8,661 results on '"Caputo P"'
Search Results
2. Tracking disturbances in transmission networks
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Caputo, Jean-Guy and Hamdi, Adel
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Mathematics - Optimization and Control ,Mathematical Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
We study the nonlinear inverse source problem of detecting, localizing and identifying unknown accidental disturbances on forced and damped transmission networks. A first result is that strategic observation sets are enough to guarantee detection of disturbances. To localize and identify them, we additionally need the observation set to be absorbent. If this set is dominantly absorbent, then detection, localization and identification can be done in "quasi real-time". We illustrate these results with numerical experiments.
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- 2024
3. A-STEP: The AstroPix Sounding Rocket Technology Demonstration Payload
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Violette, Daniel P., Steinhebel, Amanda, Roy, Abhradeep, Boggs, Ryan, Caputo, Regina, Durachka, David, Fukazawa, Yasushi, Hashizume, Masaki, Hesh, Scott, Jadhav, Manoj, Kierans, Carolyn, Kumar, Kavic, Kushima, Shin, Leys, Richard, Metcalfe, Jessica, Metzler, Zachary, Nakano, Norito, Peric, Ivan, Perkins, Jeremy, Seo, Lindsey, Shin, K. W. Taylor, Striebig, Nicolas, Suda, Yusuke, and Tajima, Hiroyasu
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A next-generation medium-energy (100 keV to 100 MeV) gamma-ray observatory will greatly enhance the identification and characterization of multimessenger sources in the coming decade. Coupling gamma-ray spectroscopy, imaging, and polarization to neutrino and gravitational wave detections will develop our understanding of various astrophysical phenomena including compact object mergers, supernovae remnants, active galactic nuclei and gamma-ray bursts. An observatory operating in the MeV energy regime requires technologies that are capable of measuring Compton scattered photons and photons interacting via pair production. AstroPix is a monolithic high voltage CMOS active pixel sensor which enables future gamma-ray telescopes in this energy range. AstroPix's design is iterating towards low-power (~1.5 mW/cm$^{2}$), high spatial (500 microns pixel pitch) and spectral (<5 keV at 122 keV) tracking of photon and charged particle interactions. Stacking planar arrays of AstroPix sensors in three dimensions creates an instrument capable of reconstructing the trajectories and energies of incident gamma rays over large fields of view. A prototype multi-layered AstroPix instrument, called the AstroPix Sounding rocket Technology dEmonstration Payload (A-STEP), will test three layers of AstroPix quad chips in a suborbital rocket flight. These quad chips (2x2 joined AstroPix sensors) form the 4x4 cm$^{2}$ building block of future large area AstroPix instruments, such as ComPair-2 and AMEGO-X. This payload will be the first demonstration of AstroPix detectors operated in a space environment and will demonstrate the technology's readiness for future astrophysical and nuclear physics applications. In this work, we overview the design and state of development of the ASTEP payload., Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation 2004 conference proceedings
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. SN 2023ixf -- an average-energy explosion with circumstellar medium and a precursor
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Kozyreva, Alexandra, Caputo, Andrea, Baklanov, Petr, Mironov, Alexey, and Janka, Hans-Thomas
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Abridged: The fortunate proximity of the SN2023ixf allowed astronomers to follow its evolution from almost the moment of the collapse of the progenitor's core. SN2023ixf can be explained as an explosion of a massive star with an energy of 0.7e51 erg, however with a greatly reduced envelope mass, probably because of binary interaction. In our radiative-transfer simulations, the SN ejecta of 6 Msun interact with circumstellar material (CSM) of ~0.6 Msun extending to 1.e15 cm, which results in a light curve (LC) peak matching that of SN2023ixf. The origin of this required CSM might be gravity waves originating from convective shell burning, which could enhance wind-like mass-loss during the late stages of stellar evolution. The steeply rising, low-luminosity flux during the first hours after observationally confirmed non-detection, however, cannot be explained by the collision of the energetic SN shock with the CSM. Instead, we considered it as a precursor that we could fit by the emission from ~0.5 Msun of matter that was ejected with an energy of 1.e49 erg a fraction of a day before the main shock of the SN explosion reached the surface of the progenitor. The source of this energy injection into the outermost shell of the stellar envelope could also be dynamical processes related to the convective activity in the progenitor's interior or envelope. Alternatively, the early rise of the LC could point to the initial breakout of a highly non-spherical SN shock or of fast-moving, asymmetrically ejected matter that was swept out well ahead of the SN shock, potentially in a low-energy, nearly relativistic jet. We also discuss that pre-SN outbursts and LC precursors can be used to study or to constrain energy deposition in the outermost stellar layers by the decay of exotic particles, such as axions, which could be produced simultaneously with neutrinos in the newly formed, hot neutron star., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, submitted to A & A
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- 2024
5. Beyond The Standard Model electrodynamics in the time domain
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Corelli, Fabrizio, Cannizzaro, Enrico, Caputo, Andrea, and Pani, Paolo
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
Many motivated extensions of the standard model include new light bosons, such as axions and dark photons, which can mix with the ordinary photon. This latter, when in a dilute plasma, can be dressed by an effective plasma mass. If this is equal to the mass of the new degree of freedom, then a resonance takes place and the probability of transition between states is enhanced. This phenomenon of resonance conversion is at the very basis of multiple probes of dark matter, and it is typically studied within the so-called Landau-Zener approximation for level crossings. This latter is known to break down in a variety of scenarios, such as multiple level crossings or when the de Broglie wave length of the new boson is comparable to the scale over which the background plasma varies. We develop a flexible code adopting a 3+1 formalism in flat spacetime to perform non-linear simulations of systems with photons and new ultralight bosons in the presence of plasma. Our code currently allows to evolve one-dimensional systems, which are the ones of interest for this first study, but can be easily extended to treat three-dimensional spaces, and can be adapted to describe a plethora of realistic astrophysical and cosmological situations. Here we use it to study the breakdown of the Landau-Zener approximation in the case of multiple level crossings and when the slowly-varying plasma approximation ceases to be valid. In this first paper we detail our code and use it to study non-turbulent plasma, where small scale fluctuations can be neglected; their treatment will be considered in an upcoming publication., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures
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- 2024
6. Rules, Cases, and Reasoning: Positivist Legal Theory as a Framework for Pluralistic AI Alignment
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Caputo, Nicholas A.
