187,328 results on '"Carpenter, A"'
Search Results
2. A Living Rule: Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Illative Sense
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Carpenter, Anne
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- 2023
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3. The Secret Garden Art Novel ™ by Frances Hodgson Burnett (review)
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Carpenter, Angelica Shirley
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- 2024
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4. Impact that Transcends Proximity: Black College Students Traversing Multiple Pandemics
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Carpenter, Ashley J., Stephens-Peace, Kat J., Feraud-King, Patricia (Tita), Lewis, Taylor, Chinkondenji, Pempho, Ohiri, Kelechi, and Mwangi, Chrystal George
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- 2023
5. Passages: Crossings, Borders, Openings: In Conversation with Austrian Writers: The Austrian-American Podium Dialog ed. by Margarete Lamb-Faffelberger and Gabriele Petricek (review)
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Carpenter, Aaron
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- 2024
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6. Schoenberg's Atonal Music: Musical Idea, Basic Image, and Specters of Tonal Function by Jack Boss (review)
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Carpenter, Alexander
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- 2022
7. Not America's Nightmare: Hans Urs von Balthasar, Janelle Monáe, and Aesthetic Form
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Carpenter, Anne M.
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- 2022
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8. NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts Phase I Final Report -- A Lunar Long-Baseline UV/Optical Imaging Interferometer: Artemis-enabled Stellar Imager (AeSI)
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Carpenter, Kenneth G., Boyajian, Tabetha, Buzasi, Derek, Clark, Jim, Creech-Eakman, Michelle, Dean, Bruce, Elliott, Ashley, Foster, Julianne, Gong, Qian, Karovska, Margarita, Kim, David, Hulberg, Jon, Leisawitz, David, Maher, Mike, Morse, Jon, Mozurkewich, Dave, Peacock, Sarah, Petro, Noah, Rau, Gioia, Scowen, Paul, Seals, Len, Smith, Walter, Smuda, Max, Sitarski, Breann, Taylor, Buddy, van Belle, Gerard, and Wilkinson, Erik
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
This report presents the findings of a NIAC Phase I feasibility study for the Artemis-enabled Stellar Imager (AeSI), a proposed high-resolution, UV/Optical interferometer designed for deployment on the lunar surface. Its primary science goal is to image the surfaces and interiors of stars with unprecedented detail, revealing new details about their magnetic processes and dynamic evolution and enabling the creation of a truly predictive solar/stellar dynamo model. This capability will transform our understanding of stellar physics and has broad applicability across astrophysics, from resolving the cores of Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) to studying supernovae, planetary nebulae, and the late stages of stellar evolution. By leveraging the stable vacuum environment of the Moon and the infrastructure being established for the Artemis Program, AeSI presents a compelling case for a lunar-based interferometer. In this study, the AeSI Team, working with the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center's Integrated Design Center (IDC), has firmly established the feasibility of building and operating a reconfigurable, dispersed aperture telescope (i.e., an interferometer) on the lunar surface. The collaboration produced a credible Baseline design featuring 15 primary mirrors arranged in an elliptical array with a 1 km major axis, with the potential to expand to 30 mirrors and larger array sizes through staged deployments. Additionally, this study identified numerous opportunities for optimization and the necessary trade studies to refine the design further. These will be pursued in follow-up investigations, such as a NIAC Phase II study, to advance the concept toward implementation., Comment: 128 pages, 59 figures
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- 2025
9. NutriGen: Personalized Meal Plan Generator Leveraging Large Language Models to Enhance Dietary and Nutritional Adherence
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Khamesian, Saman, Arefeen, Asiful, Carpenter, Stephanie M., and Ghasemzadeh, Hassan
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Maintaining a balanced diet is essential for overall health, yet many individuals struggle with meal planning due to nutritional complexity, time constraints, and lack of dietary knowledge. Personalized food recommendations can help address these challenges by tailoring meal plans to individual preferences, habits, and dietary restrictions. However, existing dietary recommendation systems often lack adaptability, fail to consider real-world constraints such as food ingredient availability, and require extensive user input, making them impractical for sustainable and scalable daily use. To address these limitations, we introduce NutriGen, a framework based on large language models (LLM) designed to generate personalized meal plans that align with user-defined dietary preferences and constraints. By building a personalized nutrition database and leveraging prompt engineering, our approach enables LLMs to incorporate reliable nutritional references like the USDA nutrition database while maintaining flexibility and ease-of-use. We demonstrate that LLMs have strong potential in generating accurate and user-friendly food recommendations, addressing key limitations in existing dietary recommendation systems by providing structured, practical, and scalable meal plans. Our evaluation shows that Llama 3.1 8B and GPT-3.5 Turbo achieve the lowest percentage errors of 1.55\% and 3.68\%, respectively, producing meal plans that closely align with user-defined caloric targets while minimizing deviation and improving precision. Additionally, we compared the performance of DeepSeek V3 against several established models to evaluate its potential in personalized nutrition planning.
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- 2025
10. Exploring $\beta$ decay and $\beta$-delayed neutron emission in exotic $^{46,47}$Cl isotopes
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Tripathi, Vandana, Longfellow, B., Volya, A., Rubino, E., Benetti, C., Perello, J. F., Tabor, S. L., Liddick, S. N., Bender, P. C., Carpenter, M. P., Carroll, J. J., Chester, A., Chiara, C. J., Childers, K., Clark, B. R., Crider, B. P., Harke, J. T., Jain, R., Luitel, S., Mogannam, M. J., Ogunbeku, T. H., Richard, A. L., Saha, S., Shehu, O. A., Unz, R., Xiao, Y., and Zhu, Yiyi
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
In this paper, $\beta^-$ and $\beta$-delayed neutron decays of $^{46,47}$Cl are reported from an experiment carried out at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory using the Beta Counting System. The half-lives of both $^{46}$Cl and $^{47}$Cl were extracted. Based on the delayed $\gamma$-ray transitions observed, the level structure of $N = 28$ $^{46}$Ar was determined. Completely different sets of excited states above the first $2^+$ state in $^{46}$Ar were populated in the $^{46}$Cl $\beta0n$ and $^{47}$Cl $\beta1n$ decay channels. Two new $\gamma$-ray transitions in $^{47}$Ar were identified from the very weak $^{47}$Cl $\beta0n$ decay. Furthermore, $^{46}$Cl $\beta1n$ and $^{47}$Cl $\beta2n$ were also observed to yield different population patterns for levels in $^{45}$Ar, including states of different parities. The experimental results allow us to address some of the open questions related to the delayed neutron emission process. For isotopes with large neutron excess and high $Q_{\beta}$ values, delayed neutron emission remains an important decay mode and can be utilized as a powerful spectroscopic tool. Experimental results were compared with shell-model calculations using the FSU and $V_{MU}$ effective interactions.
