A. F. Campoverde, Capelli, S., Capriotti, L., Caravaca-Mora, R., Carbone, A., Salgado, L. Carcedo, Cardinale, R., Cardini, A., Carniti, P., Carus, L., Vidal, A. Casais, Caspary, R., Casse, G., Cattaneo, M., Cavallero, G., Cavallini, V., Celani, S., Cervenkov, D., Cesare, S., Chadwick, A. J., Chahrour, I., Charles, M., Charpentier, Ph., Chatzianagnostou, E., Chefdeville, M., Chen, C., Chen, S., Chen, Z., Chernov, A., Chernyshenko, S., Chiotopoulos, X., Chobanova, V., Cholak, S., Chrzaszcz, M., Chubykin, A., Chulikov, V., Ciambrone, P., Vidal, X. Cid, Ciezarek, G., Cifra, P., Clarke, P. E. L., Clemencic, M., Cliff, H. V., Closier, J., Toapaxi, C. Cocha, Coco, V., Cogan, J., Cogneras, E., Cojocariu, L., Collaviti, S., Collins, P., Colombo, T., Colonna, M. C., Comerma-Montells, A., Congedo, L., Contu, A., Cooke, N., Corredoira, I., Correia, A., Corti, G., Meldrum, J. J. Cottee, Couturier, B., Craik, D. C., Torres, M. Cruz, Rivera, E. Curras, Currie, R., Da Silva, C. L., Dadabaev, S., Dai, L., Dai, X., Dall'Occo, E., Dalseno, J., D'Ambrosio, C., Daniel, J., Danilina, A., d'Argent, P., Davidson, A., Davies, J. E., Davis, A., Francisco, O. De Aguiar, De Angelis, C., De Benedetti, F., de Boer, J., De Bruyn, K., De Capua, S., De Cian, M., Da Graca, U. De Freitas Carneiro, De Lucia, E., De Miranda, J. M., De Paula, L., De Serio, M., De Simone, P., De Vellis, F., de Vries, J. A., Debernardis, F., Decamp, D., Dedu, V., Dekkers, S., Del Buono, L., Delaney, B., Dembinski, H. -P., Deng, J., Denysenko, V., Deschamps, O., Dettori, F., Dey, B., Di Nezza, P., Diachkov, I., Didenko, S., Ding, S., Dittmann, L., Dobishuk, V., Docheva, A. D., Dong, C., Donohoe, A. M., Dordei, F., Reis, A. C. dos, Dowling, A. D., Duan, W., Duda, P., Dudek, M. W., Dufour, L., Duk, V., Durante, P., Duras, M. M., Durham, J. M., Durmus, O. D., Dziurda, A., Dzyuba, A., Easo, S., Eckstein, E., Egede, U., Egorychev, A., Egorychev, V., Eisenhardt, S., Ejopu, E., Eklund, L., Elashri, M., Ellbracht, J., Ely, S., Ene, A., Eschle, J., Esen, S., Evans, T., Fabiano, F., Falcao, L. N., Fan, Y., Fang, B., Fantini, L., Faria, M., Farmer, K., Fazzini, D., Felkowski, L., Feng, M., Feo, M., Casani, A. Fernandez, Gomez, M. Fernandez, Fernez, A. D., Ferrari, F., Rodrigues, F. Ferreira, Ferrillo, M., Ferro-Luzzi, M., Filippov, S., Fini, R. A., Fiorini, M., Firlej, M., Fischer, K. L., Fitzgerald, D. S., Fitzpatrick, C., Fiutowski, T., Fleuret, F., Fontana, M., Foreman, L. F., Forty, R., Foulds-Holt, D., Lima, V. Franco, Sevilla, M. Franco, Frank, M., Franzoso, E., Frau, G., Frei, C., Friday, D. A., Fu, J., Führing, Q., Fujii, Y., Fulghesu, T., Gabriel, E., Galati, G., Galati, M. D., Torreira, A. Gallas, Galli, D., Gambetta, S., Gandelman, M., Gandini, P., Ganie, B., Gao, H., Gao, R., Gao, T. Q., Gao, Y., Martin, L. M. Garcia, Moreno, P. Garcia, Pardiñas, J. García, Gardner, P., Garg, K. G., Garrido, L., Gaspar, C., Geertsema, R. E., Gerken, L. L., Gersabeck, E., Gersabeck, M., Gershon, T., Ghizzo, S., Ghorbanimoghaddam, Z., Giambastiani, L., Giasemis, F. I., Gibson, V., Giemza, H. K., Gilman, A. L., Giovannetti, M., Gioventù, A., Girardey, L., Gironell, P. Gironella, Giugliano, C., Giza, M. A., Gkougkousis, E. L., Glaser, F. C., Gligorov, V. V., Göbel, C., Golobardes, E., Golubkov, D., Golutvin, A., Fernandez, S. Gomez, Gomulka, W., Abrantes, F. Goncalves, Goncerz, M., Gong, G., Gooding, J. A., Gorelov, I. V., Gotti, C., Grabowski, J. P., Cardoso, L. A. Granado, Graugés, E., Graverini, E., Grazette, L., Graziani, G., Grecu, A. T., Greeven, L. M., Grieser, N. A., Grillo, L., Gromov, S., Gu, C., Guarise, M., Guerry, L., Guittiere, M., Guliaeva, V., Günther, P. A., Guseinov, A. -K., Gushchin, E., Guz, Y., Gys, T., Habermann, K., Hadavizadeh, T., Hadjivasiliou, C., Haefeli, G., Haen, C., Hajheidari, M., Hallett, G., Halvorsen, M. M., Hamilton, P. M., Hammerich, J., Han, Q., Han, X., Hansmann-Menzemer, S., Hao, L., Harnew, N., Harris, T. H., Hartmann, M., Hashmi, S., He, J., Hemmer, F., Henderson, C., Henderson, R. D. L., Hennequin, A. M., Hennessy, K., Henry, L., Herd, J., Gascon, P. Herrero, Heuel, J., Hicheur, A., Mendizabal, G. Hijano, Horswill, J., Hou, R., Hou, Y., Howarth, N., Hu, J., Hu, W., Hu, X., Huang, W., Hulsbergen, W., Hunter, R. J., Hushchyn, M., Hutchcroft, D., Idzik, M., Ilin, D., Ilten, P., Inglessi, A., Iniukhin, A., Ishteev, A., Ivshin, K., Jacobsson, R., Jage, H., Elles, S. J. Jaimes, Jakobsen, S., Jans, E., Jashal, B. K., Jawahery, A., Jevtic, V., Jiang, E., Jiang, X., Jiang, Y., Jiang, Y. J., John, M., Rajan, A. John Rubesh, Johnson, D., Jones, C. R., Jones, T. P., Joshi, S., Jost, B., Castella, J. Juan, Jurik, N., Juszczak, I., Kaminaris, D., Kandybei, S., Kane, M., Kang, Y., Kar, C., Karacson, M., Karpenkov, D., Kauniskangas, A., Kautz, J. W., Kazanecki, M. K., Keizer, F., Kenzie, M., Ketel, T., Khanji, B., Kharisova, A., Kholodenko, S., Khreich, G., Kirn, T., Kirsebom, V. S., Kitouni, O., Klaver, S., Kleijne, N., Klimaszewski, K., Kmiec, M. R., Koliiev, S., Kolk, L., Konoplyannikov, A., Kopciewicz, P., Koppenburg, P., Korolev, M., Kostiuk, I., Kot, O., Kotriakhova, S., Kozachuk, A., Kravchenko, P., Kravchuk, L., Kreps, M., Krokovny, P., Krupa, W., Krzemien, W., Kshyvanskyi, O., Kubis, S., Kucharczyk, M., Kudryavtsev, V., Kulikova, E., Kupsc, A., Kutsenko, B. K., Lacarrere, D., Gonzalez, P. Laguarta, Lai, A., Lampis, A., Lancierini, D., Gomez, C. Landesa, Lane, J. J., Lane, R., Lanfranchi, G., Langenbruch, C., Langer, J., Lantwin, O., Latham, T., Lazzari, F., Lazzeroni, C., Gac, R. Le, Lee, H., Lefèvre, R., Leflat, A., Legotin, S., Lehuraux, M., Cid, E. Lemos, Leroy, O., Lesiak, T., Lesser, E. D., Leverington, B., Li, A., Li, C., Li, H., Li, K., Li, L., Li, M., Li, P., Li, P. -R., Li, Q., Li, S., Li, T., Li, Y., Lian, Z., Liang, X., Libralon, S., Lin, C., Lin, T., Lindner, R., Linton, H., Lisovskyi, V., Litvinov, R., Liu, F. L., Liu, G., Liu, K., Liu, S., Liu, W., Liu, Y., Liu, Y. L., Salvia, A. Lobo, Loi, A., Long, T., Lopes, J. H., Huertas, A. Lopez, Soliño, S. López, Lu, Q., Lucarelli, C., Lucchesi, D., Martinez, M. Lucio, Lukashenko, V., Luo, Y., Lupato, A., Luppi, E., Lynch, K., Lyu, X. -R., Ma, G. M., Maccolini, S., Machefert, F., Maciuc, F., Mack, B., Mackay, I., Mackey, L. M., Mohan, L. R. Madhan, Madurai, M. J., Maevskiy, A., Magdalinski, D., Maisuzenko, D., Majewski, M. W., Malczewski, J. J., Malde, S., Malentacca, L., Malinin, A., Maltsev, T., Manca, G., Mancinelli, G., Mancuso, C., Escalero, R. Manera, Manganella, F. M., Manuzzi, D., Marangotto, D., Marchand, J. F., Marchevski, R., Marconi, U., Mariani, E., Mariani, S., Benito, C. Marin, Marks, J., Marshall, A. M., Martel, L., Martelli, G., Martellotti, G., Martinazzoli, L., Martinelli, M., Gomez, D. Martinez, Santos, D. Martinez, Vidal, F. Martinez, Granollers, A. Martorell i, Massafferri, A., Matev, R., Mathad, A., Matiunin, V., Matteuzzi, C., Mattioli, K. R., Mauri, A., Maurice, E., Mauricio, J., Mayencourt, P., de