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Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Legal theory can address two related key problems of alignment: pluralism and specification. Alignment researchers must determine how to specify what is concretely meant by vague principles like helpfulness and fairness and they must ensure that their techniques do not exclude alternative perspectives on life and values. The law faces these same problems. Leading legal theories suggest the law solves these problems through the interaction of rules and cases, where general rules promulgated by a democratic authority are given specific content through their application over time. Concrete applications allow for convergence on practical meaning while preserving space for disagreement on values. These approaches suggest improvements to existing democratic alignment processes that use AI to create cases that give content to rules, allowing for more pluralist alignment., Comment: NeurIPS Pluralistic Alignment Workshop 2024
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- 2024
7. Constraints on dark photon dark matter from Lyman-$\alpha$ forest simulations and an ultra-high signal-to-noise quasar spectrum
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Trost, Andrea, Bolton, James S., Caputo, Andrea, Liu, Hongwan, Cristiani, Stefano, and Viel, Matteo
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The ultralight dark photon is a well-motivated, hypothetical dark matter candidate. In a dilute plasma, they can resonantly convert into photons, and heat up the intergalactic medium between galaxies. In this work, we explore the dark photon dark matter parameter space by comparing synthetic Lyman-$\alpha$ forest data from cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to observational data from VLT/UVES of the quasar HE0940-1050 ($z_{\rm em}=3.09$). We use a novel flux normalization technique that targets under-dense gas, reshaping the flux probability distribution. Not only do we place robust constraints on the kinetic mixing parameter of dark photon dark matter, but notably our findings suggest that this model can still reconcile simulated and observed Doppler parameter distributions of $z\sim0$ Lyman-$\alpha$ lines, as seen by HST/COS. This work opens new pathways for the use of the Lyman-$\alpha$ forest to explore new physics, and can be extended to other scenarios such as primordial black hole evaporation, dark matter decay, and annihilation., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
8. The 2023 Balloon Flight of the ComPair Instrument
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Smith, Lucas D., Cannady, Nicholas, Caputo, Regina, Kierans, Carolyn, Kirschner, Nicholas, Liceaga-Indart, Iker, McEnery, Julie, Metzler, Zachary, Moiseev, A. A., Parker, Lucas, Perkins, Jeremy, Sasaki, Makoto, Schoenwald, Adam J., Shy, Daniel, Valverde, Janeth, Wasti, Sambid, Woolf, Richard, Bolotnikov, Aleksey, Caligiure, Thomas J., Crosier, A. Wilder, Fried, Jack, Ghosh, Priyarshini, Griffin, Sean, Grove, J. Eric, Hays, Elizabeth, Kong, Emily, Mitchell, John, Phlips, Bernard, Sleator, Clio, Thompson, D. J., Wulf, Eric, and Zajczyk, Anna
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The ComPair balloon instrument is a prototype gamma-ray telescope that aims to further develop technology for observing the gamma-ray sky in the MeV regime. ComPair combines four detector subsystems to enable parallel Compton scattering and pair-production detection, critical for observing in this energy range. This includes a 10 layer double-sided silicon strip detector tracker, a virtual Frisch grid low energy CZT calorimeter, a high energy CsI calorimeter, and a plastic scintillator anti-coincidence detector. The inaugural balloon flight successfully launched from the Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility site in Fort Sumner, New Mexico, in late August 2023, lasting approximately 6.5 hours in duration. In this proceeding, we discuss the development of the ComPair Since balloon payload, the performance during flight, and early results., Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. TIMeSynC: Temporal Intent Modelling with Synchronized Context Encodings for Financial Service Applications
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Katariya, Dwipam, Origgi, Juan Manuel, Wang, Yage, and Caputo, Thomas
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Quantitative Finance - General Finance ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Users engage with financial services companies through multiple channels, often interacting with mobile applications, web platforms, call centers, and physical locations to service their accounts. The resulting interactions are recorded at heterogeneous temporal resolutions across these domains. This multi-channel data can be combined and encoded to create a comprehensive representation of the customer's journey for accurate intent prediction. This demands sequential learning solutions. NMT transformers achieve state-of-the-art sequential representation learning by encoding context and decoding for the next best action to represent long-range dependencies. However, three major challenges exist while combining multi-domain sequences within an encode-decoder transformers architecture for intent prediction applications: a) aligning sequences with different sampling rates b) learning temporal dynamics across multi-variate, multi-domain sequences c) combining dynamic and static sequences. We propose an encoder-decoder transformer model to address these challenges for contextual and sequential intent prediction in financial servicing applications. Our experiments show significant improvement over the existing tabular method., Comment: 6 pages, Accepted at RecTemp @ RecSys 2024
- Published
- 2024
10. Radial kinks in a Schwarzschild-like geometry
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Caputo, Jean-Guy, Dobrowolski, Tomasz, Gatlik, Jacek, and Kevrekidis, Panayotis G.
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Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and Solitons ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We study the propagation of a domain wall (kink) of the $\phi^4$ model in a radially symmetric environment defined by a gravity source. This source deforms the standard Euclidian metric into a Schwarzschild-like one. We introduce an effective model that accurately describes the dynamics of the kink center. This description works well even outside the perturbation region, i.e., even for large masses of the gravitating object. We observed that such a spherical domain wall surrounding a star-type object inevitably "collapses", i.e., shrinks in radius towards the origin and offer an understanding of the latter phenomenology. The relevant analysis is presented for a circular domain wall and a spherical one., Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures
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- 2024
11. Fast unconditional reset and leakage reduction in fixed-frequency transmon qubits
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Chen, Liangyu, Fors, Simon Pettersson, Yan, Zixian, Ali, Anaida, Abad, Tahereh, Osman, Amr, Moschandreou, Eleftherios, Lienhard, Benjamin, Kosen, Sandoko, Li, Hang-Xi, Shiri, Daryoush, Liu, Tong, Hill, Stefan, Amin, Abdullah-Al, Rehammar, Robert, Dahiya, Mamta, Nylander, Andreas, Rommel, Marcus, Roudsari, Anita Fadavi, Caputo, Marco, Leif, Grönberg, Govenius, Joonas, Dobsicek, Miroslav, Giannelli, Michele Faucci, Kockum, Anton Frisk, Bylander, Jonas, and Tancredi, Giovanna
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
The realization of fault-tolerant quantum computing requires the execution of quantum error-correction (QEC) schemes, to mitigate the fragile nature of qubits. In this context, to ensure the success of QEC, a protocol capable of implementing both qubit reset and leakage reduction is highly desirable. We demonstrate such a protocol in an architecture consisting of fixed-frequency transmon qubits pair-wise coupled via tunable couplers -- an architecture that is compatible with the surface code. We use tunable couplers to transfer any undesired qubit excitation to the readout resonator of the qubit, from which this excitation decays into the feedline. In total, the combination of qubit reset, leakage reduction, and coupler reset takes only 83ns to complete. Our reset scheme is fast, unconditional, and achieves fidelities well above 99%, thus enabling fixed-frequency qubit architectures as future implementations of fault-tolerant quantum computers. Our protocol also provides a means to both reduce QEC cycle runtime and improve algorithmic fidelity on quantum computers.
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- 2024
12. Egocentric zone-aware action recognition across environments
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Peirone, Simone Alberto, Goletto, Gabriele, Planamente, Mirco, Bottino, Andrea, Caputo, Barbara, and Averta, Giuseppe
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Human activities exhibit a strong correlation between actions and the places where these are performed, such as washing something at a sink. More specifically, in daily living environments we may identify particular locations, hereinafter named activity-centric zones, which may afford a set of homogeneous actions. Their knowledge can serve as a prior to favor vision models to recognize human activities. However, the appearance of these zones is scene-specific, limiting the transferability of this prior information to unfamiliar areas and domains. This problem is particularly relevant in egocentric vision, where the environment takes up most of the image, making it even more difficult to separate the action from the context. In this paper, we discuss the importance of decoupling the domain-specific appearance of activity-centric zones from their universal, domain-agnostic representations, and show how the latter can improve the cross-domain transferability of Egocentric Action Recognition (EAR) models. We validate our solution on the EPIC-Kitchens-100 and Argo1M datasets, Comment: Project webpage: https://gabrielegoletto.github.io/EgoZAR/
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- 2024
13. Shaping Dark Photon Spectral Distortions
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Arsenadze, Giorgi, Caputo, Andrea, Gan, Xucheng, Liu, Hongwan, and Ruderman, Joshua T.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The cosmic microwave background (CMB) spectrum is an extraordinary tool for exploring physics beyond the Standard Model. The exquisite precision of the measurement makes it particularly sensitive to small effects caused by hidden sector interactions. In particular, CMB spectral distortions can unveil the existence of dark photons which are kinetically coupled to the standard photon. In this work, we use the COBE-FIRAS dataset to derive accurate and robust limits on photon-to-dark-photon oscillations for a large range of dark photon masses, from $10^{-10}$ to $10^{-4}$ eV. We consider in detail the redshift dependence of the bounds, computing CMB distortions due to photon injection/removal using a Green's function method. Our treatment improves on previous results, which had set limits studying energy injection/removal into baryons rather than photon injection/removal, or ignored the redshift evolution of distortions. The difference between our treatment and previous ones is particularly noticeable in the predicted spectral shape of the distortions, a smoking gun signature for photon-to-dark-photon oscillations. The characterization of the spectral shape is crucial for future CMB missions, which could improve the present sensitivity by orders of magnitude, exploring regions of the dark photon parameter space that are otherwise difficult to access., Comment: 18 pages, 4 appendices, 7 figures
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- 2024
14. Entropy Contractions in Markov Chains: Half-Step, Full-Step and Continuous-Time
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Caputo, Pietro, Chen, Zongchen, Gu, Yuzhou, and Polyanskiy, Yury
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Mathematics - Probability ,Computer Science - Information Theory - Abstract
This paper considers the speed of convergence (mixing) of a finite Markov kernel $P$ with respect to the Kullback-Leibler divergence (entropy). Given a Markov kernel one defines either a discrete-time Markov chain (with the $n$-step transition kernel given by the matrix power $P^n$) or a continuous-time Markov process (with the time-$t$ transition kernel given by $e^{t(P-\mathrm{Id})}$). The contraction of entropy for $n=1$ or $t=0+$ are characterized by the famous functional inequalities, the strong data processing inequality (SDPI) and the modified log-Sobolev inequality (MLSI), respectively. When $P=KK^*$ is written as the product of a kernel and its adjoint, one could also consider the ``half-step'' contraction, which is the SDPI for $K$, while the ``full-step'' contraction refers to the SDPI for $P$. The work [DMLM03] claimed that these contraction coefficients (half-step, full-step, and continuous-time) are generally within a constant factor of each other. We disprove this and related conjectures by working out a number of different counterexamples. In particular, we construct (a) a continuous-time Markov process that contracts arbitrarily faster than its discrete-time counterpart; and (b) a kernel $P$ such that $P^{m+1}$ contracts arbitrarily better than $P^m$. Hence, our main conclusion is that the four standard inequalities comparing five common notions of entropy and variance contraction are generally not improvable. In the process of analyzing the counterexamples, we survey and sharpen the tools for bounding the contraction coefficients and characterize properties of extremizers of the respective functional inequalities. As our examples range from Bernoulli-Laplace model, random walks on graphs, to birth-death chains, the paper is also intended as a tutorial on computing MLSI, SDPI and other constants for these types of commonly occurring Markov chains.