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- 2025
11. TuMag: the tunable magnetograph for the Sunrise III mission
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Iniesta, J. C. del Toro, Suárez, D. Orozco, Álvarez-Herrero, A., Kilders, E. Sanchis, Pérez-Grande, I., Cobo, B. Ruiz, Rubio, L. R. Bellot, Jiménez, M. Balaguer, Jiménez, A. C. López, García, D. Álvarez, Más, J. L. Ramos, Carrascosa, J. P. Cobos, Labrousse, P., Mantas, A. J. Moreno, Morales-Fernández, J. M., del Moral, B. Aparicio, Gómez, A. Sánchez, Martínez, E. Bailón, Bailén, F. J., Strecker, H., Siu-Tapia, A. L., Guerrero, P. Santamarina, Vacas, A. Moreno, García, J. Atiénzar, Monteagudo, A. J. Dorantes, Bustamante, I., Tobaruela, A., Fernández-Medina, A., Peral, A. Núñez, Cebollero, M., Garranzo-García, D., Parejo, P. García, Melchor, A. Gonzalo, Rodríguez, A. Sánchez, Campos-Jara, A., Laguna, H., Silva-López, M., Rodríguez, J. Blanco, Blesa, J. L. Gasent, Martínez, P. Rodríguez, Ferreres, A., Palmer, D. Gilabert, Torralbo, I., Piqueras, J., González-Bárcena, D., Fernández, A. J., Expósito, D. Hernández, Mañá, E. Páez, Castelló, E. Magdaleno, Valido, M. Rodríguez, Korpi-Lagg, Andreas, Gandorfer, Achim, Solanki, Sami K., Berkefeld, Thomas, Bernasconi, Pietro, Feller, Alex, Katsukawa, Yukio, Riethmüller, Tino L., Smitha, H. N., Kubo, Masahito, Pillet, Valentín Martínez, Grauf, Bianca, Bell, Alexander, and Carpenter, Michael
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
One of the instruments aboard the Sunrise III mission, the Tunable Magnetograph (TuMag), is a tunable imaging spectropolarimeter in visible wavelengths. It is designed to probe the vector magnetic field and the line-of-sight velocity of the photosphere and the lower chromosphere. The quasi-simultaneous observation of two spectral lines provides excellent diagnostic measurements of the magnetic and dynamic coupling in these layers. The key technologies employed for TuMag are an LCVR-based polarimeter and a solid, LiNbO3 Fabry-P\'erot etalon as a spectrometer. However, it also incorporates several innovative features, such as home-made high-sensitivity scientific cameras and a double filter wheel. TuMag can sequentially observe any two out of the three spectral lines of Fe I at 525.02 and 525.06 nm and of Mg I at 517.3 nm. Laboratory measurements have demonstrated outstanding performance, including a wavefront root-mean-square error better than {\lambda}/13 for image quality, a full-width-at-half-maximum of 8.7 pm for the filtergraph transmission profile, and polarimetric efficiencies > 0.54. Here we report on the concept, design, calibration, and integration phases of the instrument, as well as on the data reduction pipeline., Comment: Contains 58 pages and 25 figures; to be published in Solar Physics Topical Collection "The Sunrise III Solar Observatory" (https://link.springer.com/collections/jegdciedig)
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- 2025
12. Sunrise III: Overview of Observatory and Instruments
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Korpi-Lagg, Andreas, Gandorfer, Achim, Solanki, Sami K., Iniesta, Jose Carlos del Toro, Katsukawa, Yukio, Bernasconi, Pietro, Berkefeld, Thomas, Feller, Alex, Riethmüller, Tino L., Álvarez-Herrero, Alberto, Kubo, Masahito, Pillet, Valentín Martínez, Smitha, H. N., Suárez, David Orozco, Grauf, Bianca, Carpenter, Michael, Bell, Alexander, Álvarez-Alonso, María-Teresa, García, Daniel Álvarez, del Moral, Beatriz Aparicio, Ayoub, Daniel, Bailén, Francisco Javier, Martínez, Eduardo Bailón, Jiménez, Maria Balaguer, Barthol, Peter, Laguna, Montserrat Bayon, Rubio, Luis R. Bellot, Bergmann, Melani, Rodríguez, Julian Blanco, Bochmann, Jan, Borrero, Juan Manuel, Campos-Jara, Antonio, Durán, Juan Sebastián Castellanos, Cebollero, María, Rodríguez, Aitor Conde, Deutsch, Werner, Eaton, Harry, Fernández-Medina, Ana Belen, Fernandez-Rico, German, Ferreres, Agustin, García, Andrés, Alarcia, Ramón María García, Parejo, Pilar García, Garranzo-García, Daniel, Blesa, José Luis Gasent, Gerber, Karin, Germerott, Dietmar, Palmer, David Gilabert, Gizon, Laurent, Sánchez-Tirado, Miguel Angel Gómez, Gonzalez, David, Melchor, Alejandro Gonzalo, Goodyear, Sam, Hara, Hirohisa, Harnes, Edvarda, Heerlein, Klaus, Heidecke, Frank, Heinrichs, Jan, Expósito, David Hernández, Hirzberger, Johann, Hoelken, Johannes, Hyun, Sangwon, Iglesias, Francisco A., Ishikawa, Ryohtaroh T., Jeon, Minwoo, Kawabata, Yusuke, Kolleck, Martin, Laguna, Hugo, Lomas, Julian, Jiménez, Antonio C. López, Manzano, Paula, Matsumoto, Takuma, Turrado, David Mayo, Meierdierks, Thimo, Meining, Stefan, Monecke, Markus, Morales-Fernández, José Miguel, Mantas, Antonio Jesús Moreno, Vacas, Alejandro Moreno, Müller, Marc Ferenc, Müller, Reinhard, Naito, Yoshihiro, Nakai, Eiji, Peral, Armonía Núñez, Oba, Takayoshi, Palo, Geoffrey, Pérez-Grande, Isabel, Carreño, Javier Piqueras, Preis, Tobias, Przybylski, Damien, Noda, Carlos Quintero, Ramanath, Sandeep, Más, Jose Luis Ramos, Raouafi, Nour, Rivas-Martínez, María-Jesús, Martínez, Pedro Rodríguez, Valido, Manuel Rodríguez, Cobo, Basilio Ruiz, Rodríguez, Antonio Sánchez, Gómez, Antonio Sánchez, Kilders, Esteban Sanchis, Sant, Kamal, Guerrero, Pablo Santamarina, Schulze, Erich, Shimizu, Toshifumi, Silva-López, Manuel, Siu-Tapia, Azaymi L., Sonner, Thomas, Staub, Jan, Strecker, Hanna, Tobaruela, Angel, Torralbo, Ignacio, Tritschler, Alexandra, Tsuzuki, Toshihiro, Uraguchi, Fumihiro, Volkmer, Reiner, Vourlidas, Angelos, Vukadinović, Dušan, Werner, Stephan, and Zerr, Andreas
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In July 2024, Sunrise completed its third successful science flight. The Sunrise III observatory had been upgraded significantly after the two previous successful flights in 2009 and 2013. Three completely new instruments focus on the small-scale physical processes and their complex interaction from the deepest observable layers in the photosphere up to chromospheric heights. Previously poorly explored spectral regions and lines are exploited to paint a three-dimensional picture of the solar atmosphere with unprecedented completeness and level of detail. The full polarimetric information is captured by all three instruments to reveal the interaction between the magnetic fields and the hydrodynamic processes. Two slit-based spectropolarimeters, the Sunrise UV Spectropolarimeter and Imager (SUSI) and the Sunrise Chromospheric Infrared spectro-Polarimeter (SCIP), focus on the near-ultraviolet and the near-infrared regions respectively, and the imaging spectropolarimeter Tunable Magnetograph (TuMag) simultaneously obtains maps of the full field-of-view of $46 \times 46$ Mm$^2$ in the photosphere and the chromosphere in the visible. The instruments are operated in an orchestrated mode, benefiting from a new Image Stabilization and Light Distribution unit (ISLiD), with the Correlating Wavefront Sensor (CWS) providing the autofocus control and an image stability with a root-mean-square value smaller than 0.005''. A new gondola was constructed to significantly improve the telescope pointing stability, required to achieve uninterrupted observations over many hours. Sunrise III was launched successfully on July 10, 2024, from the Esrange Space Center near Kiruna (Sweden). It reached the landing site between the Mackenzie River and the Great Bear Lake in Canada after a flight duration of 6.5 days. In this paper, we give an overview of the Sunrise III observatory and its instruments., Comment: 67 pages, 25 figures; to be published in Solar Physics Topical Collection "The Sunrise III Solar Observatory" (https://link.springer.com/collections/jegdciedig)
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- 2025