Cos, J. Mazorra, Mazurek, M., McCann, M., Mcconnell, L., McGrath, T. H., McHugh, N. T., McNab, A., McNulty, R., Meadows, B., Meier, G., Melnychuk, D., Meng, F. M., Merk, M., Merli, A., Garcia, L. Meyer, Miao, D., Miao, H., Mikhasenko, M., Milanes, D. A., Minotti, A., Minucci, E., Miralles, T., Mitreska, B., Mitzel, D. S., Modak, A., Mohammed, R. A., Moise, R. D., Mokhnenko, S., Cardenas, E. F. Molina, Mombächer, T., Monk, M., Monteil, S., Gomez, A. Morcillo, Morello, G., Morello, M. J., Morgenthaler, M. P., Moron, J., Morren, W., Morris, A. B., Morris, A. G., Mountain, R., Mu, H., Mu, Z. M., Muhammad, E., Muheim, F., Mulder, M., Müller, K., Muñoz-Rojas, F., Murta, R., Naik, P., Nakada, T., Nandakumar, R., Nanut, T., Nasteva, I., Needham, M., Neri, N., Neubert, S., Neufeld, N., Neustroev, P., Nicolini, J., Nicotra, D., Niel, E. M., Nikitin, N., Niu, Q., Nogarolli, P., Nogga, P., Normand, C., Fernandez, J. Novoa, Nowak, G., Nunez, C., Nur, H. N., Oblakowska-Mucha, A., Obraztsov, V., Oeser, T., Okamura, S., Okhotnikov, A., Okhrimenko, O., Oldeman, R., Oliva, F., Olocco, M., Onderwater, C. J. G., O'Neil, R. H., Osthues, D., Goicochea, J. M. Otalora, Owen, P., Oyanguren, A., Ozcelik, O., Paciolla, F., Padee, A., Padeken, K. O., Pagare, B., Pais, P. R., Pajero, T., Palano, A., Palutan, M., Pan, X., Panshin, G., Paolucci, L., Papanestis, A., Pappagallo, M., Pappalardo, L. L., Pappenheimer, C., Parkes, C., Parmar, D., Passalacqua, B., Passaleva, G., Passaro, D., Pastore, A., Patel, M., Patoc, J., Patrignani, C., Paul, A., Pawley, C. J., Pellegrino, A., Peng, J., Altarelli, M. Pepe, Perazzini, S., Pereima, D., Da Costa, H. Pereira, Castro, A. Pereiro, Perret, P., Perrevoort, A., Perro, A., Petridis, K., Petrolini, A., Pfaller, J. P., Pham, H., Pica, L., Piccini, M., Piccolo, L., Pietrzyk, B., Pietrzyk, G., Pinci, D., Pisani, F., Pizzichemi, M., Placinta, V., Casasus, M. Plo, Poeschl, T., Polci, F., Lener, M. Poli, Poluektov, A., Polukhina, N., Polyakov, I., Polycarpo, E., Ponce, S., Popov, D., Poslavskii, S., Prasanth, K., Prouve, C., Provenzano, D., Pugatch, V., Punzi, G., Qasim, S., Qian, Q. Q., Qian, W., Qin, N., Qu, S., Quagliani, R., Trejo, R. I. Rabadan, Rademacker, J. H., Rama, M., García, M. Ramírez, De Oliveira, V. Ramos, Pernas, M. Ramos, Rangel, M. S., Ratnikov, F., Raven, G., De Miguel, M. Rebollo, Redi, F., Reich, J., Reiss, F., Ren, Z., Resmi, P. K., Ribatti, R., Ricart, G. R., Riccardi, D., Ricciardi, S., Richardson, K., Richardson-Slipper, M., Rinnert, K., Robbe, P., Robertson, G., Rodrigues, E., Alvarez, A. Rodriguez, Fernandez, E. Rodriguez, Lopez, J. A. Rodriguez, Rodriguez, E. Rodriguez, Roensch, J., Rogachev, A., Rogovskiy, A., Rolf, D. L., Roloff, P., Romanovskiy, V., Vidal, A. Romero, Romolini, G., Ronchetti, F., Rong, T., Rotondo, M., Roy, S. R., Rudolph, M. S., Diaz, M. Ruiz, Fernandez, R. A. Ruiz, Vidal, J. Ruiz, Ryzhikov, A., Ryzka, J., Saavedra-Arias, J. J., Silva, J. J. Saborido, Sadek, R., Sagidova, N., Sahoo, D., Sahoo, N., Saitta, B., Salomoni, M., Sanderswood, I., Santacesaria, R., Rios, C. Santamarina, Santimaria, M., Santoro, L., Santovetti, E., Saputi, A., Saranin, D., Sarnatskiy, A., Sarpis, G., Sarpis, M., Satriano, C., Satta, A., Saur, M., Savrina, D., Sazak, H., Sborzacchi, F., Smead, L. G. Scantlebury, Scarabotto, A., Schael, S., Scherl, S., Schiller, M., Schindler, H., Schmelling, M., Schmidt, B., Schmitt, S., Schmitz, H., Schneider, O., Schopper, A., Schulte, N., Schulte, S., Schune, M. H., Schwemmer, R., Schwering, G., Sciascia, B., Sciuccati, A., Sellam, S., Semennikov, A., Senger, T., Soares, M. Senghi, Sergi, A., Serra, N., Sestini, L., Seuthe, A., Shang, Y., Shangase, D. M., Shapkin, M., Sharma, R. S., Shchemerov, I., Shchutska, L., Shears, T., Shekhtman, L., Shen, Z., Sheng, S., Shevchenko, V., Shi, B., Shi, Q., Shimizu, Y., Shmanin, E., Shorkin, R., Shupperd, J. D., Coutinho, R. Silva, Simi, G., Simone, S., Skidmore, N., Skwarnicki, T., Slater, M. W., Smallwood, J. C., Smith, E., Smith, K., Smith, M., Snoch, A., Lavra, L. Soares, Sokoloff, M. D., Soler, F. J. P., Solomin, A., Solovev, A., Solovyev, I., Sommerfeld, N. S., Song, R., Song, Y., Song, Y. S., De Almeida, F. L. Souza, De Paula, B. Souza, Norella, E. Spadaro, Spedicato, E., Speer, J. G., Spiridenkov, E., Spradlin, P., Sriskaran, V., Stagni, F., Stahl, M., Stahl, S., Stanislaus, S., Stein, E. N., Steinkamp, O., Stenyakin, O., Stevens, H., Strekalina, D., Su, Y., Suljik, F., Sun, J., Sun, L., Sundfeld, D., Sutcliffe, W., Swallow, P. N., Swientek, K., Swystun, F., Szabelski, A., Szumlak, T., Tan, Y., Tang, Y., Tat, M. D., Terentev, A., Terzuoli, F., Teubert, F., Thomas, E., Thompson, D. J. D., Tilquin, H., Tisserand, V., T'Jampens, S., Tobin, M., Tomassetti, L., Tonani, G., Tong, X., Machado, D. Torres, Toscano, L., Tou, D. Y., Trippl, C., Tuci, G., Tuning, N., Uecker, L. H., Ukleja, A., Unverzagt, D. J., Urbach, B., Ursov, E., Usachov, A., Ustyuzhanin, A., Uwer, U., Vagnoni, V., Cadenas, V. Valcarce, Valenti, G., Canudas, N. Valls, Van Hecke, H., van Herwijnen, E., Van Hulse, C. B., Van Laak, R., van Veghel, M., Vasquez, G., Gomez, R. Vazquez, Regueiro, P. Vazquez, Sierra, C. Vázquez, Vecchi, S., Velthuis, J. J., Veltri, M., Venkateswaran, A., Verdoglia, M., Vesterinen, M., Benet, D. Vico, Villalba, P. Vidrier, Diaz, M. Vieites, Vilasis-Cardona, X., Figueras, E. Vilella, Villa, A., Vincent, P., Volle, F. C., Bruch, D. vom, Voropaev, N., Vos, K., Vrahas, C., Wagner, J., Walsh, J., Walton, E. J., Wan, G., Wang, C., Wang, G., Wang, H., Wang, J., Wang, M., Wang, N. W., Wang, R., Wang, X., Wang, X. W., Wang, Y., Wang, Y. W., Wang, Z., Ward, J. A., Waterlaat, M., Watson, N. K., Websdale, D., Wei, Y., Wendel, J., Westhenry, B. D. C., White, C., Whitehead, M., Whiter, E., Wiederhold, A. R., Wiedner, D., Wilkinson, G., Wilkinson, M. K., Williams, M., Williams, M. J., Williams, M. R. J., Williams, R., Williams, Z., Wilson, F. F., Winn, M., Wislicki, W., Witek, M., Witola, L., Wormser, G., Wotton, S. A., Wu, H., Wu, J., Wu, X., Wu, Y., Wu, Z., Wyllie, K., Xian, S., Xiang, Z., Xie, Y., Xu, A., Xu, J., Xu, L., Xu, M., Xu, Z., Yang, K., Yang, S., Yang, X., Yang, Y., Yang, Z., Yeroshenko, V., Yeung, H., Yin, H., Yin, X., Yu, C. Y., Yu, J., Yuan, X., Yuan, Y, Zaffaroni, E., Zavertyaev, M., Zdybal, M., Zenesini, F., Zeng, C., Zeng, M., Zhang, C., Zhang, D., Zhang, J., Zhang, L., Zhang, S., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. Z., Zhao, Y., Zharkova, A., Zhelezov, A., Zheng, S. Z., Zheng, X. Z., Zheng, Y., Zhou, T., Zhou, X., Zhou, Y., Zhovkovska, V., Zhu, L. Z., Zhu, X., Zhukov, V., Zhuo, J., Zou, Q., Zuliani, D., and Zunica, G.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
An amplitude analysis of the $D_{s1}(2460)^+\to D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$ transition is performed simultaneously in $B^{0}\to D^{-}D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$, $B^{+}\to{\bar{D}}^{0} D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$, and $B^{0}\to D^{*-}D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$ decays. The study is based on a data sample of proton-proton collisions recorded with the LHCb detector at centre-of-mass energies of $\sqrt{s}=7,8,$ and $13\,$TeV, corresponding to a total integrated luminosity of $9\,\rm{fb}^{-1}$. A clear double-peak structure is observed in the $m(\pi^{+}\pi^{-})$ spectrum of the $D_{s1}(2460)^{+}\to D_{s}^{+}\pi^{+}\pi^{-}$ decay. The data can be described either with a model including $f_0(500)$, $f_0(980)$ and $f_2(1270)$ resonances, in which the contributions of $f_0(980)$ and $f_2(1270)$ are unexpectedly large, or with a model including $f_0(500)$, a doubly charged open-charm tetraquark state $T_{c\bar{s}}^{++}$ and its isospin partner $T_{c\bar{s}}^{0}$. If the former is considered implausible, the $T_{c\bar{s}}$ states are observed with high significance, and the data are consistent with isospin symmetry. When imposing isospin constraints between the two $T_{c\bar{s}}$ states, their mass and width are determined to be $2327\pm13\pm13\,$MeV and $96\pm16\,^{+170}_{-23}\,$MeV, respectively, where the first uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic. The mass is slightly below the $DK$ threshold, and a spin-parity of $0^+$ is favoured with high significance., Comment: All figures and tables, along with machine-readable versions and any supplementary material and additional information, are available at https://lbfence.cern.ch/alcm/public/analysis/full-details/3280/ (LHCb public pages)