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- 2024
15. GRB 221009A: the B.O.A.T Burst that Shines in Gamma Rays
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Axelsson, M., Ajello, M., Arimoto, M., Baldini, L., Ballet, J., Baring, M. G., Bartolini, C., Bastieri, D., Gonzalez, J. Becerra, Bellazzini, R., Berenji, B., Bissaldi, E., Blandford, R. D., Bonino, R., Bruel, P., Buson, S., Cameron, R. A., Caputo, R., Caraveo, P. A., Cavazzuti, E., Cheung, C. C., Chiaro, G., Cibrario, N., Ciprini, S., Cozzolongo, G., Orestano, P. Cristarella, Crnogorcevic, M., Cuoco, A., Cutini, S., D'Ammando, F., De Gaetano, S., Di Lalla, N., Dinesh, A., Di Tria, R., Di Venere, L., Domínguez, A., Fegan, S. J., Ferrara, E. C., Fiori, A., Franckowiak, A., Fukazawa, Y., Funk, S., Fusco, P., Galanti, G., Gargano, F., Gasbarra, C., Germani, S., Giacchino, F., Giglietto, N., Giliberti, M., Gill, R., Giordano, F., Giroletti, M., Granot, J., Green, D., Grenier, I. A., Guiriec, S., Gustafsson, M., Hashizume, M., Hays, E., Hewitt, J. W., Horan, D., Kayanoki, T., Kuss, M., Laviron, A., Li, J., Liodakis, I., Longo, F., Loparco, F., Lorusso, L., Lott, B., Lovellette, M. N., Lubrano, P., Maldera, S., Malyshev, D., Manfreda, A., Martí-Devesa, G., Martinelli, R., Castellanos, I. Martinez, Mazziotta, M. N., McEnery, J. E., Mereu, I., Meyer, M., Michelson, P. F., Mirabal, N., Mitthumsiri, W., Mizuno, T., Monti-Guarnieri, P., Monzani, M. E., Morishita, T., Morselli, A., Moskalenko, I. V., Negro, M., Niwa, R., Omodei, N., Orienti, M., Orlando, E., Paneque, D., Panzarini, G., Persic, M., Pesce-Rollins, M., Petrosian, V., Pillera, R., Piron, F., Porter, T. A., Principe, G., Racusin, J. L., Rainò, S., Rando, R., Rani, B., Razzano, M., Razzaque, S., Reimer, A., Reimer, O., Ryde, F., Sánchez-Conde, M., Parkinson, P. M. Saz, Serini, D., Sgrò, C., Sharma, V., Siskind, E. J., Spandre, G., Spinelli, P., Suson, D. J., Tajima, H., Tak, D., Thayer, J. B., Torres, D. F., Valverde, J., Zaharijas, G., Lesage, S., Briggs, M. S., Burns, E., Bala, S., Bhat, P. N., Cleveland, W. H., Dalessi, S., de Barra, C., Gibby, M., Giles, M. M., Hamburg, R., Hristov, B. A., Hui, C. M., Kocevski, D., Mailyan, B., Malacaria, C., McBreen, S., Poolakkil, S., Roberts, O. J., Scotton, L., Veres, P., von Kienlin, A., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., and Wood, J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a complete analysis of Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) data of GRB 221009A, the brightest Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) ever detected. The burst emission above 30 MeV detected by the LAT preceded by 1 s the low-energy (< 10 MeV) pulse that triggered the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM), as has been observed in other GRBs. The prompt phase of GRB 221009A lasted a few hundred seconds. It was so bright that we identify a Bad Time Interval (BTI) of 64 seconds caused by the extremely high flux of hard X-rays and soft gamma rays, during which the event reconstruction efficiency was poor and the dead time fraction quite high. The late-time emission decayed as a power law, but the extrapolation of the late-time emission during the first 450 seconds suggests that the afterglow started during the prompt emission. We also found that high-energy events observed by the LAT are incompatible with synchrotron origin, and, during the prompt emission, are more likely related to an extra component identified as synchrotron self-Compton (SSC). A remarkable 400 GeV photon, detected by the LAT 33 ks after the GBM trigger and directionally consistent with the location of GRB 221009A, is hard to explain as a product of SSC or TeV electromagnetic cascades, and the process responsible for its origin is uncertain. Because of its proximity and energetic nature, GRB 221009A is an extremely rare event., Comment: 60 pages, 38 figures, 9 tables
- Published
- 2024
16. Quantum optimal transport with convex regularization
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Caputo, Emanuele, Gerolin, Augusto, Monina, Nataliia, and Portinale, Lorenzo
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Mathematical Physics ,Mathematics - Optimization and Control - Abstract
The goal of this paper is to settle the study of non-commutative optimal transport problems with convex regularization, in their static and finite-dimensional formulations. We consider both the balanced and unbalanced problem and show in both cases a duality result, characterizations of minimizers (for the primal) and maximizers (for the dual). An important tool we define is a non-commutative version of the classical $(c,\psi)$-transforms associated with a general convex regularization, which we employ to prove the convergence of Sinkhorn iterations in the balanced case. Finally, we show the convergence of the unbalanced transport problems towards the balanced one, as well as the convergence of transforms, as the marginal penalization parameters go to $+\infty$.
- Published
- 2024
17. Performance evaluation of the high-voltage CMOS active pixel sensor AstroPix for gamma-ray space telescopes
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Suda, Yusuke, Caputo, Regina, Steinhebel, Amanda L, Striebig, Nicolas, Jadhav, Manoj, Fukazawa, Yasushi, Hashizume, Masaki, Kierans, Carolyn, Leys, Richard, Metcalfe, Jessica, Negro, Michela, Perić, Ivan, Perkins, Jeremy S, Shin, Taylor, Tajima, Hiroyasu, Violette, Daniel, and Nakano, Norito
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Synchrotrons and Accelerators ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,High energy astrophysics ,MeV gamma-ray telescope ,HV-CMOS active pixel sensor ,MAPS ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Other Physical Sciences ,Nuclear & Particles Physics ,Nuclear and plasma physics - Published
- 2024
18. Influence of gauges in the numerical simulation of the time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau model
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Tain, Cyril, Caputo, Jean-Guy, and Danaila, Ionut
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Mathematical Physics ,G.1 - Abstract
The time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) model requires the choice of a gauge for the problem to be mathematically well-posed. In the literature, three gauges are commonly used: the Coulomb gauge, the Lorenz gauge and the temporal gauge. It has been noticed [J. Fleckinger-Pell\'e et al., Technical report, Argonne National Lab. (1997)] that these gauges can be continuously related by a single parameter considering the more general $\omega$-gauge, where $\omega$ is a non-negative real parameter. In this article, we study the influence of the gauge parameter $\omega$ on the convergence of numerical simulations of the TDGL model using finite element schemes. A classical benchmark is first analysed for different values of $\omega$ and artefacts are observed for lower values of $\omega$. Then, we relate these observations with a systematic study of convergence orders in the unified $\omega$-gauge framework. In particular, we show the existence of a tipping point value for $\omega$, separating optimal convergence behaviour and a degenerate one. We find that numerical artefacts are correlated to the degeneracy of the convergence order of the method and we suggest strategies to avoid such undesirable effects. New 3D configurations are also investigated (the sphere with or without geometrical defect).