13. The No-Underrun Sampler: A Locally-Adaptive, Gradient-Free MCMC Method
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Bou-Rabee, Nawaf, Carpenter, Bob, Liu, Sifan, and Oberdörster, Stefan
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Mathematics - Statistics Theory ,Mathematics - Probability ,Statistics - Methodology ,60J05, 65C05 - Abstract
In this work, we introduce the No-Underrun Sampler (NURS), a locally-adaptive, gradient-free Markov chain Monte Carlo method that blends ideas from Hit-and-Run and the No-U-Turn Sampler. NURS dynamically adapts to the local scale of the target distribution without requiring gradient evaluations, making it especially suitable for applications where gradients are unavailable or costly. We establish key theoretical properties, including reversibility, formal connections to Hit-and-Run and Random Walk Metropolis, Wasserstein contraction comparable to Hit-and-Run in Gaussian targets, and bounds on the total variation distance between the transition kernels of Hit-and-Run and NURS. Empirical experiments, supported by theoretical insights, illustrate the ability of NURS to sample from Neal's funnel, a challenging multi-scale distribution from Bayesian hierarchical inference., Comment: 37 pages
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- 2025
14. Self-configuring high-speed multi-plane light conversion
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Rocha, José C. A., Būtaitė, Unė G., Carpenter, Joel, and Phillips, David B.
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Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Multi-plane light converters (MPLCs) - also known as linear diffractive neural networks - are an emerging optical technology, capable of converting an orthogonal set of optical fields into any other orthogonal set via a unitary transformation. MPLC design is a non-linear problem typically solved by optimising a digital model of the optical system. However, inherently high levels of design complexity mean that even a minor mismatch between this digital model and the physically realised MPLC leads to a severe reduction in real-world performance. Here we address this challenge by creating a self-configuring free-space MPLC. Despite the large number of parameters to be optimised (typically tens of thousands or more), our proof-of-principle device converges in minutes using a method in which light only needs to be transmitted in one direction through the MPLC. Two innovations make this possible. Firstly, we devise an in-situ optimisation algorithm combining wavefront shaping with the principles of wavefront matching that would conventionally be used to inverse-design MPLCs offline in simulation. Secondly, we introduce a new MPLC platform incorporating a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) phase-only light modulator - allowing rapid MPLC switching at up to kiloHertz rates. Our scheme automatically accounts for the physical characteristics of all system components and absorbs any unknown misalignments and aberrations into the final design. We demonstrate self-configured MPLCs capable of mapping random orthogonal speckle input fields to well-defined Laguerre-Gaussian and Hermite-Gaussian output modes, as well as universal mode sorters. Our work paves the way towards large-scale ultra-high-fidelity fast-switching MPLCs and diffractive neural networks, which promises to unlock new applications in areas ranging from optical communications to optical computing and imaging., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 1 table
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- 2025
15. High dimensional spatiotemporal toroidal light beams with arbitrary polarization and orientation through a multimode fiber
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Komonen, Andrew V., Fontaine, Nicolas K., Morote, Marcos Maestre, Plöschner, Martin, Neilson, David T., Carpenter, Joel, and Mounaix, Mickael
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
We experimentally demonstrate high-dimensional, polarization-resolved, 3D spatiotemporal toroidal beams delivered through a multimode optical fiber (MMF). Our approach leverages advanced spectral and spatial shaping techniques, combined with full polarization control, to achieve precise manipulation of the amplitude, phase, and polarization of toroidal beams. These beams feature highly customizable 3D geometries, allowing independent control of their aspect ratio and orientation. We demonstrate the ability to deliver complex toroidal beams directly at the multimode fiber output, enabling beam rotations about any 3D spatiotemporal axis and the generation of beams with specific orbital angular momentum orientations. Our work establishes a platform for creating and delivering arbitrary toroidal beams, offering new tools for exploring light-matter interactions and pushing the boundaries of ultrafast photonics science and technology., Comment: 4 figs
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- 2025
16. REsolved ALMA and SMA Observations of Nearby Stars (REASONS): A population of 74 resolved planetesimal belts at millimetre wavelengths
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Matrà, L., Marino, S., Wilner, D. J., Kennedy, G. M., Booth, M., Krivov, A. V., Williams, J. P., Hughes, A. M., del Burgo, C., Carpenter, J., Davies, C. L., Ertel, S., Kral, Q., Lestrade, J. -F., Marshall, J. P., Milli, J., Öberg, K. I., Pawellek, N., Sepulveda, A. G., Wyatt, M. C., Matthews, B. C., and MacGregor, M.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Planetesimal belts are ubiquitous around nearby stars, and their spatial properties hold crucial information for planetesimal and planet formation models. We present resolved dust observations of 74 planetary systems as part of the REsolved ALMA and SMA Observations of Nearby Stars (REASONS) survey and archival reanalysis. We uniformly modelled interferometric visibilities for the entire sample to obtain the basic spatial properties of each belt, and combined these with constraints from multi-wavelength photometry. We report key findings from a first exploration of this legacy dataset: (1) Belt dust masses are depleted over time in a radially dependent way, with dust being depleted faster in smaller belts, as predicted by collisional evolution. (2) Most belts are broad discs rather than narrow rings, with much broader fractional widths than rings in protoplanetary discs. We link broad belts to either unresolved substructure or broad planetesimal discs produced if protoplanetary rings migrate. (3) The vertical aspect ratios (h = H/R) of 24 belts indicate orbital inclinations of 1-20 degrees, implying relative particle velocities of 0.1-4 km/s, and no clear evolution of heights with system age. This could be explained by early stirring within the belt by large bodies (with sizes of at least 140 km to the size of the Moon), by inheritance of inclinations from the protoplanetary disc stage, or by a diversity in evolutionary pathways and gravitational stirring mechanisms. We release the REASONS legacy multidimensional sample of millimetre-resolved belts to the community as a valuable tool for follow-up multi-wavelength observations and population modelling studies., Comment: Published in A&A, 693, A151. 27 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables
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- 2025
17. Implementing photonic-crystal resonator frequency combs in a photonics foundry
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Liu, Haixin, Dickson, Ivan, Antohe, Alin, Carpenter, Lewis G., Zang, Jizhao, Carollo, Alexa R., Dan, Atasi, Black, Jennifer A., and Papp, Scott B.