- Published
- 2024
37. Detection of Thermal Emission at Millimeter Wavelengths from Low-Earth Orbit Satellites
- Author
-
Foster, A., Chokshi, A., Anderson, A. J., Ansarinejad, B., Archipley, M., Balkenhol, L., Benabed, K., Bender, A. N., Barron, D. R., Benson, B. A., Bianchini, F., Bleem, L. E., Bouchet, F. R., Bryant, L., Camphuis, E., Carlstrom, J. E., Chang, C. L., Chaubal, P., Chichura, P. M., Chou, T. -L., Coerver, A., Crawford, T. M., Daley, C., de Haan, T., Dibert, K. R., Dobbs, M. A., Doussot, A., Dutcher, D., Everett, W., Feng, C., Ferguson, K. R., Fichman, K., Galli, S., Gambrel, A. E., Gardner, R. W., Ge, F., Goeckner-Wald, N., Gualtieri, R., Guidi, F., Guns, S., Halverson, N. W., Hivon, E., Holder, G. P., Holzapfel, W. L., Hood, J. C., Hryciuk, A., Huang, N., Kéruzoré, F., Khalife, A. R., Knox, L., Korman, M., Kornoelje, K., Kuo, C. -L., Levy, K., Lowitz, A. E., Lu, C., Maniyar, A., Martsen, E. S., Menanteau, F., Millea, M., Montgomery, J., Nakato, Y., Natoli, T., Noble, G. I., Omori, Y., Pan, Z., Paschos, P., Phadke, K. A., Pollak, A. W., Prabhu, K., Quan, W., Raghunathan, S., Rahimi, M., Rahlin, A., Reichardt, C. L., Rouble, M., Ruhl, J. E., Schiappucci, E., Sobrin, J. A., Stark, A. A., Stephen, J., Tandoi, C., Thorne, B., Trendafilova, C., Umilta, C., Vieira, J. D., Vitrier, A., Wan, Y., Whitehorn, N., Wu, W. L. K., Young, M. R., and Zebrowski, J. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The detection of satellite thermal emission at millimeter wavelengths is presented using data from the 3rd-Generation receiver on the South Pole Telescope (SPT-3G). This represents the first reported detection of thermal emission from artificial satellites at millimeter wavelengths. Satellite thermal emission is shown to be detectable at high signal-to-noise on timescales as short as a few tens of milliseconds. An algorithm for downloading orbital information and tracking known satellites given observer constraints and time-ordered observatory pointing is described. Consequences for cosmological surveys and short-duration transient searches are discussed, revealing that the integrated thermal emission from all large satellites does not contribute significantly to the SPT-3G survey intensity map. Measured satellite positions are found to be discrepant from their two-line element (TLE) derived ephemerides up to several arcminutes which may present a difficulty in cross-checking or masking satellites from short-duration transient searches.
- Published
- 2024
38. Data-driven model validation for neutrino-nucleus cross section measurements
- Author
-
MicroBooNE collaboration, Abratenko, P., Alterkait, O., Aldana, D. Andrade, Arellano, L., Asaadi, J., Ashkenazi, A., Balasubramanian, S., Baller, B., Barnard, A., Barr, G., Barrow, D., Barrow, J., Basque, V., Bateman, J., Rodrigues, O. Benevides, Berkman, S., Bhanderi, A., Bhat, A., Bhattacharya, M., Bishai, M., Blake, A., Bogart, B., Bolton, T., Brunetti, M. B., Camilleri, L., Cao, Y., Caratelli, D., Cavanna, F., Cerati, G., Chappell, A., Chen, Y., Conrad, J. M., Convery, M., Cooper-Troendle, L., Crespo-Anadon, J. I., Cross, R., Del Tutto, M., Dennis, S. R., Detje, P., Diurba, R., Djurcic, Z., Duffy, K., Dytman, S., Eberly, B., Englezos, P., Ereditato, A., Evans, J. J., Fang, C., Fleming, B. T., Foreman, W., Franco, D., Furmanski, A. P., Gao, F., Garcia-Gamez, D., Gardiner, S., Ge, G., Gollapinni, S., Gramellini, E., Green, P., Greenlee, H., Gu, L., Gu, W., Guenette, R., Guzowski, P., Hagaman, L., Handley, M. D., Hen, O., Hilgenberg, C., Horton-Smith, G. A., Imani, Z., Irwin, B., Ismail, M. S., James, C., Ji, X., Jo, J. H., Johnson, R. A., Jwa, Y. J., Kalra, D., Karagiorgi, G., Ketchum, W., Kirby, M., Kobilarcik, T., Lane, N., Li, J. -Y., Li, Y., Lin, K., Littlejohn, B. R., Liu, L., Louis, W. C., Luo, X., Mahmud, T., Mariani, C., Marsden, D., Marshall, J., Martinez, N., Caicedo, D. A. Martinez, Martynenko, S., Mastbaum, A., Mawby, I., McConkey, N., Meddage, V., Mellet, L., Mendez, J., Micallef, J., Miller, K., Mistry, K., Mohayai, T., Mogan, A., Mooney, M., Moor, A. F., Moore, C. D., Lepin, L. Mora, Moudgalya, M. M., Babu, S. Mulleria, Naples, D., Navrer-Agasson, A., Nayak, N., Nebot-Guinot, M., Nguyen, C., Nowak, J., Oza, N., Palamara, O., Pallat, N., Paolone, V., Papadopoulou, A., Papavassiliou, V., Parkinson, H., Pate, S. F., Patel, N., Pavlovic, Z., Piasetzky, E., Pletcher, K., Pophale, I., Qian, X., Raaf, J. L., Radeka, V., Rafique, A., Reggiani-Guzzo, M., Ren, L., Rochester, L., Rondon, J. Rodriguez, Rosenberg, M., Ross-Lonergan, M., Safa, I., Schmitz, D. W., Schukraft, A., Seligman, W., Shaevitz, M. H., Sharankova, R., Shi, J., Snider, E. L., Soderberg, M., Soldner-Rembold, S., Spitz, J., Stancari, M., John, J. St., Strauss, T., Szelc, A. M., Taniuchi, N., Terao, K., Thorpe, C., Torbunov, D., Totani, D., Toups, M., Trettin, A., Tsai, Y. -T., Tyler, J., Uchida, M. A., Usher, T., Viren, B., Wang, J., Weber, M., Wei, H., White, A. J., Wolbers, S., Wongjirad, T., Wospakrik, M., Wresilo, K., Wu, W., Yandel, E., Yang, T., Yates, L. E., Yu, H. W., Zeller, G. P., Zennamo, J., and Zhang, C.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Neutrino-nucleus cross section measurements are needed to improve interaction modeling to meet the precision needs of neutrino experiments in efforts to measure oscillation parameters and search for physics beyond the Standard Model. We review the difficulties associated with modeling neutrino-nucleus interactions that lead to a dependence on event generators in oscillation analyses and cross section measurements alike. We then describe data-driven model validation techniques intended to address this model dependence. The method relies on utilizing various goodness-of-fit tests and the correlations between different observables and channels to probe the model for defects in the phase space relevant for the desired analysis. These techniques shed light on relevant mis-modeling, allowing it to be detected before it begins to bias the cross section results. We compare more commonly used model validation methods which directly validate the model against alternative ones to these data-driven techniques and show their efficacy with fake data studies. These studies demonstrate that employing data-driven model validation in cross section measurements represents a reliable strategy to produce robust results that will stimulate the desired improvements to interaction modeling.