- Published
- 2024
19. Sobolev spaces via chains in metric measure spaces
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Caputo, Emanuele and Cavallucci, Nicola
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Mathematics - Metric Geometry ,Mathematics - Functional Analysis ,46E36, 30L99, 49J52 - Abstract
We define the chain Sobolev space on a possibly non-complete metric measure space in terms of chain upper gradients. In this context, $\varepsilon$-chains are a finite collection of points with distance at most $\varepsilon$ between consecutive points. They play the role of discrete versions of curves. Chain upper gradients are defined accordingly and the chain Sobolev space is defined by letting the size parameter $\varepsilon$ going to zero. In the complete setting, we prove that the chain Sobolev space is equal to the classical notions of Sobolev spaces in terms of relaxation of upper gradients or of the local Lipschitz constant of Lipschitz functions. The proof of this fact is inspired by a recent technique developed by Eriksson-Bique. In the possible non-complete setting, we prove that the chain Sobolev space is equal to the one defined via relaxation of the local Lipschitz constant of Lipschitz functions, while in general they are different from the one defined via upper gradients along curves. We apply the theory developed in the paper to prove equivalent formulations of the Poincar\'{e} inequality in terms of pointwise estimates involving $\varepsilon$-upper gradients, lower bounds on modulus of chains connecting points and size of separating sets measured with the Minkowski content in the non-complete setting. Along the way, we discuss the notion of weak $\varepsilon$-upper gradients and asymmetric notions of integral along chains., Comment: 49 pages, 1 figure
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- 2024
20. The Double-Sided Silicon Strip Detector Tracker onboard the ComPair Balloon Flight
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Kirschner, Nicholas, Kierans, Carolyn, Wasti, Sambid, Schoenwald, Adam J., Caputo, Regina, Griffin, Sean, Liceaga-Indart, Iker, Parker, Lucas, Perkins, Jeremy S., and Zajczyk, Anna
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The ComPair balloon instrument is a prototype of the All-sky Medium Energy Gamma-ray Observatory (AMEGO) mission concept. AMEGO aims to bridge the spectral gap in sensitivity that currently exists from $\sim$100 keV to $\sim$100 MeV by being sensitive to both Compton and pair-production events. This is made possible through the use of four subsystems working together to reconstruct events: a double-sided silicon strip detector (DSSD) Tracker, a virtual Frisch grid cadmium zinc telluride (CZT) Low Energy Calorimeter, a ceasium iodide (CsI) High Energy Calorimeter, and an anti-coincidence detector (ACD) to reject charged particle backgrounds. Composed of 10 layers of DSSDs, ComPair's Tracker is designed to measure the position of photons that Compton scatter in the silicon, as well as reconstruct the tracks of electrons and positrons from pair-production as they propagate through the detector. By using these positions, as well as the absorbed energies in the Tracker and 2 Calorimeters, the energy and direction of the incident photon can be determined. This proceeding will present the development, testing, and calibration of the ComPair DSSD Tracker and early results from its balloon flight in August 2023., Comment: SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation Conference
- Published
- 2024
21. Repeated Block Averages: entropic time and mixing profiles
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Caputo, Pietro, Quattropani, Matteo, and Sau, Federico
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Mathematics - Probability ,Mathematics - Combinatorics - Abstract
We consider randomized dynamics over the $n$-simplex, where at each step a random set, or block, of coordinates is evenly averaged. When all blocks have size 2, this reduces to the repeated averages studied in [CDSZ22], a version of the averaging process on a graph [AL12]. We study the convergence to equilibrium of this process as a function of the distribution of the block size, and provide sharp conditions for the emergence of the cutoff phenomenon. Moreover, we characterize the size of the cutoff window and provide an explicit Gaussian cutoff profile. To complete the analysis, we study in detail the simplified case where the block size is not random. We show that the absence of a cutoff is equivalent to having blocks of size $n^{\Omega(1)}$, in which case we provide a convergence in distribution for the total variation distance at any given time, showing that, on the proper time scale, it remains constantly 1 up to an exponentially distributed random time, after which it decays following a Poissonian profile., Comment: 41 pages, 4 figures
- Published
- 2024
22. On the sensitivity of nuclear clocks to new physics
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Caputo, Andrea, Gazit, Doron, Hammer, Hans-Werner, Kopp, Joachim, Paz, Gil, Perez, Gilad, and Springmann, Konstantin
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The recent demonstration of laser excitation of the $\approx 8$ eV isomeric state of thorium-229 is a significant step towards a nuclear clock. The low excitation energy likely results from a cancellation between the contributions of the electromagnetic and strong forces. Physics beyond the Standard Model could disrupt this cancellation, highlighting nuclear clocks' sensitivity to new physics. Accurate predictions of the different contributions to nuclear transition energies, and therefore of the quantitative sensitivity of a nuclear clock, are challenging. We improve upon previous sensitivity estimates and assess a ''nightmare scenario'', where all binding energy differences are small and the new physics sensitivity is poor. A classical geometric model of thorium-229 suggests that fine-tuning is needed for such a scenario. We also propose a $d$-wave halo model, inspired by effective field theory. We show that it reproduces observations and suggests the ''nightmare scenario'' is unlikely. We find that the nuclear clock's sensitivity to variations in the effective fine structure constant is enhanced by a factor of order $10^4$. We finally propose auxiliary nuclear measurements to reduce uncertainties and further test the validity of the halo model., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures
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- 2024
23. Entropy factorization via curvature
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Caputo, Pietro and Salez, Justin
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Mathematics - Probability ,Mathematics - Combinatorics ,Mathematics - Functional Analysis ,39B62, 60J10 - Abstract
We develop a new framework for establishing approximate factorization of entropy on arbitrary probability spaces, using a geometric notion known as non-negative sectional curvature. The resulting estimates are equivalent to entropy subadditivity and generalized Brascamp-Lieb inequalities, and provide a sharp modified log-Sobolev inequality for the Gibbs sampler of several particle systems in both continuous and discrete settings. The method allows us to obtain simple proofs of known results, as well as some new inequalities. We illustrate this through various applications, including discrete Gaussian free fields on arbitrary networks, the down-up walk on uniform $n$-sets, the uniform measure over permutations, and the uniform measure on the unit sphere in $\R^n$. Our method also yields a simple, coupling-based proof of the celebrated logarithmic Sobolev inequality for Langevin diffusions in a convex potential, which is one of the most emblematic applications of the Bakry-\'Emery criterion., Comment: additional references
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- 2024
24. Relaxation time and topology in 1D $O(N)$ models
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Caputo, Pietro, Ott, Sébastien, and Shapira, Assaf
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Mathematics - Probability ,Mathematical Physics ,60K35 - Abstract
We discuss the relaxation time (inverse spectral gap) of the one dimensional $O(N)$ model, for all $N$ and with two types of boundary conditions. We see how its low temperature asymptotic behavior is affected by the topology. The combination of the space dimension, which here is always 1, the boundary condition (free or periodic), and the spin state $S^{N-1}$, determines the existence or absence of non-trivial homotopy classes in some discrete version. Such non-trivial topology reflects in bottlenecks of the dynamics, creating metastable states that the system exits at exponential times; while when only one homotopy class exists the relaxation time depends polynomially on the temperature. We prove in the one dimensional case that, indeed, the relaxation time is a proxy to the model's topological properties via the exponential/polynomial dependence on the temperature., Comment: 26 pages. Comments welcome!