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Physics - Optics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Pattern Formation and Solitons ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
We explore an AIM Photonics silicon-nitride platform to fabricate photonic-crystal resonators for generating optical parametric oscillators (OPO) and soliton microcombs. Our approach leverages the scalability and fine feature size of silicon-nitride processing on large-scale silicon wafers to achieve low-loss, high-Q microresonators, functionalized by nano-scale photonic-crystal structures. We demonstrate intrinsic microresonator quality factor up to 1.2*10^7 with complete foundry fabrication on 300 mm silicon, a 700 nm thick silicon-nitride device layer, and inclusion of complex nanophotonics. These features enable a host of nonlinear nanophotonics sources on the platform, including OPOs, microcombs, parametric amplifiers, squeezed-light generators, and single-photon sources. By fine-tuning the photonic-crystal design parameters, we achieve broad tunability in the frequency of the OPO output, spanning a significant portion of the near-infrared. Additionally, we observe the formation of soliton frequency combs, enabled by the precise dispersion engineering of the microresonators. These results highlight the potential of widely accessible, photolithographically patterned, silicon-nitride photonics to enable wide access to and complex integration of frequency-comb sources, with applications in spectroscopy, metrology, and communications.
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- 2025
18. Moonlighting: Beethoven and Literary Modernism by Nathan Waddell (review)
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Carpenter, Alexander
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- 2021
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19. A de Grummond Primer: Highlights of the Children’s Literature Collection ed. by Carolyn J. Brown, Ellen Hunter Ruffin and Eric Tribunella (review)
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Carpenter, Angelica Shirley
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Kukuipahu: A Unique Hawaiian Monumental Structure Utilizing Cut-and-Dressed Stone Masonry
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Kirch, Patrick V., Carpenter, Alan, and Ruggles, Clive
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- 2020
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21. Fostering Tomorrow's Leaders in Gifted Education
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Ashley Y. Carpenter and Dana L. Lockhart
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William & Mary's Center for Gifted Education's mission is to foster talent development of high-ability individuals over their lifespan. This article highlights the Center for Gifted Education's programs and offerings to develop leaders in the field of gifted education and talent development. This article details professional learning programs for educators that work with gifted and talented students including conferences, custom professional development, the Online Academy, and grant projects. The graduate programs, including an Online Certificate in Gifted Education and two doctoral programs in Gifted Administration, provide the knowledge and skills for leaders in the field.
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Swift in Print: Published Texts in Dublin and London, 1691–1765 by Valerie Rumbold (review)
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Carpenter, Andrew
- Published
- 2021
23. [Cream of the crop - Dairy Industry Awards regional winners 2023]
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Carpenter, Amber
- Published
- 2023
24. Gender Minority Status and Family Inequality in the United States
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CARPENTER, CHRISTOPHER S., LEE, MAXINE J., and NETTUNO, LAURA
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- 2025
25. RNA-Puzzles Round V: blind predictions of 23 RNA structures
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Bu, Fan, Adam, Yagoub, Adamiak, Ryszard W, Antczak, Maciej, de Aquino, Belisa Rebeca H, Badepally, Nagendar Goud, Batey, Robert T, Baulin, Eugene F, Boinski, Pawel, Boniecki, Michal J, Bujnicki, Janusz M, Carpenter, Kristy A, Chacon, Jose, Chen, Shi-Jie, Chiu, Wah, Cordero, Pablo, Das, Naba Krishna, Das, Rhiju, Dawson, Wayne K, DiMaio, Frank, Ding, Feng, Dock-Bregeon, Anne-Catherine, Dokholyan, Nikolay V, Dror, Ron O, Dunin-Horkawicz, Stanisław, Eismann, Stephan, Ennifar, Eric, Esmaeeli, Reza, Farsani, Masoud Amiri, Ferré-D’Amaré, Adrian R, Geniesse, Caleb, Ghanim, George E, Guzman, Horacio V, Hood, Iris V, Huang, Lin, Jain, Dharm Skandh, Jaryani, Farhang, Jin, Lei, Joshi, Astha, Karelina, Masha, Kieft, Jeffrey S, Kladwang, Wipapat, Kmiecik, Sebastian, Koirala, Deepak, Kollmann, Markus, Kretsch, Rachael C, Kurciński, Mateusz, Li, Jun, Li, Shuang, Magnus, Marcin, Masquida, BenoÎt, Moafinejad, S Naeim, Mondal, Arup, Mukherjee, Sunandan, Nguyen, Thi Hoang Duong, Nikolaev, Grigory, Nithin, Chandran, Nye, Grace, Pandaranadar Jeyeram, Iswarya PN, Perez, Alberto, Pham, Phillip, Piccirilli, Joseph A, Pilla, Smita Priyadarshini, Pluta, Radosław, Poblete, Simón, Ponce-Salvatierra, Almudena, Popenda, Mariusz, Popenda, Lukasz, Pucci, Fabrizio, Rangan, Ramya, Ray, Angana, Ren, Aiming, Sarzynska, Joanna, Sha, Congzhou Mike, Stefaniak, Filip, Su, Zhaoming, Suddala, Krishna C, Szachniuk, Marta, Townshend, Raphael, Trachman, Robert J, Wang, Jian, Wang, Wenkai, Watkins, Andrew, Wirecki, Tomasz K, Xiao, Yi, Xiong, Peng, Xiong, Yiduo, Yang, Jianyi, Yesselman, Joseph David, Zhang, Jinwei, Zhang, Yi, Zhang, Zhenzhen, Zhou, Yuanzhe, Zok, Tomasz, Zhang, Dong, Zhang, Sicheng, Żyła, Adriana, Westhof, Eric, and Miao, Zhichao
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Nucleic Acid Conformation ,RNA ,Models ,Molecular ,Computational Biology ,RNA ,Catalytic ,Software ,Technology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Developmental Biology ,Biological sciences - Abstract
RNA-Puzzles is a collective endeavor dedicated to the advancement and improvement of RNA three-dimensional structure prediction. With agreement from structural biologists, RNA structures are predicted by modeling groups before publication of the experimental structures. We report a large-scale set of predictions by 18 groups for 23 RNA-Puzzles: 4 RNA elements, 2 Aptamers, 4 Viral elements, 5 Ribozymes and 8 Riboswitches. We describe automatic assessment protocols for comparisons between prediction and experiment. Our analyses reveal some critical steps to be overcome to achieve good accuracy in modeling RNA structures: identification of helix-forming pairs and of non-Watson-Crick modules, correct coaxial stacking between helices and avoidance of entanglements. Three of the top four modeling groups in this round also ranked among the top four in the CASP15 contest.