- Published
- 2024
39. Morphology of 32 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources at Microsecond Time Scales with CHIME/FRB
- Author
-
Curtin, Alice P., Sand, Ketan R., Pleunis, Ziggy, Jain, Naman, Kaspi, Victoria, Michilli, Daniele, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Shin, Kaitlyn, Nimmo, Kenzie, Brar, Charanjot, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Eadie, Gwendolyn M., Gaensler, B. M., Herrera-Martin, Antonio, Ibik, Adaeze L., Joseph, Ronny C., Kaczmarek, Jane, Leung, Calvin, Main, Robert, Masui, Kiyoshi W., McKinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Ng, Cherry, Pandhi, Ayush, Pearlman, Aaron B., Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Sammons, Mawson W., Scholz, Paul, Smith, Kendrick, and Stairs, Ingrid
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst (CHIME/FRB) project has discovered the most repeating fast radio burst (FRB) sources of any telescope. However, most of the physical conclusions derived from this sample are based on data with a time resolution of $\sim$1 ms. In this work, we present for the first time a morphological analysis of the raw voltage data for 118 bursts from 32 of CHIME/FRB's repeating sources. We do not find any significant correlations amongst fluence, dispersion measure (DM), burst rate, and burst duration. Performing the first large-scale morphological comparison at timescales down to microseconds between our repeating sources and 125 non-repeating FRBs, we find that repeaters are narrower in frequency and broader in duration than non-repeaters, supporting previous findings. However, we find that the duration-normalized sub-burst widths of the two populations are consistent, possibly suggesting a shared physical emission mechanism. Additionally, we find that the spectral fluences of the two are consistent. When combined with the larger bandwidths and previously found larger DMs of non-repeaters, this suggests that non-repeaters may have higher intrinsic specific energies than repeating FRBs. We do not find any consistent increase or decrease in the DM ($\lessapprox 1$ pc cm$^{-3}$ yr$^{-1}$) and scattering timescales ($\lessapprox 2$ ms yr$^{-1}$) of our sources over $\sim2-4$ year periods., Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures, 4 tables; Submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2024
40. Euclid: High-precision imaging astrometry and photometry from Early Release Observations. I. Internal kinematics of NGC 6397 by combining Euclid and Gaia data
- Author
-
Libralato, M., Bedin, L. R., Griggio, M., Massari, D., Anderson, J., Cuillandre, J. -C., Ferguson, A. M. N., Lançon, A., Larsen, S. S., Schirmer, M., Annibali, F., Balbinot, E., Dalessandro, E., Erkal, D., Kuzma, P. B., Saifollahi, T., Kleijn, G. Verdoes, Kümmel, M., Nakajima, R., Correnti, M., Battaglia, G., Altieri, B., Amara, A., Andreon, S., Baccigalupi, C., Baldi, M., Balestra, A., Bardelli, S., Basset, A., Battaglia, P., Bonino, D., Branchini, E., Brescia, M., Brinchmann, J., Caillat, A., Camera, S., Capobianco, V., Carbone, C., Carretero, J., Casas, S., Castellano, M., Castignani, G., Cavuoti, S., Cimatti, A., Colodro-Conde, C., Congedo, G., Conselice, C. J., Conversi, L., Copin, Y., Courbin, F., Courtois, H. M., Cropper, M., Da Silva, A., Degaudenzi, H., De Lucia, G., Dinis, J., Dubath, F., Dupac, X., Dusini, S., Fabricius, M., Farina, M., Farrens, S., Faustini, F., Ferriol, S., Fosalba, P., Frailis, M., Franceschi, E., Fumana, M., Galeotta, S., Garilli, B., George, K., Gillard, W., Gillis, B., Giocoli, C., Gómez-Alvarez, P., Grazian, A., Grupp, F., Guzzo, L., Haugan, S. V. H., Hoar, J., Hoekstra, H., Holmes, W., Hormuth, F., Hornstrup, A., Hudelot, P., Jahnke, K., Jhabvala, M., Keihänen, E., Kermiche, S., Kiessling, A., Kilbinger, M., Kubik, B., Kunz, M., Kurki-Suonio, H., Laureijs, R., Mignant, D. Le, Ligori, S., Lilje, P. B., Lindholm, V., Lloro, I., Maiorano, E., Mansutti, O., Marggraf, O., Markovic, K., Martinelli, M., Martinet, N., Marulli, F., Massey, R., Medinaceli, E., Mei, S., Melchior, M., Mellier, Y., Meneghetti, M., Merlin, E., Meylan, G., Moresco, M., Moscardini, L., Neissner, C., Nichol, R. C., Niemi, S. -M., Nightingale, J. W., Padilla, C., Paltani, S., Pasian, F., Pedersen, K., Percival, W. J., Pettorino, V., Pires, S., Polenta, G., Poncet, M., Popa, L. A., Pozzetti, L., Raison, F., Rebolo, R., Refregier, A., Renzi, A., Rhodes, J., Riccio, G., Romelli, E., Roncarelli, M., Rossetti, E., Saglia, R., Sakr, Z., Sánchez, A. G., Sapone, D., Sartoris, B., Sauvage, M., Schneider, P., Schrabback, T., Secroun, A., Sefusatti, E., Seidel, G., Seiffert, M., Serrano, S., Sirignano, C., Sirri, G., Skottfelt, J., Stanco, L., Steinwagner, J., Tallada-Crespí, P., Taylor, A. N., Teplitz, H. I., Tereno, I., Toledo-Moreo, R., Torradeflot, F., Tsyganov, A., Tutusaus, I., Valenziano, L., Vassallo, T., Veropalumbo, A., Wang, Y., Weller, J., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Burigana, C., Scottez, V., Scott, D., and Smart, R. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The instruments at the focus of the Euclid space observatory offer superb, diffraction-limited imaging over an unprecedented (from space) wide field of view of 0.57 deg$^2$. This exquisite image quality has the potential to produce high-precision astrometry for point sources once the undersampling of Euclid's cameras is taken into account by means of accurate, effective point spread function (ePSF) modelling. We present a complex, detailed workflow to simultaneously solve for the geometric distortion (GD) and model the undersampled ePSFs of the Euclid detectors. Our procedure was successfully developed and tested with data from the Early Release Observations (ERO) programme focused on the nearby globular cluster NGC 6397. Our final one-dimensional astrometric precision for a well-measured star just below saturation is 0.7 mas (0.007 pixel) for the Visible Instrument (VIS) and 3 mas (0.01 pixel) for the Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP). Finally, we present a specific scientific application of this high-precision astrometry: the combination of Euclid and Gaia data to compute proper motions and study the internal kinematics of NGC 6397. Future work, when more data become available, will allow for a better characterisation of the ePSFs and GD corrections that are derived here, along with assessment of their temporal stability, and their dependencies on the spectral energy distribution of the sources as seen through the wide-band filters of Euclid., Comment: 23 pages, 21 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A on October 24, 2024. Astro-photometric catalogs and stacked images will be available at the CDS after the paper will be published
- Published
- 2024
41. Requirements on the gain calibration for LiteBIRD polarisation data with blind component separation
- Author
-
Carralot, F., Carones, A., Krachmalnicoff, N., Ghigna, T., Novelli, A., Pagano, L., Piacentini, F., Baccigalupi, C., Adak, D., Anand, A., Aumont, J., Azzoni, S., Ballardini, M., Banday, A. J., Barreiro, R. B., Bartolo, N., Basak, S., Basyrov, A., Bersanelli, M., Bortolami, M., Brinckmann, T., Cacciotti, F., Campeti, P., Carinos, E., Casas, F. J., Cheung, K., Clermont, L., Columbro, F., Conenna, G., Coppi, G., Coppolecchia, A., Cuttaia, F., de Bernardis, P., De Lucia, M., Della Torre, S., Di Giorgi, E., Diego-Palazuelos, P., Essinger-Hileman, T., Ferreira, E., Finelli, F., Franceschet, C., Galloni, G., Galloway, M., Gervasi, M., Génova-Santos, R. T., Giardiello, S., Gimeno-Amo, C., Gjerløw, E., Gruppuso, A., Hazumi, M., Henrot-Versillé, S., Hergt, L. T., Hivon, E., Ishino, H., Jost, B., Kohri, K., Lamagna, L., Leloup, C., Lembo, M., Levrier, F., Lonappan, A. I., López-Caniego, M., Luzzi, G., Macias-Perez, J., Martínez-González, E., Masi, S., Matarrese, S., Matsumura, T., Micheli, S., Monelli, M., Montier, L., Morgante, G., Mot, B., Mousset, L., Nagano, Y., Nagata, R., Namikawa, T., Natoli, P., Obata, I., Occhiuzzi, A., Paiella, A., Paoletti, D., Pascual-Cisneros, G., Patanchon, G., Pavlidou, V., Pisano, G., Polenta, G., Porcelli, L., Puglisi, G., Raffuzzi, N., Remazeilles, M., Rubiño-Martín, J. A., Ruiz-Granda, M., Sanghavi, J., Scott, D., Shiraishi, M., Sullivan, R. M., Takase, Y., Tassis, K., Terenzi, L., Tomasi, M., Tristram, M., Vacher, L., van Tent, B., Vielva, P., Weymann-Despres, G., Wollack, E. J., Zannoni, M., and Zhou, Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Future cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments are primarily targeting a detection of the primordial $B$-mode polarisation. The faintness of this signal requires exquisite control of systematic effects which may bias the measurements. In this work, we derive requirements on the relative calibration accuracy of the overall polarisation gain ($\Delta g_\nu$) for LiteBIRD experiment, through the application of the blind Needlet Internal Linear Combination (NILC) foreground-cleaning method. We find that minimum variance techniques, as NILC, are less affected by gain calibration uncertainties than a parametric approach, which requires a proper modelling of these instrumental effects. The tightest constraints are obtained for frequency channels where the CMB signal is relatively brighter (166 GHz channel, $\Delta {g}_\nu \approx 0.16 \%$), while, with a parametric approach, the strictest requirements were on foreground-dominated channels. We then propagate gain calibration uncertainties, corresponding to the derived requirements, into all frequency channels simultaneously. We find that the overall impact on the estimated $r$ is lower than the required budget for LiteBIRD by almost a factor $5$. The adopted procedure to derive requirements assumes a simple Galactic model. We therefore assess the robustness of obtained results against more realistic scenarios by injecting the gain calibration uncertainties, according to the requirements, into LiteBIRD simulated maps and assuming intermediate- and high-complexity sky models. In this case, we employ the so-called Multi-Clustering NILC (MC-NILC) foreground-cleaning pipeline and obtain that the impact of gain calibration uncertainties on $r$ is lower than the LiteBIRD gain systematics budget for the intermediate-complexity sky model. For the high-complexity case, instead, it would be necessary to tighten the requirements by a factor $1.8$., Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2024