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- 2024
25. The path toward 500 $\mu$m depletion of AstroPix, a pixelated silicon HVCMOS sensor for space and EIC
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Steinhebel, Amanda L., Ott, Jennifer, Kroger, Olivia, Caputo, Regina, Fadeyev, Vitaliy, Affolder, Anthony, Affolder, Kirsten, Deshmukh, Aware, Striebig, Nicolas, Jadhav, Manoj, Suda, Yusuke, Fukazawa, Yasushi, Metcalfe, Jessica, Leys, Richard, Peric, Ivan, Taylor, Shin, and Violette, Daniel
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The precise reconstruction of Compton-scatter events is paramount for an imaging medium-energy gamma-ray telescope. The proposed AMEGO-X is enabled by a silicon tracker utilizing AstroPix chips - a pixelated silicon HVCMOS sensor novel for space use. To achieve science goals, each 500 x 500 $\mu$m$^2$ pixel must be sensitive for energy deposits ranging from 25 - 700 keV with an energy resolution of 5 keV at 122 keV (< 10%). This is achieved through depletion of the 500 $\mu$m thick sensor, although complete depletion poses an engineering and design challenge. This work will summarize the current status of depletion measurements highlighting direct measurement with TCT laser scanning and the agreement with simulation. Future plans for further testing will also be identified., Comment: 13 pages, proceedings, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024, June 16-21 2024
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- 2024
26. Statistical signatures of abstraction in deep neural networks
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Caputo, Carlo Orientale and Marsili, Matteo
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability ,Statistics - Machine Learning - Abstract
We study how abstract representations emerge in a Deep Belief Network (DBN) trained on benchmark datasets. Our analysis targets the principles of learning in the early stages of information processing, starting from the "primordial soup" of the under-sampling regime. As the data is processed by deeper and deeper layers, features are detected and removed, transferring more and more "context-invariant" information to deeper layers. We show that the representation approaches an universal model -- the Hierarchical Feature Model (HFM) -- determined by the principle of maximal relevance. Relevance quantifies the uncertainty on the model of the data, thus suggesting that "meaning" -- i.e. syntactic information -- is that part of the data which is not yet captured by a model. Our analysis shows that shallow layers are well described by pairwise Ising models, which provide a representation of the data in terms of generic, low order features. We also show that plasticity increases with depth, in a similar way as it does in the brain. These findings suggest that DBNs are capable of extracting a hierarchy of features from the data which is consistent with the principle of maximal relevance., Comment: The estimate of the Kullback-Leibler distance used in the paper is affected by strong sampling errors. Additional statistical analysis is needed
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- 2024
27. Neutrino emission in cold neutron stars: Bremsstrahlung and modified urca rates reexamined
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Bottaro, Salvatore, Caputo, Andrea, and Fiorillo, Damiano
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Neutrino emission in cold neutron stars is dominated by the modified urca (murca) process and nucleon-nucleon bremsstrahlung. The standard emission rates were provided by Friman and Maxwell in 1979, effectively based on a chiral Lagrangian framework with pion and rho meson exchange, supplemented by Landau parameters to describe short-range interactions. We reevaluate these rates within the same framework, correcting several errors and removing unnecessary simplifications, notably the triangular approximation - where the Fermi momenta of protons and leptons negligible compared to that of neutrons - in MURCA, and quantify their importance. The impact of rho meson exchange, previously argued to cancel with interference effects, is actually quite relevant. Altogether, the cooling rates are reduced by as much as a factor 2. We provide comprehensive analytical formulas encompassing all contributions, designed for straightforward numerical implementation. Our results are particularly relevant for studies of physics beyond the standard model, where the emission of new particles - such as axions - is typically computed within the same framework we adopt here., Comment: 24+3 pages, 9 Figures, Matching to the version accepted for publication on JCAP
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- 2024
28. Automatic Labels are as Effective as Manual Labels in Biomedical Images Classification with Deep Learning
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Marini, Niccolò, Marchesin, Stefano, Ferris, Lluis Borras, Püttmann, Simon, Wodzinski, Marek, Fratti, Riccardo, Podareanu, Damian, Caputo, Alessandro, Boytcheva, Svetla, Vatrano, Simona, Fraggetta, Filippo, Nagtegaal, Iris, Silvello, Gianmaria, Atzori, Manfredo, and Müller, Henning
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The increasing availability of biomedical data is helping to design more robust deep learning (DL) algorithms to analyze biomedical samples. Currently, one of the main limitations to train DL algorithms to perform a specific task is the need for medical experts to label data. Automatic methods to label data exist, however automatic labels can be noisy and it is not completely clear when automatic labels can be adopted to train DL models. This paper aims to investigate under which circumstances automatic labels can be adopted to train a DL model on the classification of Whole Slide Images (WSI). The analysis involves multiple architectures, such as Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) and Vision Transformer (ViT), and over 10000 WSIs, collected from three use cases: celiac disease, lung cancer and colon cancer, which one including respectively binary, multiclass and multilabel data. The results allow identifying 10% as the percentage of noisy labels that lead to train competitive models for the classification of WSIs. Therefore, an algorithm generating automatic labels needs to fit this criterion to be adopted. The application of the Semantic Knowledge Extractor Tool (SKET) algorithm to generate automatic labels leads to performance comparable to the one obtained with manual labels, since it generates a percentage of noisy labels between 2-5%. Automatic labels are as effective as manual ones, reaching solid performance comparable to the one obtained training models with manual labels., Comment: pre-print of the journal paper
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- 2024
29. MeshVPR: Citywide Visual Place Recognition Using 3D Meshes
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Berton, Gabriele, Junglas, Lorenz, Zaccone, Riccardo, Pollok, Thomas, Caputo, Barbara, and Masone, Carlo
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Mesh-based scene representation offers a promising direction for simplifying large-scale hierarchical visual localization pipelines, combining a visual place recognition step based on global features (retrieval) and a visual localization step based on local features. While existing work demonstrates the viability of meshes for visual localization, the impact of using synthetic databases rendered from them in visual place recognition remains largely unexplored. In this work we investigate using dense 3D textured meshes for large-scale Visual Place Recognition (VPR). We identify a significant performance drop when using synthetic mesh-based image databases compared to real-world images for retrieval. To address this, we propose MeshVPR, a novel VPR pipeline that utilizes a lightweight features alignment framework to bridge the gap between real-world and synthetic domains. MeshVPR leverages pre-trained VPR models and is efficient and scalable for city-wide deployments. We introduce novel datasets with freely available 3D meshes and manually collected queries from Berlin, Paris, and Melbourne. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that MeshVPR achieves competitive performance with standard VPR pipelines, paving the way for mesh-based localization systems. Data, code, and interactive visualizations are available at https://meshvpr.github.io/, Comment: Website: https://mesh-vpr.github.io/
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- 2024
30. Fluorescence Profile of Calabrian Opuntia ficus-indica Cladodes Extract: a Promising Low-cost Material for Technological Applications
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Ferraro, Antonio, Sighano, Sephora Kamwe, Caputo, Roberto, Cofone, Franco, Desiderio, Giovanni, and Gennari, Oriella
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Physics - Optics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The autofluorescence of calabrian Opuntia ficus-indica bioactive extract upon UV illumination is explored by fluorescence spectroscopy enabling to investigate the typology and distribution of responsible molecules within green cladodes. The spectroscopic analysis of the extract shows a significative red emission, suggesting an abundance of chlorophylls in the sample. Such molecules show pronounced fluorescence in the visible range (400-800 nm) with a very large Stokes shift, when excited with UV light source. The fluorescence profiling is performed also in the case of polymers, such as poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP) and polyvinyl alcohol (PVA), enriched with OFI extract with a signal improvement up to 40 times greater than the extract alone. This by-product fluorescent molecule can replace commercial dyes into several applications spanning from nano-optics to anti-counterfeiting and bioimaging.