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- 2025
26. Proteomic profiling of the local and systemic immune response to pediatric respiratory viral infections.
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Lydon, Emily, Osborne, Christina, Wagner, Brandie, Ambroggio, Lilliam, Harris, J, Reeder, Ron, Carpenter, Todd, Maddux, Aline, Leroue, Matthew, Yehya, Nadir, Derisi, Joseph, Hall, Mark, Zuppa, Athena, Carcillo, Joseph, Meert, Kathleen, Sapru, Anil, Pollack, Murray, McQuillen, Patrick, Notterman, Daniel, Langelier, Charles, and Mourani, Peter
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LRTI ,co-infection ,host response ,pneumonia ,proteomics ,respiratory viruses ,viral pneumonia ,Humans ,Male ,Proteomics ,Respiratory Tract Infections ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Infant ,Child ,Virus Diseases ,Proteome ,Viral Load ,Critical Illness ,Biomarkers ,Coinfection - Abstract
Viral lower respiratory tract infection (vLRTI) is a leading cause of hospitalization and death in children worldwide. Despite this, no studies have employed proteomics to characterize host immune responses to severe pediatric vLRTI in both the lower airway and systemic circulation. To address this gap, gain insights into vLRTI pathophysiology, and test a novel diagnostic approach, we assayed 1,305 proteins in tracheal aspirate (TA) and plasma from 62 critically ill children using SomaScan. We performed differential expression (DE) and pathway analyses comparing vLRTI (n = 40) to controls with non-infectious acute respiratory failure (n = 22), developed a diagnostic classifier using LASSO regression, and analyzed matched TA and plasma samples. We further investigated the impact of viral load and bacterial coinfection on the proteome. The TA signature of vLRTI was characterized by 200 DE proteins (Padj
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- 2025
27. Testing a method for developing facility-level greenhouse gas emissions intensities of U.S. traded goods
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Rao, Prakash, Hendrickson, Thomas, Wachs, Elizabeth, Upasani, Shubhankar, and Carpenter, Alberta
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carbon border adjustments ,embedded emissions ,Embodied emissions ,facility-level emissions ,U.S. traded good - Abstract
This paper tests a methodology proposed by a U.S. government inter-agency working group for calculating a facility-level U.S. national average greenhouse gas emissions intensity for a selected traded good. The testing of the method relies on publicly available data from the U.S. government supplemented by for purchase data. To draw practical insights, a pilot product is selected for this initial test (cold-rolled stainless steel with width less than 600mm). Lessons learned based on the results of testing the method with this product include: 1) the level of product specificity chosen should consider the emissions and production data availability for the product, particularly with respect to the product’s supply chain, production pathways, and any co-products from its production, and 2) more granular, nonpublic micro-data collected by the U.S. government include additional relevant details that may address gaps in publicly available data and hold promise towards successfully applying the U.S. government proposed method.This paper is intended to provide a preliminary assessment of data availability, potential pathways for calculating scope 1 and scope 2 emissions from industrial facilities, and related challenges and potential remedies. As such, it draws its findings based on testing one product. Extension of any findings from this paper should be corroborated with results from testingadditional products. Findings reported in this paper are preliminary and meant to inform potential future work to assess data needs and availability for determining facility-level greenhouse gas emissions intensity of a traded good. This paper is the first of an envisionedseries reporting on methods for bench-marking facility-level greenhouse gas emissions intensities of U.S. products.
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- 2025
28. Evidence for microbially-mediated tradeoffs between growth and defense throughout coral evolution.
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Epstein, Hannah, Brown, Tanya, Akinrinade, Ayọmikun, McMinds, Ryan, Pollock, F, Sonett, Dylan, Smith, Styles, Bourne, David, Carpenter, Carolina, Knight, Rob, Willis, Bette, Medina, Mónica, Lamb, Joleah, Thurber, Rebecca, and Zaneveld, Jesse
- Subjects
Coral disease ,Coral microbiome ,Coral reefs ,Evolution ,Evolutionary tradeoffs - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evolutionary tradeoffs between life-history strategies are important in animal evolution. Because microbes can influence multiple aspects of host physiology, including growth rate and susceptibility to disease or stress, changes in animal-microbial symbioses have the potential to mediate life-history tradeoffs. Scleractinian corals provide a biodiverse, data-rich, and ecologically-relevant host system to explore this idea. RESULTS: Using a comparative approach, we tested if coral microbiomes correlate with disease susceptibility across 425 million years of coral evolution by conducting a cross-species coral microbiome survey (the Global Coral Microbiome Project) and combining the results with long-term global disease prevalence and coral trait data. Interpreting these data in their phylogenetic context, we show that microbial dominance predicts disease susceptibility, and traced this dominance-disease association to a single putatively beneficial symbiont genus, Endozoicomonas. Endozoicomonas relative abundance in coral tissue explained 30% of variation in disease susceptibility and 60% of variation in microbiome dominance across 40 coral genera, while also correlating strongly with high growth rates. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate that the evolution of Endozoicomonas symbiosis in corals correlates with both disease prevalence and growth rate, and suggest a mediating role. Exploration of the mechanistic basis for these findings will be important for our understanding of how microbial symbioses influence animal life-history tradeoffs.
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- 2025
29. Condylar fracture location is correlated to exercise history in Thoroughbred racehorses.
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Bergstrom, Thomas, Spriet, Mathieu, Carpenter, Ryan, Jacques, Kevin, and Stover, Susan
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disease ,horse ,joint ,microfracture ,osteochondral ,palmar ,remodelling ,Animals ,Horses ,Physical Conditioning ,Animal ,Retrospective Studies ,Male ,Female ,Horse Diseases ,Mandibular Fractures ,Sports ,Fractures ,Bone - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Condylar fractures are a major cause of morbidity and mortality in Thoroughbred racehorses. Condylar fractures have a variety of fracture configurations that suggest there may be differences in aetiopathogenesis. OBJECTIVE: To determine if exercise history differs with condylar fracture location in a population of Thoroughbred racehorses. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective analysis of clinical and exercise data. METHODS: Exercise history of Thoroughbred racehorses that had condylar fracture repair between 1 January 2018 and 28 February 2021 was compared between racehorses that had fractures located radiographically either within the parasagittal groove (PSG) or abaxial to the PSG (non-PSG). Age, sex, and last event (race, timed work) matched control groups were compared between the PSG and non-PSG groups. Additionally, exercise history variables of both groups were each compared with a group-specific control population, each consisting of three control racehorses of equivalent age and sex matched to each affected racehorse by last event (race or official timed work) before fracture. RESULTS: Eighty-two horses with 84 fractures (45 PSG, 39 non-PSG) met inclusion criteria. Age was not different between groups (PSG: 3.4 ± 1.3 years [mean ± SD], non-PSG: 3.7 ± 1.3, p = 0.3). Number of races (PSG: 5.3 ± 7.1, non-PSG: 11.4 ± 8.9, p
- Published
- 2025
30. Literarische Fürsprache bei Franz Kafka: Rhetorik und Poetik by Doreen Densky (review)
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Carpenter, Aaron
- Published
- 2021
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31. The quark-lepton portal beyond lepto-quarks
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Murphy, Linda M. Carpenter Katherine Schwind Taylor
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We explore models where single new exotic states interact with the Standard Model through an asymmetric Standard Model portal with couplings to at least one quark and one lepton. We write down all effective operators up to dimension six where such interactions couple the SM to spin 0 and spin 1/2 particles. We identify the exotic states accessible through the portal and find the interactions couple the SM to new particles with exotic combinations of baryon and lepton number, and particles with unusual SM charge, including states in higher dimensional representations of both SU(3) and SU(2), and states of higher electric charge. We discuss the phenomenology of these interactions including novel particle decays, and we classify some of the collider production modes for exotic states at LHC, LHeC and the muon collider., Comment: 30 pages 10 figures 25 tables