42. Euclid: The $r_{\rm b}$-$M_\ast$ relation as a function of redshift. I. The $5 \times 10^9 M_\odot$ black hole in NGC 1272
- Author
-
Saglia, R., Mehrgan, K., de Nicola, S., Thomas, J., Kluge, M., Bender, R., Delley, D., Erwin, P., Fabricius, M., Neureiter, B., Andreon, S., Baccigalupi, C., Baldi, M., Bardelli, S., Bonino, D., Branchini, E., Brescia, M., Brinchmann, J., Caillat, A., Camera, S., Capobianco, V., Carbone, C., Carretero, J., Casas, S., Castellano, M., Castignani, G., Cavuoti, S., Cimatti, A., Colodro-Conde, C., Congedo, G., Conselice, C. J., Conversi, L., Copin, Y., Courbin, F., Courtois, H. M., Degaudenzi, H., De Lucia, G., Dinis, J., Dupac, X., Dusini, S., Farina, M., Farrens, S., Faustini, F., Ferriol, S., Fourmanoit, N., Frailis, M., Franceschi, E., Fumana, M., Galeotta, S., George, K., Gillis, B., Giocoli, C., Grazian, A., Grupp, F., Guzzo, L., Haugan, S. V. H., Hoar, J., Holmes, W., Hormuth, F., Hornstrup, A., Jahnke, K., Jhabvala, M., Keihänen, E., Kermiche, S., Kiessling, A., Kilbinger, M., Kubik, B., Kümmel, M., Kunz, M., Kurki-Suonio, H., Mignant, D. Le, Ligori, S., Lilje, P. B., Lindholm, V., Lloro, I., Mainetti, G., Maiorano, E., Mansutti, O., Marggraf, O., Markovic, K., Martinelli, M., Martinet, N., Marulli, F., Massey, R., Medinaceli, E., Melchior, M., Mellier, Y., Meneghetti, M., Merlin, E., Meylan, G., Moresco, M., Moscardini, L., Munari, E., Nakajima, R., Neissner, C., Nichol, R. C., Niemi, S. -M., Nightingale, J. W., Padilla, C., Paltani, S., Pasian, F., Pedersen, K., Percival, W. J., Pettorino, V., Pires, S., Polenta, G., Poncet, M., Popa, L. A., Pozzetti, L., Raison, F., Rebolo, R., Renzi, A., Rhodes, J., Riccio, G., Romelli, E., Roncarelli, M., Rossetti, E., Sakr, Z., Sánchez, A. G., Sapone, D., Sartoris, B., Schirmer, M., Schneider, P., Schrabback, T., Secroun, A., Seiffert, M., Serrano, S., Sirignano, C., Sirri, G., Skottfelt, J., Stanco, L., Steinwagner, J., Tallada-Crespí, P., Tavagnacco, D., Taylor, A. N., Tereno, I., Toledo-Moreo, R., Torradeflot, F., Tutusaus, I., Valenziano, L., Vassallo, T., Kleijn, G. Verdoes, Wang, Y., Weller, J., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Burigana, C., Scottez, V., Ferrarese, L., Lusso, E., and Scott, D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Core ellipticals, massive early-type galaxies have an almost constant inner surface brightness profile. The size of the core region correlates with the mass of the finally merged black hole. Here we report the first Euclid-based dynamical mass determination of a supermassive black hole. We study the centre of NGC 1272, the second most luminous elliptical galaxy in the Perseus cluster, combining the Euclid VIS photometry coming from the Early Release Observations of the Perseus cluster with VIRUS spectroscopic observations at the Hobby-Eberly Telescope. The core of NGC 1272 is detected on the Euclid VIS image. Its size is $1.29\pm 0.07''$ or 0.45 kpc, determined by fitting PSF-convolved core-S\'ersic and Nuker-law functions. The two-dimensional stellar kinematics of the galaxy is measured from the VIRUS spectra by deriving optimally regularized non-parametric line-of-sight velocity distributions. Dynamical models of the galaxy are constructed using our axisymmetric and triaxial Schwarzschild codes. We measure a black hole mass of $(5\pm3) \times 10^9 M_\odot$, in line with the expectation from the $M_{\rm BH}$-$r_{\rm b}$ correlation, but eight times larger than predicted by the $M_{\rm BH}$-$\sigma$ correlation (at $1.8\sigma$ significance). The core size, rather than the velocity dispersion, allows one to select galaxies harboring the most massive black holes. The spatial resolution, wide area coverage, and depth of the \Euclid (Wide and Deep) surveys allow us to find cores of passive galaxies larger than 2 kpc up to redshift 1., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2024
43. An information-matching approach to optimal experimental design and active learning
- Author
-
Kurniawan, Yonatan, Neilsen, Tracianne B., Francis, Benjamin L., Stankovic, Alex M., Wen, Mingjian, Nikiforov, Ilia, Tadmor, Ellad B., Bulatov, Vasily V., Lordi, Vincenzo, and Transtrum, Mark K.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Physics - Applied Physics ,Physics - Computational Physics ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
The efficacy of mathematical models heavily depends on the quality of the training data, yet collecting sufficient data is often expensive and challenging. Many modeling applications require inferring parameters only as a means to predict other quantities of interest (QoI). Because models often contain many unidentifiable (sloppy) parameters, QoIs often depend on a relatively small number of parameter combinations. Therefore, we introduce an information-matching criterion based on the Fisher Information Matrix to select the most informative training data from a candidate pool. This method ensures that the selected data contain sufficient information to learn only those parameters that are needed to constrain downstream QoIs. It is formulated as a convex optimization problem, making it scalable to large models and datasets. We demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach across various modeling problems in diverse scientific fields, including power systems and underwater acoustics. Finally, we use information-matching as a query function within an Active Learning loop for material science applications. In all these applications, we find that a relatively small set of optimal training data can provide the necessary information for achieving precise predictions. These results are encouraging for diverse future applications, particularly active learning in large machine learning models.
- Published
- 2024
44. Search for a Hidden Sector Scalar from Kaon Decay in the Di-Muon Final State at ICARUS
- Author
-
ICARUS Collaboration, Alrahman, F. Abd, Abratenko, P., Abrego-Martinez, N., Aduszkiewicz, A., Akbar, F., Soplin, L. Aliaga, Garrote, R. Alvarez, Pons, M. Artero, Asaadi, J., Badgett, W. F., Baibussinov, B., Behera, B., Bellini, V., Benocci, R., Berger, J., Berkman, S., Bertolucci, S., Betancourt, M., Bonesini, M., Boone, T., Bottino, B., Braggiotti, A., Brailsford, D., Brice, S. J., Brio, V., Brizzolari, C., Budd, H. S., Campani, A., Campos, A., Carber, D., Carneiro, M., Terrazas, I. Caro, Carranza, H., Fernandez, F. Castillo, Castro, A., Centro, S., Cerati, G., Chatterjee, A., Cherdack, D., Cherubini, S., Chitirasreemadam, N., Cicerchia, M., Coan, T. E., Cocco, A., Convery, M. R., Cooper-Troendle, L., Copello, S., Da Motta, H., Dallolio, M., Dange, A. A., de Roeck, A., Di Domizio, S., Di Noto, L., Di Stefano, C., Di Ferdinando, D., Diwan, M., Dolan, S., Domine, L., Donati, S., Drielsma, F., Dyer, J., Dytman, S., Falcone, A., Farnese, C., Fava, A., Ferrari, A., Gallice, N., Garcia, F. G., Gatto, C., Gibin, D., Gioiosa, A., Gu, W., Guglielmi, A., Gurung, G., Hassinin, K., Hausner, H., Heggestuen, A., Howard, B., Howell, R., Ingratta, I., James, C., Jang, W., Jung, M., Jwa, Y. -J., Kashur, L., Ketchum, W., Kim, J. S., Koh, D. -H., Larkin, J., Li, Y., Mariani, C., Marshall, C. M., Martynenko, S., Mauri, N., McFarland, K. S., Mé9ndez, D. P., Menegolli, A., Meng, G., Miranda, O. G., Mogan, A., Moggi, N., Montagna, E., Montanari, C., Montanari, A., Mooney, M., Moreno-Granados, G., Mueller, J., Murphy, M., Naples, D., Nguyen, V. C. L, Palestini, S., Pallavicini, M., Paolone, V., Papaleo, R., Pasqualini, L., Patrizii, L., Paudel, L., Pelegrina-Gutiérrez, L., Petrillo, G., Petta, C., Pia, V., Pietropaolo, F., Poppi, F., Pozzato, M., Putnam, G., Qian, X., Rappoldi, A., Raselli, G. L., Repetto, S., Resnati, F., Ricci, A. M., Riccobene, G., Richards, E., Rosenberg, M., Rossella, M., Rowe, N., Roy, P., Rubbia, C., Saad, M., Safa, I., Saha, S., Sala, P., Salmoria, G., Samanta, S., Sapienza, P., Scaramelli, A., Scarpelli, A., Schmitz, D., Schukraft, A., Senadheera, D., Seo, S-H., Sergiampietri, F., Sirri, G., Smedley, J. S., Smith, J., Stanco, L., Stewart, J., Tanaka, H. A., Tapia, F., Tenti, M., Terao, K., Terranova, F., Togo, V., Torretta, D., Torti, M., Tortorici, F., Triozzi, R., Tsai, Y. -T., Tufanli, S., Usher, T., Varanini, F., Ventura, S., Vicenzi, M., Vignoli, C., Viren, B., Wieler, F. A., Williams, Z., Wilson, R. J., Wilson, P., Wolfs, J., Wongjirad, T., Wood, A., Worcester, E., Worcester, M., Wospakrik, M., Yadav, S., Yu, H., Yu, J., Zani, A., Zennamo, J., Zettlemoyer, J., Zhang, C., and Zucchelli, S.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We present a search for long-lived particles (LLPs) produced from kaon decay that decay to two muons inside the ICARUS neutrino detector. This channel would be a signal of hidden sector models that can address outstanding issues in particle physics such as the strong CP problem and the microphysical origin of dark matter. The search is performed with data collected in the Neutrinos at the Main Injector (NuMI) beam at Fermilab corresponding to $2.41\times 10^{20}$ protons-on-target. No new physics signal is observed, and we set world-leading limits on heavy QCD axions, as well as for the Higgs portal scalar among dedicated searches. Limits are also presented in a model-independent way applicable to any new physics model predicting the process $K\to \pi+S(\to\mu\mu)$, for a long-lived particle S. This result is the first search for new physics performed with the ICARUS detector at Fermilab. It paves the way for the future program of long-lived particle searches at ICARUS.