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- 2024
31. Accelerating Heterogeneous Federated Learning with Closed-form Classifiers
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Fanì, Eros, Camoriano, Raffaello, Caputo, Barbara, and Ciccone, Marco
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Federated Learning (FL) methods often struggle in highly statistically heterogeneous settings. Indeed, non-IID data distributions cause client drift and biased local solutions, particularly pronounced in the final classification layer, negatively impacting convergence speed and accuracy. To address this issue, we introduce Federated Recursive Ridge Regression (Fed3R). Our method fits a Ridge Regression classifier computed in closed form leveraging pre-trained features. Fed3R is immune to statistical heterogeneity and is invariant to the sampling order of the clients. Therefore, it proves particularly effective in cross-device scenarios. Furthermore, it is fast and efficient in terms of communication and computation costs, requiring up to two orders of magnitude fewer resources than the competitors. Finally, we propose to leverage the Fed3R parameters as an initialization for a softmax classifier and subsequently fine-tune the model using any FL algorithm (Fed3R with Fine-Tuning, Fed3R+FT). Our findings also indicate that maintaining a fixed classifier aids in stabilizing the training and learning more discriminative features in cross-device settings. Official website: https://fed-3r.github.io/., Comment: Accepted at ICML 2024 - https://fed-3r.github.io/
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- 2024
32. Lyceum and University Aspirations among Migrants and Non-Migrants in Italy
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Alessio Buonomo, Giustina Orientale Caputo, Giuseppe Gabrielli, and Giuseppe Gargiulo
- Abstract
Scholars have argued that, on average, immigrant students are 'optimists' and have higher educational aspirations than non-migrant students after accounting for students' socio-economic background and educational performance. However, ethnic minority groups, which proxy the different origin backgrounds of migrants, may show mixed findings in terms of educational aspirations. This study aims to analyse the lyceum (the most theoretical school in Italy) and university aspirations of migrant-origin students and their Italian counterparts, enrolled respectively in Italian lower (Grade 8: age 13) and upper secondary state schools (Grades 9-11: ages 14-16). The analyses are based on data from the Italian Integration of the Second Generation survey conducted during the 2014/15 school year. Our results show that students having Chinese, Moroccan, Moldovan and other non-European Union Eastern European origins assume the lowest levels of lyceum aspiration after also considering compositional effects. Conversely, the largest proportion of migrants attending school in Grades 9-11 have higher levels of university aspiration compared to non-migrants. When considering the role of migratory generation, lyceum and university aspirations are positively associated with the acculturation process of migrants. Furthermore, we found that high family expectations, social relationships and self-perception benefits of studying have positive associations with both lyceum and university aspirations, especially among migrants.
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- 2024
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33. Evidence-based recommendations for gene-specific ACMG/AMP variant classification from the ClinGen ENIGMA BRCA1 and BRCA2 Variant Curation Expert Panel
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Parsons, Michael T, de la Hoya, Miguel, Richardson, Marcy E, Tudini, Emma, Anderson, Michael, Berkofsky-Fessler, Windy, Caputo, Sandrine M, Chan, Raymond C, Cline, Melissa S, Feng, Bing-Jian, Fortuno, Cristina, Gomez-Garcia, Encarna, Hadler, Johanna, Hiraki, Susan, Holdren, Megan, Houdayer, Claude, Hruska, Kathleen, James, Paul, Karam, Rachid, Leong, Huei San, Martins, Alexandra, Mensenkamp, Arjen R, Monteiro, Alvaro N, Nathan, Vaishnavi, O'Connor, Robert, Pedersen, Inge Sokilde, Pesaran, Tina, Radice, Paolo, Schmidt, Gunnar, Southey, Melissa, Tavtigian, Sean, Thompson, Bryony A, Toland, Amanda E, Turnbull, Clare, Vogel, Maartje J, Weyandt, Jamie, Wiggins, George AR, Zec, Lauren, Couch, Fergus J, Walker, Logan C, Vreeswijk, Maaike PG, Goldgar, David E, and Spurdle, Amanda B
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Biological Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Genetics ,Women's Health ,Breast Cancer ,Ovarian Cancer ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,ACMG/AMP variant curation guidelines ,BRCA1 ,BRCA2 ,ClinGen ,ClinVar ,VCEP ,Humans ,BRCA2 Protein ,BRCA1 Protein ,Female ,Genetic Variation ,Breast Neoplasms ,Genomics ,Databases ,Genetic ,Ovarian Neoplasms ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Testing ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Genetics & Heredity ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
The ENIGMA research consortium develops and applies methods to determine clinical significance of variants in hereditary breast and ovarian cancer genes. An ENIGMA BRCA1/2 classification sub-group, formed in 2015 as a ClinGen external expert panel, evolved into a ClinGen internal Variant Curation Expert Panel (VCEP) to align with Food and Drug Administration recognized processes for ClinVar contributions. The VCEP reviewed American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association of Molecular Pathology (ACMG/AMP) classification criteria for relevance to interpreting BRCA1 and BRCA2 variants. Statistical methods were used to calibrate evidence strength for different data types. Pilot specifications were tested on 40 variants and documentation revised for clarity and ease of use. The original criterion descriptions for 13 evidence codes were considered non-applicable or overlapping with other criteria. Scenario of use was extended or re-purposed for eight codes. Extensive analysis and/or data review informed specification descriptions and weights for all codes. Specifications were applied to pilot variants with pre-existing ClinVar classification as follows: 13 uncertain significance or conflicting, 14 pathogenic and/or likely pathogenic, and 13 benign and/or likely benign. Review resolved classification for 11/13 uncertain significance or conflicting variants and retained or improved confidence in classification for the remaining variants. Alignment of pre-existing ENIGMA research classification processes with ACMG/AMP classification guidelines highlighted several gaps in the research processes and the baseline ACMG/AMP criteria. Calibration of evidence strength was key to justify utility and strength of different data types for gene-specific application. The gene-specific criteria demonstrated value for improving ACMG/AMP-aligned classification of BRCA1 and BRCA2 variants.
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- 2024
34. Combination of Measurements of the Top Quark Mass from Data Collected by the ATLAS and CMS Experiments at s=7 and 8 TeV
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Hayrapetyan, A, Tumasyan, A, Adam, W, Andrejkovic, JW, Bergauer, T, Chatterjee, S, Damanakis, K, Dragicevic, M, Hussain, PS, Jeitler, M, Krammer, N, Li, A, Liko, D, Mikulec, I, Schieck, J, Schöfbeck, R, Schwarz, D, Sonawane, M, Templ, S, Waltenberger, W, Wulz, C-E, Darwish, MR, Janssen, T, Van Mechelen, P, Bols, ES, D’Hondt, J, Dansana, S, De Moor, A, Delcourt, M, Faham, H El, Lowette, S, Makarenko, I, Müller, D, Sahasransu, AR, Tavernier, S, Tytgat, M, Van Putte, S, Vannerom, D, Clerbaux, B, De Lentdecker, G, Favart, L, Hohov, D, Jaramillo, J, Khalilzadeh, A, Lee, K, Mahdavikhorrami, M, Malara, A, Paredes, S, Pétré, L, Postiau, N, Thomas, L, Bemden, M Vanden, Vander Velde, C, Vanlaer, P, De Coen, M, Dobur, D, Hong, Y, Knolle, J, Lambrecht, L, Mestdach, G, Rendón, C, Samalan, A, Skovpen, K, Van Den Bossche, N, van der Linden, J, Wezenbeek, L, Benecke, A, Bruno, G, Caputo, C, Delaere, C, Donertas, IS, Giammanco, A, Jaffel, K, Jain, Lemaitre, V, Lidrych, J, Mastrapasqua, P, Mondal, K, Tran, TT, Wertz, S, Alves, GA, Coelho, E, Hensel, C, De Oliveira, T Menezes, Moraes, A, Teles, P Rebello, Soeiro, M, Júnior, WL Aldá, Pereira, M Alves Gallo, Filho, M Barroso Ferreira, Malbouisson, H Brandao, Carvalho, W, Chinellato, J, Da Costa, EM, Da Silveira, GG, De Jesus Damiao, D, De Souza, S Fonseca, De Souza, R Gomes, Martins, J, and Herrera, C Mora
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,CMS Collaboration† ,ATLAS Collaboration‡ ,Mathematical Sciences ,Engineering ,General Physics ,Mathematical sciences ,Physical sciences - Abstract
A combination of fifteen top quark mass measurements performed by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC is presented. The datasets used correspond to an integrated luminosity of up to 5 and 20 fb^{-1} of proton-proton collisions at center-of-mass energies of 7 and 8 TeV, respectively. The combination includes measurements in top quark pair events that exploit both the semileptonic and hadronic decays of the top quark, and a measurement using events enriched in single top quark production via the electroweak t channel. The combination accounts for the correlations between measurements and achieves an improvement in the total uncertainty of 31% relative to the most precise input measurement. The result is m_{t}=172.52±0.14(stat)±0.30(syst) GeV, with a total uncertainty of 0.33 GeV.