- Published
- 2024
32. Strong-Weak Bi-Adjoints, Gluon-W resonances, and new asymmetric LHC production processes
- Author
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Carpenter, Linda M. and Schwind, Katherine
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We study a novel production and decay mechanism for a bi-adjoint spin zero particle in the (8,3,0) representation of the Standard Model gauge groups. This work is part of a series studying new production processes for exotic particles in higher representations of Standard Model color and weak charge. We study a new dimension 5 effective operator model which couples an exotic bi-adjoint scalar field to the SU(3) and SU(2) field strength tensors. We explore the W-gluon resonant decay of the charged component of this new exotic field. We discuss LHC production modes of the charged and neutral bi-adjoint state and find a new single production mode for the charged state that is the dominant LHC production mode for TeV-scale masses. We introduce a new HL-LHC search in this asymmetric W-gluon fusion process in which a single bi-adjoint is produced in association with a hard forward quark jet. We have 5 sigma discovery potential for bi-adjoint masses up to 3 TeV for 10 TeV scalar effective operator cutoffs. We also find 2 sigma sensitivity of HL-LHC for bi-adjoint masses up to 4 TeV and effective cut-offs in the 15 TeV range for the full 3 inverse atto-barn data set., Comment: 19 pages 13 figures 3 tables
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- 2024
33. Meaurement of spin vs. TKE of $^{144}$Ba produced in spontaneous fission of $^{252}$Cf
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Giha, N. P., Marin, S., Tolstukhin, I. A., Oberling, M. B., Knaack, R. A., Mueller-Gatermann, C., Korichi, A., Bhatt, K., Carpenter, M. P., Fougères, C., Karayonchev, V., Kay, B. P., Lauritsen, T., Seweryniak, D., Watwood, N., Duke, D. L., Mosby, S., Montoya, K. B., Connolly, D. S., Loveland, W., Hernandez, I. E., Clarke, S. D., Pozzi, S. A., and Tovesson, F.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We measure the average spin of $^{144}$Ba, a common fragment produced in $^{252}$Cf(sf), as a function of the total kinetic energy (TKE). We combined for the first time a twin Frisch-gridded ionization chamber with a world-class $\gamma$-ray spectrometer that was designed to measure high-multiplicity $\gamma$-ray events, Gammasphere. The chamber, loaded with a $^{252}$Cf(sf) source, provides a fission trigger, the TKE of the fragments, the approximate fragment masses, and the polar angle of the fission axis. Gammasphere provides the total $\gamma$-ray yield, fragment identification through the tagging of decay $\gamma$ rays, and the feeding of rotational bands in the fragments. We determine the dependence of the average spin of $^{144}$Ba on the fragments' TKE by correlating the fragment properties with the distribution of discrete levels that are fed. We find that the average spin only changes by about $0.5$ $\hbar$ across the TKE range of 158-203 MeV. The virtual independence of the spin on TKE suggests that spin is not solely generated through the statistical excitation of rotational modes, and more complex mechanisms are required., Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Red, hot, and very metal poor: extreme properties of a massive accreting black hole in the first 500 Myr
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Tripodi, Roberta, Martis, Nicholas, Markov, Vladan, Bradač, Maruša, Di Mascia, Fabio, Cammelli, Vieri, D'Eugenio, Francesco, Willott, Chris, Curti, Mirko, Bhatt, Maulik, Gallerani, Simona, Rihtaršič, Gregor, Singh, Jasbir, Gaspar, Gaia, Harshan, Anishya, Judež, Jon, Merida, Rosa M., Desprez, Guillaume, Sawicki, Marcin, Goovaerts, Ilias, Muzzin, Adam, Noirot, Gaël, Sarrouh, Ghassan T. E., Abraham, Roberto, Asada, Yoshihisa, Brammer, Gabriel, Carpenter, Vicente Estrada, Felicioni, Giordano, Fujimoto, Seiji, Iyer, Kartheik, Mowla, Lamiya, and Strait, Victoria
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has recently discovered a new population of objects at high redshift referred to as `Little Red Dots' (LRDs). Their nature currently remains elusive, despite their surprisingly high inferred number densities. This emerging population of red point-like sources is reshaping our view of the early Universe and may shed light on the formation of high-redshift supermassive black holes. Here we present a spectroscopically confirmed LRD CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 at $z_{\rm spec}=8.6319\pm 0.0005$ hosting an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN), using JWST data. This source shows the typical spectral shape of an LRD (blue UV and red optical continuum, unresolved in JWST imaging), along with broad H$\beta$ line emission, detection of high-ionization emission lines (CIV, NIV]) and very high electron temperature indicative of the presence of AGN. This is also combined with a very low metallicity ($Z<0.1 Z_\odot$). The presence of all these diverse features in one source makes CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 unique. We show that the inferred black hole mass of CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 ($M_{\rm BH}=1.0^{+0.6}_{-0.4}\times 10^{8}\rm ~M_\odot$) strongly challenges current standard theoretical models and simulations of black hole formation, and forces us to adopt `ad hoc' prescriptions. Indeed if massive seeds, or light seeds with super-Eddington accretion, are considered, the observed BH mass of CANUCS-LRD-z8.6 at $z=8.6$ can be reproduced. Moreover, the black hole is over-massive compared to its host, relative to the local $M_{\rm BH}-M_*$ relations, pointing towards an earlier and faster evolution of the black hole compared to its host galaxy., Comment: 4 main figures; 8 supplementary figures; 5 supplementary tables
- Published
- 2024
35. Data-Driven Gradient Optimization for Field Emission Management in a Superconducting Radio-Frequency Linac
- Author
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Goldenberg, Steven, Ahammed, Kawser, Carpenter, Adam, Li, Jiang, Suleiman, Riad, and Tennant, Chris
- Subjects
Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Field emission can cause significant problems in superconducting radio-frequency linear accelerators (linacs). When cavity gradients are pushed higher, radiation levels within the linacs may rise exponentially, causing degradation of many nearby systems. This research aims to utilize machine learning with uncertainty quantification to predict radiation levels at multiple locations throughout the linacs and ultimately optimize cavity gradients to reduce field emission induced radiation while maintaining the total linac energy gain necessary for the experimental physics program. The optimized solutions show over 40% reductions for both neutron and gamma radiation from the standard operational settings., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 10 tables
- Published
- 2024
36. Harnessing the Power of Gradient-Based Simulations for Multi-Objective Optimization in Particle Accelerators
- Author
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Rajput, Kishansingh, Schram, Malachi, Edelen, Auralee, Colen, Jonathan, Kasparian, Armen, Roussel, Ryan, Carpenter, Adam, Zhang, He, and Benesch, Jay
- Subjects
Physics - Accelerator Physics ,Computer Science - Neural and Evolutionary Computing - Abstract
Particle accelerator operation requires simultaneous optimization of multiple objectives. Multi-Objective Optimization (MOO) is particularly challenging due to trade-offs between the objectives. Evolutionary algorithms, such as genetic algorithm (GA), have been leveraged for many optimization problems, however, they do not apply to complex control problems by design. This paper demonstrates the power of differentiability for solving MOO problems using a Deep Differentiable Reinforcement Learning (DDRL) algorithm in particle accelerators. We compare DDRL algorithm with Model Free Reinforcement Learning (MFRL), GA and Bayesian Optimization (BO) for simultaneous optimization of heat load and trip rates in the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF). The underlying problem enforces strict constraints on both individual states and actions as well as cumulative (global) constraint for energy requirements of the beam. A physics-based surrogate model based on real data is developed. This surrogate model is differentiable and allows back-propagation of gradients. The results are evaluated in the form of a Pareto-front for two objectives. We show that the DDRL outperforms MFRL, BO, and GA on high dimensional problems.