- Published
- 2024
45. One-step synthesis of graphene containing topological defects
- Author
-
Klein, Benedikt P., Stoodley, Matthew A., Deyerling, Joel, Rochford, Luke A., Morgan, Dylan B., Hopkinson, David, Sullivan-Allsop, Sam, Eratam, Fulden, Sattler, Lars, Weber, Sebastian M., Hilt, Gerhard, Generalov, Alexander, Preobrajenski, Alexei, Liddy, Thomas, Williams, Leon B. S., Lee, Tien-Lin, Saywell, Alex, Gorbachev, Roman, Haigh, Sarah J., Allen, Christopher, Auwärter, Willi, Maurer, Reinhard J., and Duncan, David A.
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Chemical vapour deposition enables large-domain growth of ideal graphene, yet many applications of graphene require the controlled inclusion of specific defects. We present a one-step chemical vapour deposition procedure aimed at retaining the precursor topology when incorporated into the grown carbonaceous film. When azupyrene, the molecular analogue of the Stone-Wales defect in graphene, is used as a precursor, carbonaceous monolayers with a range of morphologies are produced as a function of the copper substrate growth temperature. The higher the substrate temperature during deposition, the closer the resulting monolayer is to ideal graphene. Analysis, with a set of complementary materials characterisation techniques, reveals morphological changes closely correlated with changes in the atomic adsorption heights, network topology, and concentration of 5-/7-membered carbon rings. The engineered defective carbon monolayers can be transferred to different substrates, potentially enabling applications in nanoelectronics, sensorics, and catalysis., Comment: manuscript and SI provided
- Published
- 2024
46. Detection of two TeV gamma-ray outbursts from NGC 1275 by LHAASO
- Author
-
Cao, Zhen, Aharonian, F., Axikegu, Bai, Y. X., Bao, Y. W., Bastieri, D., Bi, X. J., Bi, Y. J., Cai, J. T., Cao, Q., Cao, W. Y., Cao, Zhe, Chang, J., Chang, J. F., Chen, A. M., Chen, E. S., Chen, Liang, Chen, Lin, Chen, Long, Chen, M. J., Chen, M. L., Chen, Q. H., Chen, S. H., Chen, S. Z., Chen, T. L., Chen, Y., Cheng, N., Cheng, Y. D., Cui, M. Y., Cui, S. W., Cui, X. H., Cui, Y. D., Dai, B. Z., Dai, H. L., Dai, Z. G., Danzengluobu, della Volpe, D., Dong, X. Q., Duan, K. K., Fan, J. H., Fan, Y. Z., Fang, J., Fang, K., Feng, C. F., Feng, L., Feng, S. H., Feng, X. T., Feng, Y. L., Gabici, S., Gao, B., Gao, C. D., Gao, L. Q., Gao, Q., Gao, W., Gao, W. K., Ge, M. M., Geng, L. S., Giacinti, G., Gong, G. H., Gou, Q. B., Gu, M. H., Guo, F. L., Guo, X. L., Guo, Y. Q., Guo, Y. Y., Han, Y. A., He, H. H., He, H. N., He, J. Y., He, X. B., He, Y., Heller, M., Hor, Y. K., Hou, B. W., Hou, C., Hou, X., Hu, H. B., Hu, Q., Hu, S. C., Huang, D. H., Huang, T. Q., Huang, W. J., Huang, X. T., Huang, X. Y., Huang, Y., Huang, Z. C., Ji, X. L., Jia, H. Y., Jia, K., Jiang, K., Jiang, X. W., Jiang, Z. J., Jin, M., Kang, M. M., Ke, T., Kuleshov, D., Kurinov, K., Li, B. B., Li, Cheng, Li, Cong, Li, D., Li, F., Li, H. B., Li, H. C., Li, H. Y., Li, J., Li, Jian, Li, Jie, Li, K., Li, W. L., Li, X. R., Li, Xin, Li, Y. Z., Li, Zhe, Li, Zhuo, Liang, E. W., Liang, Y. F., Lin, S. J., Liu, B., Liu, C., Liu, D., Liu, H., Liu, H. D., Liu, J., Liu, J. L., Liu, J. Y., Liu, M. Y., Liu, R. Y., Liu, S. M., Liu, W., Liu, Y., Liu, Y. N., Lu, R., Luo, Q., Lv, H. K., Ma, B. Q., Ma, L. L., Ma, X. H., Mao, J. R., Min, Z., Mitthumsiri, W., Mu, H. J., Nan, Y. C., Neronov, A., Ou, Z. W., Pang, B. Y., Pattarakijwanich, P., Pei, Z. Y., Qi, M. Y., Qi, Y. Q., Qiao, B. Q., Qin, J. J., Ruffolo, D., Sáiz, A., Semikoz, D., Shao, C. Y., Shao, L., Shchegolev, O., Sheng, X. D., Shu, F. W., Song, H. C., Stenkin, Yu. V., Stepanov, V., Su, Y., Sun, Q. N., Sun, X. N., Sun, Z. B., Tam, P. H. T., Tang, Q. W., Tang, Z. B., Tian, W. W., Wang, C., Wang, C. B., Wang, G. W., Wang, H. G., Wang, H. H., Wang, J. C., Wang, K., Wang, L. P., Wang, L. Y., Wang, P. H., Wang, R., Wang, W., Wang, X. G., Wang, X. Y., Wang, Y., Wang, Y. D., Wang, Y. J., Wang, Z. H., Wang, Z. X., Wang, Zhen, Wang, Zheng, Wei, D. M., Wei, J. J., Wei, Y. J., Wen, T., Wu, C. Y., Wu, H. R., Wu, S., Wu, X. F., Wu, Y. S., Xi, S. Q., Xia, J., Xia, J. J., Xiang, G. M., Xiao, D. X., Xiao, G., Xin, G. G., Xin, Y. L., Xing, Y., Xiong, Z., Xu, D. L., Xu, R. F., Xu, R. X., Xu, W. L., Xue, L., Yan, D. H., Yan, J. Z., Yan, T., Yang, C. W., Yang, F., Yang, F. F., Yang, H. W., Yang, J. Y., Yang, L. L., Yang, M. J., Yang, R. Z., Yang, S. B., Yao, Y. H., Yao, Z. G., Ye, Y. M., Yin, L. Q., Yin, N., You, X. H., You, Z. Y., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, Q., Yue, H., Zeng, H. D., Zeng, T. X., Zeng, W., Zha, M., Zhang, B. B., Zhang, F., Zhang, H. M., Zhang, H. Y., Zhang, J. L., Zhang, L. X., Zhang, Li, Zhang, P. F., Zhang, P. P., Zhang, R., Zhang, S. B., Zhang, S. R., Zhang, S. S., Zhang, X., Zhang, X. P., Zhang, Y. F., Zhang, Yi, Zhang, Yong, Zhao, B., Zhao, J., Zhao, L., Zhao, L. Z., Zhao, S. P., Zheng, F., Zhou, B., Zhou, H., Zhou, J. N., Zhou, M., Zhou, P., Zhou, R., Zhou, X. X., Zhu, C. G., Zhu, F. R., Zhu, H., Zhu, K. J., and Zuo., X.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Water Cherenkov Detector Array (WCDA) is one of the components of Large High Altitude Air Shower Observatory (LHAASO) and can monitor any sources over two-thirds of the sky for up to 7 hours per day with >98\% duty cycle. In this work, we report the detection of two outbursts of the Fanaroff-Riley I radio galaxy NGC 1275 that were detected by LHAASO-WCDA between November 2022 and January 2023 with statistical significance of 5.2~$\sigma$ and 8.3~$\sigma$. The observed spectral energy distribution in the range from 500 GeV to 3 TeV is fitted by a power-law with a best-fit spectral index of $\alpha=-3.37\pm0.52$ and $-3.35\pm0.29$, respectively. The outburst flux above 0.5~TeV was ($4.55\pm 4.21)\times~10^{-11}~\rm cm^{-2}~s^{-1}$ and ($3.45\pm 1.78)\times~10^{-11}~\rm cm^{-2}~s^{-1}$, corresponding to 60\%, 45\% of Crab Nebula flux. Variation analysis reveals the variability time-scale of days at the TeV energy band. A simple test by one-zone synchrotron self-Compton model reproduces the data in the gamma-ray band well., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2024
47. Isospin breaking in the $^{71}$Kr and $^{71}$Br mirror system
- Author
-