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- 2024
35. The Anti-Coincidence Detector Subsystem for ComPair
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Metzler, Zachary, Cannady, Nicholas, Shy, Daniel, Caputo, Regina, Kierans, Carolyn, and Woolf, Richard
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
ComPair is a prototype gamma-ray telescope for the development of key technologies for next-generation gamma-ray detectors consisting of four subsystems: a 10-layer double-sided silicon strip detector tracker, a cadmium zinc telluride calorimeter, a cesium iodide calorimeter, and a plastic anti-coincidence detector (ACD). The ACD acts as an active shield to veto charged particle events and consists of 5 plastic scintillating panels. ComPair was launched as a balloon payload from Ft. Sumner, New Mexico and completed a 6-hour flight on August 27, 2023. Here we detail the design adn calibration of the ComPair ACD, and report on the ACD's veto efficiency and other performance metrics during the ComPair fight., Comment: Proceedings for SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024; June 16-21 2024; Yokohama, Japan
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- 2024
36. Resonant Conversion of Wave Dark Matter in the Ionosphere
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Beadle, Carl, Caputo, Andrea, and Ellis, Sebastian A. R.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We consider resonant wave-like dark matter conversion into low-frequency radio waves in the Earth's ionosphere. Resonant conversion occurs when the dark matter mass and the plasma frequency coincide, defining a range $m_{ \text{DM} } \sim 10^{-9} - 10^{-8}$ eV where this approach is best suited. Owing to the non-relativistic nature of dark matter and the typical variational scale of the Earth's ionosphere, the standard linearized approach to computing dark matter conversion is not suitable. We therefore solve a second-order boundary-value problem, effectively framing the ionosphere as a driven cavity filled with a positionally-varying plasma. An electrically-small dipole antenna targeting the generated radio waves can be orders of magnitude more sensitive to dark photon and axion-like particle dark matter in the relevant mass range. The present study opens up a promising way of testing hitherto unexplored parameter space which could be further improved with a dedicated instrument., Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures
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- 2024
37. Results from the CsI Calorimeter onboard the 2023 ComPair Balloon Flight
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Shy, Daniel, Woolf, Richard S., Sleator, Clio, Phlips, Bernard, Grove, J. Eric, Wulf, Eric A., Johnson-Rambert, Mary, Davis, Mitch, Kong, Emily, Caligiure, Thomas, Crosier, A. Wilder, Bolotnikov, Aleksey, Cannady, Nicholas, Carini, Gabriella A., Caputo, Regina, Fried, Jack, Ghosh, Priyarshini, Griffin, Sean, Hays, Elizabeth, Herrmann, Sven, Kierans, Carolyn, Kirschner, Nicholas, Liceaga-Indart, Iker, Metzler, Zachary, McEnery, Julie, Mitchell, John, Moiseev, A. A., Parker, Lucas, Dellapenna, Alfred, Perkins, Jeremy S., Sasaki, Makoto, Schoenwald, Adam J., Smith, Lucas D., Valverde, Janeth, Wasti, Sambid, and Zajczyk, Anna
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The ComPair gamma-ray telescope is a technology demonstrator for a future gamma-ray telescope called the All-sky Medium Energy Gamma-ray Observatory (AMEGO). The instrument is composed of four subsystems, a double-sided silicon strip detector, a virtual Frisch grid CdZnTe calorimeter, a CsI:Tl based calorimeter, and an anti-coincidence detector (ACD). The CsI calorimeter's goal is to measure the position and energy deposited from high-energy events. To demonstrate the technological readiness, the calorimeter has flown onboard a NASA scientific balloon as part of the GRAPE-ComPair mission and accumulated around 3 hours of float time at an altitude of 40 km. During the flight, the CsI calorimeter observed background radiation, Regener-Pfotzer Maximum, and several gamma-ray activation lines originating from aluminum.
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- 2024
38. EarthMatch: Iterative Coregistration for Fine-grained Localization of Astronaut Photography
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Berton, Gabriele, Goletto, Gabriele, Trivigno, Gabriele, Stoken, Alex, Caputo, Barbara, and Masone, Carlo
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Precise, pixel-wise geolocalization of astronaut photography is critical to unlocking the potential of this unique type of remotely sensed Earth data, particularly for its use in disaster management and climate change research. Recent works have established the Astronaut Photography Localization task, but have either proved too costly for mass deployment or generated too coarse a localization. Thus, we present EarthMatch, an iterative homography estimation method that produces fine-grained localization of astronaut photographs while maintaining an emphasis on speed. We refocus the astronaut photography benchmark, AIMS, on the geolocalization task itself, and prove our method's efficacy on this dataset. In addition, we offer a new, fair method for image matcher comparison, and an extensive evaluation of different matching models within our localization pipeline. Our method will enable fast and accurate localization of the 4.5 million and growing collection of astronaut photography of Earth. Webpage with code and data at https://earthloc-and-earthmatch.github.io, Comment: CVPR 2024 IMW - webpage: https://earthloc-and-earthmatch.github.io
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- 2024
39. Introducing the DREAMS Project: DaRk mattEr and Astrophysics with Machine learning and Simulations
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Rose, Jonah C., Torrey, Paul, Villaescusa-Navarro, Francisco, Lisanti, Mariangela, Nguyen, Tri, Roy, Sandip, Kollmann, Kassidy E., Vogelsberger, Mark, Cyr-Racine, Francis-Yan, Medvedev, Mikhail V., Genel, Shy, Anglés-Alcázar, Daniel, Kallivayalil, Nitya, Wang, Bonny Y., Costanza, Belén, O'Neil, Stephanie, Roche, Cian, Karmakar, Soumyodipta, Garcia, Alex M., Low, Ryan, Lin, Shurui, Mostow, Olivia, Cruz, Akaxia, Caputo, Andrea, Farahi, Arya, Muñoz, Julian B., Necib, Lina, Teyssier, Romain, Dalcanton, Julianne J., and Spergel, David
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We introduce the DREAMS project, an innovative approach to understanding the astrophysical implications of alternative dark matter models and their effects on galaxy formation and evolution. The DREAMS project will ultimately comprise thousands of cosmological hydrodynamic simulations that simultaneously vary over dark matter physics, astrophysics, and cosmology in modeling a range of systems -- from galaxy clusters to ultra-faint satellites. Such extensive simulation suites can provide adequate training sets for machine-learning-based analyses. This paper introduces two new cosmological hydrodynamical suites of Warm Dark Matter, each comprised of 1024 simulations generated using the Arepo code. One suite consists of uniform-box simulations covering a $(25~h^{-1}~{\rm M}_\odot)^3$ volume, while the other consists of Milky Way zoom-ins with sufficient resolution to capture the properties of classical satellites. For each simulation, the Warm Dark Matter particle mass is varied along with the initial density field and several parameters controlling the strength of baryonic feedback within the IllustrisTNG model. We provide two examples, separately utilizing emulators and Convolutional Neural Networks, to demonstrate how such simulation suites can be used to disentangle the effects of dark matter and baryonic physics on galactic properties. The DREAMS project can be extended further to include different dark matter models, galaxy formation physics, and astrophysical targets. In this way, it will provide an unparalleled opportunity to characterize uncertainties on predictions for small-scale observables, leading to robust predictions for testing the particle physics nature of dark matter on these scales., Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, DREAMS website: https://www.dreams-project.org
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- 2024
40. The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Pre-Trained Features for Camera Pose Refinement
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Trivigno, Gabriele, Masone, Carlo, Caputo, Barbara, and Sattler, Torsten
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Pose refinement is an interesting and practically relevant research direction. Pose refinement can be used to (1) obtain a more accurate pose estimate from an initial prior (e.g., from retrieval), (2) as pre-processing, i.e., to provide a better starting point to a more expensive pose estimator, (3) as post-processing of a more accurate localizer. Existing approaches focus on learning features / scene representations for the pose refinement task. This involves training an implicit scene representation or learning features while optimizing a camera pose-based loss. A natural question is whether training specific features / representations is truly necessary or whether similar results can be already achieved with more generic features. In this work, we present a simple approach that combines pre-trained features with a particle filter and a renderable representation of the scene. Despite its simplicity, it achieves state-of-the-art results, demonstrating that one can easily build a pose refiner without the need for specific training. The code is at https://github.com/ga1i13o/mcloc_poseref, Comment: Accepted to CVPR2024 (Highlight)
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- 2024
41. Thermoelectric Properties of Graphene through BN-ring Doping: A Theoretical Investigation
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Caputo, Laura, Nguyen, Viet-Hung, and Charlier, Jean-Christophe
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Graphene has been widely studied for various applications due to its outstanding electrical and mechanical properties. However, its potential in thermoelectric applications has been limited by a low Seebeck coefficient and high thermal conductivity. Efforts to enhance its thermoelectric properties have involved the usage of carbon-based nanoribbons, strain engineering, and heteroatom co-doping, particularly with Nitrogen and/or Boron atoms. In this work, multiscale simulation approaches combining DFT calculations and semi-empirical models are used to explore the potential improvement of the thermoelectric properties via borazine (B$_3$N$_3$)-ring doping. As bandgap engineering can be obtained with this doping, the thermoelectric properties of graphene are significantly enlarged, albeit at the cost of reduced conductance. The effects observed are not only dependent on the concentration of BN within the graphene lattice but are also notably influenced by the relative rotational alignment of the BN rings. Furthermore, the effect of the distribution and rotational disorder are considered, showing reduced electronic conductance compared to the periodic case highlighting the importance of precise control over the doping parameters of BN-ring. Lastly, the thermal lattice conductance is estimated revealing a substantial reduction of up to 40$\%$ compared to pristine graphene opening up the possibility of enhancing the thermoelectric efficiency of BNC materials. The present theoretical approach highlights how BN-ring doping can refine the thermoelectric properties of 2D graphene, offering a pathway for enhancing its suitability in practical thermoelectric applications.