- Published
- 2024
37. Audience Reach of Scientific Data Visualizations in Planetarium-Screened Films
- Author
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Borkiewicz, Kalina, Jensen, Eric, Miao, Yiwen, Levy, Stuart, Naiman, J. P., Carpenter, Jeff, and Isaacs, Katherine E.
- Subjects
Physics - Popular Physics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Graphics ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Quantifying the global reach of planetarium dome shows presents significant challenges due to the lack of standardized viewership tracking mechanisms across diverse planetarium venues. We present an analysis of the global impact of dome shows, presenting data regarding four documentary films from a single visualization lab. Specifically, we designed and administered a viewership survey of four long-running shows that contained cinematic scientific visualizations. Reported survey data shows that between 1.2 - 2.6 million people have viewed these four films across the 68 responding planetariums (mean: 1.9 million). When we include estimates and extrapolate for the 315 planetariums that licensed these shows, we arrive at an estimate of 16.5 - 24.1 million people having seen these films (mean: 20.3 million).
- Published
- 2024
38. Extending the ALMA Census of Circumstellar Disks in the Upper Scorpius OB Association
- Author
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Carpenter, John M., Esplin, Taran L., Luhman, Kevin L., Mamajek, Eric E., and Andrews, Sean M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present ALMA Band 7 continuum (340 GHz) and CO J=3-2 observations for an extended sample of disks in the Upper Scorpius OB Association (Upper Sco, age ~ 10 Myr). The targets were selected from previous studies that identified new members of Upper Sco using photometry and astrometry from the Gaia mission, and the presence of a disk has been inferred from mid-infrared excess emission. The new ALMA observations are combined with previous ALMA data to define a sample of 202 Upper Sco members with disks that have spectral types between G0 and M5.5. Among these sources, 120 (59%) have been detected in the continuum with a signal-to-noise ratio >= 3, and 83 (41%) have been detected in CO J=3-2. Both the continuum and CO J=3-2 fluxes show a strong correlation with the spectral type of the central star and the type of disk inferred from the shape of the infrared spectral energy distribution, where disks around earlier type stars and full disks are more luminous than disks around later type stars and evolved and debris disks. The median dust continuum luminosity is lower for disks in Upper Sco than in younger regions, as found in previous studies, where the differences are more pronounced in later spectral types (M4-M5) than in earlier spectral types., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 53 pages, 13 figures
- Published
- 2024
39. MultiVENT 2.0: A Massive Multilingual Benchmark for Event-Centric Video Retrieval
- Author
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Kriz, Reno, Sanders, Kate, Etter, David, Murray, Kenton, Carpenter, Cameron, Van Ochten, Kelly, Recknor, Hannah, Guallar-Blasco, Jimena, Martin, Alexander, Colaianni, Ronald, King, Nolan, Yang, Eugene, and Van Durme, Benjamin
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Efficiently retrieving and synthesizing information from large-scale multimodal collections has become a critical challenge. However, existing video retrieval datasets suffer from scope limitations, primarily focusing on matching descriptive but vague queries with small collections of professionally edited, English-centric videos. To address this gap, we introduce $\textbf{MultiVENT 2.0}$, a large-scale, multilingual event-centric video retrieval benchmark featuring a collection of more than 218,000 news videos and 3,906 queries targeting specific world events. These queries specifically target information found in the visual content, audio, embedded text, and text metadata of the videos, requiring systems leverage all these sources to succeed at the task. Preliminary results show that state-of-the-art vision-language models struggle significantly with this task, and while alternative approaches show promise, they are still insufficient to adequately address this problem. These findings underscore the need for more robust multimodal retrieval systems, as effective video retrieval is a crucial step towards multimodal content understanding and generation.
- Published
- 2024
40. Enhancing Peer Review in Astronomy: A Machine Learning and Optimization Approach to Reviewer Assignments for ALMA
- Author
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Carpenter, John M., Corvillón, Andrea, and Shah, Nihar B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Digital Libraries - Abstract
The increasing volume of papers and proposals that undergo peer review emphasizes the pressing need for greater automation to effectively manage the growing scale. In this study, we present the deployment and evaluation of machine learning and optimization techniques to assign proposals to reviewers that were developed for the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) during the Cycle 10 Call for Proposals issued in 2023. Using topic modeling algorithms, we identify the proposal topics and assess reviewers' expertise based on their previous ALMA proposal submissions. We then apply an adapted version of the assignment optimization algorithm from PeerReview4All (Stelmakh et al. 2021) to maximize the alignment between proposal topics and reviewer expertise. Our evaluation shows a significant improvement in matching reviewer expertise: the median similarity score between the proposal topic and reviewer expertise increased by 51 percentage points compared to the previous cycle, and the percentage of reviewers reporting expertise in their assigned proposals rose by 20 percentage points. Furthermore, the assignment process proved highly effective in that no proposals required reassignment due to significant mismatches, resulting in a savings of 3 to 5 days of manual effort., Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, revised version accepted by PASP
- Published
- 2024
41. Unusual portals to new exotics, the W-gluon portal
- Author
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Carpenter, Linda M. and Schwind, Katherine
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We explore models where new light exotic states interact with the Standard Model through an asymmetric di-boson portal with one gluon and one W boson. We consider the complete set of effective operators up to dimension 6 which couple a single light exotic (LEX) state to at least one W boson and 1 gluon. Other Standard Model particles may also be present in the interactions. We discover that the W-gluon portal allows us to access a large array of exotic states in non-trivial representations of SU(3) and SU(2). We discuss new single production collider modes and phenomenological signatures for these light exotic states at LHC and e-p colliders., Comment: 29 pages, 16 figures, 9 tables
- Published
- 2024
42. Enabling Novel Mission Operations and Interactions with ROSA: The Robot Operating System Agent
- Author
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Royce, Rob, Kaufmann, Marcel, Becktor, Jonathan, Moon, Sangwoo, Carpenter, Kalind, Pak, Kai, Towler, Amanda, Thakker, Rohan, and Khattak, Shehryar
- Subjects
Computer Science - Robotics ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
The advancement of robotic systems has revolutionized numerous industries, yet their operation often demands specialized technical knowledge, limiting accessibility for non-expert users. This paper introduces ROSA (Robot Operating System Agent), an AI-powered agent that bridges the gap between the Robot Operating System (ROS) and natural language interfaces. By leveraging state-of-the-art language models and integrating open-source frameworks, ROSA enables operators to interact with robots using natural language, translating commands into actions and interfacing with ROS through well-defined tools. ROSA's design is modular and extensible, offering seamless integration with both ROS1 and ROS2, along with safety mechanisms like parameter validation and constraint enforcement to ensure secure, reliable operations. While ROSA is originally designed for ROS, it can be extended to work with other robotics middle-wares to maximize compatibility across missions. ROSA enhances human-robot interaction by democratizing access to complex robotic systems, empowering users of all expertise levels with multi-modal capabilities such as speech integration and visual perception. Ethical considerations are thoroughly addressed, guided by foundational principles like Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, ensuring that AI integration promotes safety, transparency, privacy, and accountability. By making robotic technology more user-friendly and accessible, ROSA not only improves operational efficiency but also sets a new standard for responsible AI use in robotics and potentially future mission operations. This paper introduces ROSA's architecture and showcases initial mock-up operations in JPL's Mars Yard, a laboratory, and a simulation using three different robots. The core ROSA library is available as open-source., Comment: Preprint. Accepted at IEEE Aerospace Conference 2025, 16 pages, 12 figures