Algora, A., Vitéz-Sveiczer, A., Poves, A., Kiss, G. G., Rubio, B., de Angelis, G., Recchia, F., Nishimura, S., Rodriguez, T., Sarriguren, P., Agramunt, J., Guadilla, V., Montaner-Pizá, A., Morales, A. I., Orrigo, S. E. A., Napoli, D., Lenzi, S. M., Boso, A., Phong, V. H., Wu, J., Söderström, P. -A., Sumikama, T., Suzuki, H., Takeda, H., Ahn, D. S., Baba, H., Doornenbal, P., Fukuda, N., Inabe, N., Isobe, T., Kubo, T., Kubono, S., Sakurai, H., Shimizu, Y., Chen, S., Blank, B., Ascher, P., Gerbaux, M., Goigoux, T., Giovinazzo, J., Grévy, S., Nieto, T. Kurtukián, Magron, C., Gelletly, W., Dombrádi, Zs., Fujita, Y., Tanaka, M., Aguilera, P., Molina, F., Eberth, J., Diel, F., Lubos, D., Borcea, C., Ganioglu, E., Nishimura, D., Oikawa, H., Takei, Y., Yagi, S., Korten, W., de France, G., Davies, P., Liu, J., Lee, J., Lokotko, T., Kojouharov, I., Kurz, N., Schaffner, H., and Kruppa, A.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Isospin symmetry is a fundamental concept in nuclear physics. Even though isospin symmetry is partially broken, it holds approximately for most nuclear systems, which makes exceptions very interesting from the nuclear structure perspective. In this framework, it is expected that the spins and parities of the ground states of mirror nuclei should be the same, in particular for the simplest systems where a proton is exchanged with a neutron or vice versa. In this work, we present evidence that this assumption is broken in the mirror pair $^{71}$Br and $^{71}$Kr system. Our conclusions are based on a high-statistics $\beta$ decay study of $^{71}$Kr and on state-of-the-art shell model calculations. In our work, we also found evidence of a new state in $^{70}$Se, populated in the $\beta$-delayed proton emission process which can be interpreted as the long sought coexisting 0$^+$ state., Comment: 8 pages with references, 3 figures. Supplemental material 4 pages (1 table, 3 figures)
- Published
- 2024
48. Measurement of the time-integrated CP asymmetry in $D^{0}\rightarrow K^{0}_{S}K^{0}_{S}$ decays using Belle and Belle II data
- Author
-
Belle, Collaborations, Belle II, Adachi, I., Aggarwal, L., Ahmed, H., Aihara, H., Akopov, N., Aloisio, A., Althubiti, N., Ky, N. Anh, Asner, D. M., Atmacan, H., Aushev, V., Aversano, M., Ayad, R., Babu, V., Baghel, N. K., Bahinipati, S., Bambade, P., Banerjee, Sw., Bansal, S., Barrett, M., Bartl, M., Baudot, J., Beaubien, A., Becker, J., Bennett, J. V., Bertacchi, V., Bertemes, M., Bertholet, E., Bessner, M., Bettarini, S., Bhuyan, B., Biswas, D., Bobrov, A., Bodrov, D., Bolz, A., Boschetti, A., Bozek, A., Bračko, M., Branchini, P., Briere, R. A., Browder, T. E., Budano, A., Bussino, S., Campagna, Q., Campajola, M., Casarosa, G., Cecchi, C., Cerasoli, J., Chang, M. -C., Chang, P., Cheaib, R., Cheema, P., Chen, C., Cheon, B. G., Chilikin, K., Chirapatpimol, K., Cho, H. -E., Cho, K., Cho, S. -J., Choi, S. -K., Choudhury, S., Cochran, J., Corona, L., Cui, J. X., Das, S., De La Cruz-Burelo, E., De La Motte, S. A., De Pietro, G., de Sangro, R., Destefanis, M., Di Canto, A., Di Capua, F., Dingfelder, J., Doležal, Z., Dong, T. V., Dorigo, M., Dossett, D., Dujany, G., Ecker, P., Eppelt, J., Feichtinger, P., Ferber, T., Fillinger, T., Finck, C., Finocchiaro, G., Fodor, A., Forti, F., Fulsom, B. G., Gabrielli, A., Ganiev, E., Gaudino, G., Gaur, V., Gaz, A., Gellrich, A., Ghevondyan, G., Ghosh, D., Ghumaryan, H., Giakoustidis, G., Giordano, R., Giri, A., Gironell, P. Gironella, Glazov, A., Gobbo, B., Godang, R., Goldenzweig, P., Gradl, W., Graziani, E., Greenwald, D., Gruberová, Z., Guan, Y., Gudkova, K., Haide, I., Hara, T., Hayasaka, K., Hayashii, H., Hazra, S., Hearty, C., Hedges, M. T., Heidelbach, A., de la Cruz, I. Heredia, Villanueva, M. Hernández, Higuchi, T., Hoek, M., Hohmann, M., Hoppe, R., Hsu, C. -L., Humair, T., Iijima, T., Inami, K., Ipsita, N., Ishikawa, A., Itoh, R., Iwasaki, M., Jacobs, W. W., Jaffe, D. E., Jang, E. -J., Ji, Q. P., Jia, S., Jin, Y., Johnson, A., Joo, K. K., Junkerkalefeld, H., Kaliyar, A. B., Kandra, J., Karyan, G., Keil, F., Kiesling, C., Kim, C. -H., Kim, D. Y., Kim, J. -Y., Kim, K. -H., Kim, Y. -K., Kinoshita, K., Kodyš, P., Koga, T., Kohani, S., Kojima, K., Korobov, A., Korpar, S., Kovalenko, E., Kowalewski, R., Križan, P., Krokovny, P., Kuhr, T., Kumara, K., Kunigo, T., Kuzmin, A., Kwon, Y. -J., Lacaprara, S., Lai, Y. -T., Lalwani, K., Lam, T., Lange, J. S., Lau, T. S., Laurenza, M., Leboucher, R., Diberder, F. R. Le, Lee, M. J., Lemettais, C., Leo, P., Li, C., Li, L. K., Li, Q. M., Li, W. Z., Li, Y. B., Liao, Y. P., Libby, J., Liu, M. H., Liu, Q. Y., Liu, Y., Liu, Z. Q., Liventsev, D., Longo, S., Lueck, T., Lyu, C., Madaan, C., Maggiora, M., Maharana, S. P., Maiti, R., Mancinelli, G., Manfredi, R., Manoni, E., Mantovano, M., Marcantonio, D., Marcello, S., Marinas, C., Martellini, C., Martens, A., Martini, A., Martinov, T., Massaccesi, L., Masuda, M., Matvienko, D., Maurya, S. K., Maushart, M., McKenna, J. A., Mehta, R., Meier, F., Merola, M., Miller, C., Mirra, M., Mitra, S., Miyabayashi, K., Mohanty, G. B., Mondal, S., Moneta, S., Moser, H. -G., Mussa, R., Nakamura, I., Nakao, M., Nakazawa, Y., Naruki, M., Natkaniec, Z., Natochii, A., Nayak, M., Nazaryan, G., Neu, M., Nishida, S., Ogawa, S., Ono, H., Oxford, E. R., Pakhlova, G., Pardi, S., Parham, K., Park, H., Park, J., Park, K., Park, S. -H., Paschen, B., Passeri, A., Patra, S., Pedlar, T. K., Peruzzi, I., Peschke, R., Piccolo, M., Piilonen, L. E., Podesta-Lerma, P. L. M., Podobnik, T., Praz, C., Prell, S., Prencipe, E., Prim, M. T., Purwar, H., Raiz, S., Rauls, N., Rehman, J. U., Reif, M., Reiter, S., Reuter, L., Herrmann, D. Ricalde, Ripp-Baudot, I., Rizzo, G., Roehrken, M., Roney, J. M., Rostomyan, A., Rout, N., Sanders, D. A., Sandilya, S., Santelj, L., Savinov, V., Scavino, B., Schnepf, M., Schwanda, C., Seino, Y., Selce, A., Senyo, K., Serrano, J., Sevior, M. E., Sfienti, C., Shan, W., Shi, X. D., Shiu, J. -G., Shtol, D., Shwartz, B., Sibidanov, A., Simon, F., Skorupa, J., Sobie, R. J., Sobotzik, M., Soffer, A., Sokolov, A., Solovieva, E., Spataro, S., Spruck, B., Starič, M., Stavroulakis, P., Stefkova, S., Stroili, R., Strube, J., Sumihama, M., Sumisawa, K., Svidras, H., Takizawa, M., Tamponi, U., Tanida, K., Tenchini, F., Tittel, O., Tiwary, R., Torassa, E., Trabelsi, K., Ueda, I., Uglov, T., Unger, K., Unno, Y., Uno, K., Uno, S., Urquijo, P., Ushiroda, Y., Vahsen, S. E., van Tonder, R., Varvell, K. E., Veronesi, M., Vinokurova, A., Vismaya, V. S., Vitale, L., Vobbilisetti, V., Volpe, R., Wakai, M., Wallner, S., Wang, M. -Z., Warburton, A., Watanabe, M., Watanuki, S., Wessel, C., Won, E., Yabsley, B. D., Yamada, S., Yan, W., Yelton, J., Yin, J. H., Yoshihara, K., Yuan, J., Zani, L., Zhang, B., Zhilich, V., Zhou, J. S., Zhou, Q. D., Zhu, L., Zhukova, V. I., and Žlebčík, R.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We measure the time-integrated CP asymmetry in $D^{0} \rightarrow K^{0}_{S}K^{0}_{S}$ decays reconstructed in $e^{+}e^{-} \rightarrow c\overline{c}$ events collected by the Belle and Belle II experiments. The corresponding data samples have integrated luminosities of 980 fb$^{-1}$ and 428 fb$^{-1}$, respectively. The $D^{0}$ decays are required to originate from the $D^{*+} \rightarrow D^{0}\pi^{+}$ decay, which determines the charm flavor at production time. A control sample of $D^{0} \rightarrow K^{+}K^{-}$ decays is used to correct for production and detection asymmetries. The result, $(-1.4\pm1.3{\rm(stat)}\pm0.1{\rm (syst)})\%$, is consistent with previous determinations and with CP symmetry., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2410.22961
- Published
- 2024
49. gSeaGen code by KM3NeT: an efficient tool to propagate muons simulated with CORSIKA
- Author
-