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- 2024
42. JIST: Joint Image and Sequence Training for Sequential Visual Place Recognition
- Author
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Berton, Gabriele, Trivigno, Gabriele, Caputo, Barbara, and Masone, Carlo
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Visual Place Recognition aims at recognizing previously visited places by relying on visual clues, and it is used in robotics applications for SLAM and localization. Since typically a mobile robot has access to a continuous stream of frames, this task is naturally cast as a sequence-to-sequence localization problem. Nevertheless, obtaining sequences of labelled data is much more expensive than collecting isolated images, which can be done in an automated way with little supervision. As a mitigation to this problem, we propose a novel Joint Image and Sequence Training protocol (JIST) that leverages large uncurated sets of images through a multi-task learning framework. With JIST we also introduce SeqGeM, an aggregation layer that revisits the popular GeM pooling to produce a single robust and compact embedding from a sequence of single-frame embeddings. We show that our model is able to outperform previous state of the art while being faster, using 8 times smaller descriptors, having a lighter architecture and allowing to process sequences of various lengths. Code is available at https://github.com/ga1i13o/JIST
- Published
- 2024
43. Exploring Dielectric Properties in Models of Amorphous Boron Nitride
- Author
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Galvani, Thomas, Hamze, Ali K., Caputo, Laura, Kaya, Onurcan, Dubois, Simon, Colombo, Luigi, Nguyen, Viet-Hung, Shin, Yongwoo, Shin, Hyeon-Jin, Charlier, Jean-Christophe, and Roche, Stephan
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks - Abstract
We report a theoretical study of dielectric properties of models of amorphous Boron Nitride, using interatomic potentials generated by machine learning. We first perform first-principles simulations on small (about $100$ atoms in the periodic cell) sample sizes to explore the emergence of mid-gap states and its correlation with structural features. Next, by using a simplified tight-binding electronic model, we analyse the dielectric functions for complex three dimensional models (containing about $10.000$ atoms) embedding varying concentrations of ${\rm sp^{1}, sp^{2}}$ and ${\rm sp^3}$ bonds between B and N atoms. Within the limits of these methodologies, the resulting value of the zero-frequency dielectric constant is shown to be influenced by the population density of such mid-gap states and their localization characteristics. We observe nontrivial correlations between the structure-induced electronic fluctuations and the resulting dielectric constant values. Our findings are however just a first step in the quest of accessing fully accurate dielectric properties of as-grown amorphous BN of relevance for interconnect technologies and beyond., Comment: 27 pages, 10 figures
- Published
- 2024
44. EarthLoc: Astronaut Photography Localization by Indexing Earth from Space
- Author
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Berton, Gabriele, Stoken, Alex, Caputo, Barbara, and Masone, Carlo
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Astronaut photography, spanning six decades of human spaceflight, presents a unique Earth observations dataset with immense value for both scientific research and disaster response. Despite its significance, accurately localizing the geographical extent of these images, crucial for effective utilization, poses substantial challenges. Current manual localization efforts are time-consuming, motivating the need for automated solutions. We propose a novel approach - leveraging image retrieval - to address this challenge efficiently. We introduce innovative training techniques, including Year-Wise Data Augmentation and a Neutral-Aware Multi-Similarity Loss, which contribute to the development of a high-performance model, EarthLoc. We develop six evaluation datasets and perform a comprehensive benchmark comparing EarthLoc to existing methods, showcasing its superior efficiency and accuracy. Our approach marks a significant advancement in automating the localization of astronaut photography, which will help bridge a critical gap in Earth observations data. Code and datasets are available at https://github.com/gmberton/EarthLoc, Comment: CVPR 2024
- Published
- 2024
45. Signal crosstalk in a flip-chip quantum processor
- Author
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Kosen, Sandoko, Li, Hang-Xi, Rommel, Marcus, Rehammar, Robert, Caputo, Marco, Grönberg, Leif, Fernández-Pendás, Jorge, Kockum, Anton Frisk, Biznárová, Janka, Chen, Liangyu, Križan, Christian, Nylander, Andreas, Osman, Amr, Roudsari, Anita Fadavi, Shiri, Daryoush, Tancredi, Giovanna, Govenius, Joonas, and Bylander, Jonas
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum processors require a signal-delivery architecture with high addressability (low crosstalk) to ensure high performance already at the scale of dozens of qubits. Signal crosstalk causes inadvertent driving of quantum gates, which will adversely affect quantum-gate fidelities in scaled-up devices. Here, we demonstrate packaged flip-chip superconducting quantum processors with signal-crosstalk performance competitive with those reported in other platforms. For capacitively coupled qubit-drive lines, we find on-resonant crosstalk better than -27 dB (average -37 dB). For inductively coupled magnetic-flux-drive lines, we find less than 0.13 % direct-current flux crosstalk (average 0.05 %). These observed crosstalk levels are adequately small and indicate a decreasing trend with increasing distance, which is promising for further scaling up to larger numbers of qubits. We discuss the implication of our results for the design of a low-crosstalk, on-chip signal delivery architecture, including the influence of a shielding tunnel structure, potential sources of crosstalk, and estimation of crosstalk-induced qubit-gate error in scaled-up quantum processors., Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, includes appendices, updated discussion on source of xy crosstalk, flux stability, etc
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Seeing eye to eye: a modified Delphi method-based multidisciplinary expert consensus on the diagnosis and treatment of vernal keratoconjunctivitis
- Author
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Ghiglioni, Daniele Giovanni, Bruschi, Gaia, Chiappini, Elena, Consales, Alessandra, Allegri, Pia, Aragona, Pasquale, Bonini, Stefano, Caputo, Roberto, Cardinale, Fabio, Landi, Massimo, Leonardi, Andrea, Marseglia, Gian Luigi, Mori, Francesca, Nebbioso, Marcella, Nucci, Paolo, Osnaghi, Silvia, Procoli, Ugo, Villani, Edoardo, Zicari, Anna Maria, and Miraglia Del Giudice, Michele
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Elucidation of Organic Reaction Mechanisms Using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance: A review
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J., Carreras, M., Caputo, D., Colasurdo, M., Pila, D., Ruiz, and S., Laurella
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Understanding the impact of steam pretreatment severity on cellulose ultrastructure, recalcitrance, and hydrolyzability of Norway spruce
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Caputo, Fabio, Al-Rudainy, Basel, Naidjonoka, Polina, Wallberg, Ola, Olsson, Lisbeth, and Novy, Vera
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. [18F]FDG-PET/CT in adrenal lesions: diagnostic performance in different clinical settings
- Author
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Romanisio, Martina, Daffara, Tommaso, Pitino, Rosa, Ferrero, Alice, Pizzolitto, Francesca, Zavattaro, Marco, Biello, Federica, Gennari, Alessandra, Volpe, Alessandro, Sacchetti, Gian Mauro, Marzullo, Paolo, Aimaretti, Gianluca, Prodam, Flavia, and Caputo, Marina
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Gut mucosa alterations after kidney transplantation: a cross sectional study
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Joshi, Rashmi, Secondulfo, Carmine, Caputo, Alessandro, Zeppa, Pio, Iacuzzo, Candida, Apicella, Luca, Borriello, Margherita, Bilancio, Giancarlo, and Viggiano, Davide
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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