- Published
- 2024
43. Grounding Partially-Defined Events in Multimodal Data
- Author
-
Sanders, Kate, Kriz, Reno, Etter, David, Recknor, Hannah, Martin, Alexander, Carpenter, Cameron, Lin, Jingyang, and Van Durme, Benjamin
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
How are we able to learn about complex current events just from short snippets of video? While natural language enables straightforward ways to represent under-specified, partially observable events, visual data does not facilitate analogous methods and, consequently, introduces unique challenges in event understanding. With the growing prevalence of vision-capable AI agents, these systems must be able to model events from collections of unstructured video data. To tackle robust event modeling in multimodal settings, we introduce a multimodal formulation for partially-defined events and cast the extraction of these events as a three-stage span retrieval task. We propose a corresponding benchmark for this task, MultiVENT-G, that consists of 14.5 hours of densely annotated current event videos and 1,168 text documents, containing 22.8K labeled event-centric entities. We propose a collection of LLM-driven approaches to the task of multimodal event analysis, and evaluate them on MultiVENT-G. Results illustrate the challenges that abstract event understanding poses and demonstrates promise in event-centric video-language systems., Comment: Preprint; 9 pages; 2024 EMNLP Findings
- Published
- 2024
44. Music Criticism in France, 1918–1939: Authority, Advocacy, Legacy ed. Barbara L. Kelly and Christopher Moore (review)
- Author
-
Carpenter, Alexander
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Analogy and Kenosis
- Author
-
Carpenter, Anne M.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Science Students Develop Multiple Employability Literacies from Large, Early-Year Courses without Employability Modules
- Author
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Lauren Carpenter, Sophie Hubbard, N. Scout Basinski, and Susan Rowland
- Abstract
Concerns have been raised about the employability of Science graduates, however undergraduate Science curricula rarely focus on building employability. Our goal is to harness existing Science-focused curricula to improve Science graduate employability. In this study we asked whether students could identify learning of employability literacies from their experiences in undergraduate Science courses that do not explicitly teach employability literacies. To address these questions, we employed a short reflective activity in three large first year courses; these courses focused on scientific content and processes, and did not include employability modules. We asked students to choose an employability literacy from a menu and describe how components of the course prompted them to develop this literacy. Students chose a wide variety of literacies and linked their development to multiple aspects of their course experience. They also consistently indicated they had achieved multiple literacies from their course. Course coordinators highlighted the strength-based quality of the reflections, which differed from the usual course evaluation comments given by students. Coordinators who used the reflection activity in the first year were eager to continue in subsequent semesters and years. This mechanism gives students and staff the opportunity to understand the wide and varied opportunities for employability skill development that already exist in undergraduate Science courses. The approach does not require course teaching amendments or student skill-building instruction. This study shows that students can achieve multiple employability literacies from early-year courses, and raises new possibilities around how we can boost students' understanding and development of their employability.
- Published
- 2024
47. Fieldwork Educators' Perceptions of the Revised Fieldwork Performance Evaluation
- Author
-
Todd Sanders and Amanda M. Carpenter
- Abstract
The American Occupational Therapy Association's Fieldwork Performance Evaluation plays a vital role in occupational therapy education by guiding students and fieldwork educators in determining students' entry-level competence. This evaluation tool dates to 1953 and has undergone numerous revisions as the profession evolved and changes were made to the practice framework. Revisions have included changes to the stated purpose of the evaluation tool, items to be scored, scoring scale, and number of items on the tool. The purpose of this study was to survey Academic Fieldwork Coordinators (AFWCs) to examine their perceptions of the 2020 revision of the evaluation. We surveyed 68 AFWCs in occupational therapy and occupational therapy assistant programs. The majority had positive perceptions of the changes to the tool. The American Occupational Therapy Association, academic programs, and fieldwork sites should consider the findings of this study to help ensure effective and accurate evaluation of future students.
- Published
- 2024
48. Sustained Strain: Faculty Work Strain under COVID-19
- Author
-
David A. Cotter, Catherine White Berheide, and Megan A. Carpenter
- Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic initially placed college and university instruction into an emergency remote mode. The subsequent periods of the pandemic presented new challenges. This paper examines changes in faculty work lives in the immediate aftermath of the onset of the pandemic and reports on results from surveys of faculty at three selective liberal arts colleges in 2020 and again in 2021. Specifically, we investigate faculty experiences with work strain. Drawing on job demands-resources theory, we develop an analytic framework that examines the effects of status resources (gender, race, and tenure), work domain demands and resources (teaching and research resources, student demands, emotional labor demands, and scholarship demands), and home and family demands (caregiving). Our findings suggest that work strain was elevated in both periods and that only tenure among the status resources predicted less strain. We show that the sources of elevated strain shifted from teaching and research demands in the initial phase of the pandemic to emotional labor demands during the first full academic year of it.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Automated Video Tracking of Autistic Children's Movement during Caregiver-Child Interaction: An Exploratory Study
- Author
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Alexandra L. Bey, Maura Sabatos-DeVito, Kimberly L. H. Carpenter, Lauren Franz, Jill Howard, Saritha Vermeer, Ryan Simmons, Jesse D. Troy, and Geraldine Dawson
- Abstract
Objective, quantitative measures of caregiver-child interaction during play are needed to complement caregiver or examiner ratings for clinical assessment and tracking intervention responses. In this exploratory study, we examined the feasibility of using automated video tracking, Noldus EthoVision XT, to measure 159 2-to-7-year-old autistic children's patterns of movement during play-based, caregiver-child interactions and examined their associations with standard clinical measures and human observational coding of caregiver-child joint engagement. Results revealed that autistic children who exhibited higher durations and velocity of movement were, on average, younger, had lower cognitive abilities, greater autism-related features, spent less time attending to the caregiver, and showed lower levels of joint engagement. After adjusting for age and nonverbal cognitive abilities, we found that children who remained in close proximity to their caregiver were more likely to engage in joint engagement that required support from the caregiver. These findings suggest that video tracking offers promise as a scalable, quantitative, and relevant measure of autism-related behaviors.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. From Vocalist to "Inventor of the Dresses": Vincenzo Sestini's Career at the King's Theatre in the Haymarket
- Author
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Carpenter, Audrey T.
- Published
- 2018
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