Aiello, S., Albert, A., Alhebsi, A. R., Alshamsi, M., Garre, S. Alves, Ambrosone, A., Ameli, F., Andre, M., Androutsou, E., Aphecetche, L., Ardid, M., Ardid, S., Atmani, H., Aublin, J., Badaracco, F., Bailly-Salins, L., Bardačová, Z., Baret, B., Bariego-Quintana, A., Becherini, Y., Bendahman, M., Benfenati, F., Benhassi, M., Bennani, M., Benoit, D. M., Berbee, E., Bertin, V., Beyer, C., Biagi, S., Boettcher, M., Bonanno, D., Bouasla, A. B., Boumaaza, J., Bouta, M., Bouwhuis, M., Bozza, C., Bozza, R. M., Brânzaş, H., Bretaudeau, F., Breuhaus, M., Bruijn, R., Brunner, J., Bruno, R., Buis, E., Buompane, R., Busto, J., Caiffi, B., Calvo, D., Capone, A., Carenini, F., Carretero, V., Cartraud, T., Castaldi, P., Cecchini, V., Celli, S., Cerisy, L., Chabab, M., Chadolias, M., Chen, A., Cherubini, S., Chiarusi, T., Circella, M., Cocimano, R., Coelho, J. A. B., Coleiro, A., Condorelli, A., Coniglione, R., Coyle, P., Creusot, A., Cuttone, G., Dallier, R., Darras, Y., De Benedittis, A., De Martino, B., De Wasseige, G., Decoene, V., Del Rosso, I., Di Mauro, L. S., Di Palma, I., Díaz, A. F., Diego-Tortosa, D., Distefano, C., Domi, A., Donzaud, C., Dornic, D., Drakopoulou, E., Drouhin, D., Ducoin, J. -G., Dvornický, R., Eberl, T., Eckerová, E., Eddymaoui, A., van Eeden, T., Eff, M., van Eijk, D., Bojaddaini, I. El, Hedri, S. El, Ellajosyula, V., Enzenhöfer, A., Ferrara, G., Filipović, M. D., Filippini, F., Franciotti, D., Fusco, L. A., Gagliardini, S., Gal, T., Méndez, J. García, Soto, A. Garcia, Oliver, C. Gatius, Geißelbrecht, N., Genton, E., Ghaddari, H., Gialanella, L., Gibson, B. K., Giorgio, E., Goos, I., Goswami, P., Gozzini, S. R., Gracia, R., Guidi, C., Guillon, B., Gutiérrez, M., Haack, C., van Haren, H., Hassieiev, V., Heijboer, A., Hennig, L., Hernández-Rey, J. J., Ibnsalih, W. Idrissi, Illuminati, G., Joly, D., de Jong, M., de Jong, P., Jung, B. J., Kalaczyński, P., Kistauri, G., Kopper, C., Kouchner, A., Kueviakoe, V., Kulikovskiy, V., Kvatadze, R., Labalme, M., Lahmann, R., Lamoureux, M., Larosa, G., Lastoria, C., Lazo, A., Stum, S. Le, Lehaut, G., Lemaître, V., Leonora, E., Lessing, N., Levi, G., Clark, M. Lindsey, Longhitano, F., Magnani, F., Majumdar, J., Malerba, L., Mamedov, F., Manfreda, A., Marconi, M., Margiotta, A., Marinelli, A., Markou, C., Martin, L., Mastrodicasa, M., Mastroianni, S., Mauro, J., Miele, G., Migliozzi, P., Migneco, E., Mitsou, M. L., Mollo, C. M., Morales-Gallegos, L., Moretti, G., Moussa, A., Mateo, I. Mozun, Muller, R., Musone, M. R., Musumeci, M., Navas, S., Nayerhoda, A., Nicolau, C. A., Nkosi, B., Fearraigh, B. Ó, Oliviero, V., Orlando, A., Oukacha, E., Paesani, D., González, J. Palacios, Papalashvili, G., Parisi, V., Gomez, E. J. Pastor, Păun, A. M., Păvălaş, G. E., Pelegris, I., Martínez, S. Peña, Perrin-Terrin, M., Pestel, V., Pestes, R., Piattelli, P., Poirè, C., Popa, V., Pradier, T., Prado, J., Pulvirenti, S., Quiroz-Rangel, C. A., Rahaman, U., Randazzo, N., Razzaque, S., Rea, I. C., Real, D., Riccobene, G., Robinson, J., Romanov, A., Šaina, A., Greus, F. Salesa, Samtleben, D. F. E., Losa, A. Sánchez, Sanfilippo, S., Sanguineti, M., Santonocito, D., Sapienza, P., Schnabel, J., Schumann, J., Schutte, H. M., Seneca, J., Sennan, N., Setter, B., Sgura, I., Shanidze, R., Sharma, A., Shitov, Y., Šimkovic, F., Simonelli, A., Sinopoulou, A., Spisso, B., Spurio, M., Stavropoulos, D., Štekl, I., Taiuti, M., Tayalati, Y., Thiersen, H., Thoudam, S., de la Torre, P., Melo, I. Tosta e, Tragia, E., Trocmé, B., Tsourapis, V., Tudorache, A., Tzamariudaki, E., Ukleja, A., Vacheret, A., Valsecchi, V., Van Elewyck, V., Vannoye, G., Vasileiadis, G., de Sola, F. Vazquez, Veutro, A., Viola, S., Vivolo, D., van Vliet, A., Warnhofer, H., Weissbrod, S., de Wolf, E., Lhenry-Yvon, I., Zarpapis, G., Zavatarelli, S., Zegarelli, A., Zito, D., Zornoza, J. D., Zúñiga, J., and Zywucka, N.
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
The KM3NeT Collaboration has tackled a common challenge faced by the astroparticle physics community, namely adapting the experiment-specific simulation software to work with the CORSIKA air shower simulation output. The proposed solution is an extension of the open-source code gSeaGen, allowing for the transport of muons generated by CORSIKA to a detector of any size at an arbitrary depth. The gSeaGen code was not only extended in terms of functionalities but also underwent a thorough redesign of the muon propagation routine, resulting in a more accurate and efficient simulation. This paper presents the capabilities of the new gSeaGen code as well as prospects for further developments., Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures
- Published
- 2024
50. A repeating fast radio burst source in the outskirts of a quiescent galaxy
- Author
-
Shah, V., Shin, K., Leung, C., Fong, W., Eftekhari, T., Amiri, M., Andersen, B. C., Andrew, S., Bhardwaj, M., Brar, C., Cassanelli, T., Chatterjee, S., Curtin, A. P., Dobbs, M., Dong, Y., Dong, F. A., Fonseca, E., Gaensler, B. M., Halpern, M., Hessels, J. W. T., Ibik, A. L., Jain, N., Joseph, R. C., Kaczmarek, J., Kahinga, L. A., Kaspi, V. M., Kharel, B., Landecker, T., Lanman, A. E., Lazda, M., Main, R., Mas-Ribas, L., Masui, K. W., Mckinven, R., Mena-Parra, J., Meyers, B. W., Michilli, D., Nimmo, K., Pandhi, A., Patil, S. S., Pearlman, A. B., Pleunis, Z., Prochaska, J. X., Rafiei-Ravandi, M., Sammons, M., Sand, K. R., Scholz, P., Smith, K., and Stairs, I.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the discovery of the repeating fast radio burst source FRB 20240209A using the CHIME/FRB telescope. We have detected 22 bursts from this repeater between February and July 2024, six of which were also recorded at the Outrigger station KKO. The 66-km long CHIME-KKO baseline can provide single-pulse FRB localizations along one dimension with $2^{\prime\prime}$ accuracy. The high declination of $\sim$86 degrees for this repeater allowed its detection with a rotating range of baseline vectors, enabling the combined localization region size to be constrained to $1^{\prime\prime}\times2^{\prime\prime}$. We present deep Gemini observations that, combined with the FRB localization, enabled a robust association of FRB 20240209A to the outskirts of a luminous galaxy (P(O|x) = 0.99; $L \approx 5.3 \times 10^{10}\,L_{\odot}$). FRB 20240209A has a projected physical offset of $40 \pm 5$ kpc from the center of its host galaxy, making it the FRB with the largest host galaxy offset to date. When normalized by the host galaxy size, the offset of FRB 20240209A is comparable to that of FRB 20200120E, the only FRB source known to originate in a globular cluster. We consider several explanations for the large offset, including a progenitor that was kicked from the host galaxy or in situ formation in a low-luminosity satellite galaxy of the putative host, but find the most plausible scenario to be a globular cluster origin. This, coupled with the quiescent, elliptical nature of the host as demonstrated in our companion paper, provide strong evidence for a delayed formation channel for the progenitor of the FRB source., Comment: Submitted to AAS Journals
- Published
- 2024
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.