3,330 results on '"D. Sánchez"'
Search Results
2. 21444. MIOSITIS Y MIASTENIA GRAVIS SECUNDARIAS A INHIBIDORES DEL PUNTO DE CONTROL INMUNITARIO. CARACTERÍSTICAS CLÍNICAS EN FUNCIÓN DE LA PRESENCIA DE ANTICUERPOS ANTIRRECEPTOR DE ACETILCOLINA
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A. Llauradó Gayete, E. Trallero, E. Laínez Samper, H. Ariño, J. Restrepo Vera, J. Alemañ Díez, D. Sánchez-Tejerina San Jose, J. Sotoca Fernández, M. Gratacós Viñola, J. Seoane Reboredo, N. Raguer Sanz, M. Salvadó Figueras, A. Vilaseca, and R. Juntas Morales
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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3. 21288. MANIFESTACIONES NEUROLÓGICAS DEL VHE A PROPÓSITO DE DOS CASOS
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M. Iza Achutegui, D. Ramos, A. Llauradó, J. Restrepo, M. Pallero, J. Alemañ, J. Sotoca, V. López, J. Sampol, M. Salvado, and D. Sánchez Tejerina
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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4. 21051. UTILIDAD DE LOS NEUROFILAMENTOS DE CADENA LIGERA EN SUERO EN PACIENTES CON POLIRRADICULONEUROPATÍA DESMIELINIZANTE INFLAMATORIA CRÓNICA
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A. Llauradó Gayete, J. Vidal Taboada, C. García Carmona, J. Restrepo Vera, J. Alemañ Díez, M. Salvadó Figueras, D. Sánchez- Tejerina San Jose, J. Sotoca Fernández, J. Seoane Reboredo, E. Lainez Samper, M. Gratacós Viñola, N. Raguer Sanz, and R. Juntas Morales
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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5. 21010. SÍNDROME DEL TÚNEL DEL CARPO COMO MANIFESTACIÓN PRECOZ DE LA NEUROPATÍA ASOCIADA A AMILOIDOSIS HEREDITARIA POR TRANSTIRRETINA
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D. Sánchez-Tejerina San José, J. Restrepo Vera, A. Llauradó Gayete, J. Alemany, V. López Diego, M. Salvadó Figueras, J. Sotoca, M. Gratacós-Viñola, N. Raguer, C. González Mingot, J. Limeres, F. Martínez Valle, and R. Juntas Morales
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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6. 21133. UTILIDAD DEL TÍTULO DE ANTICUERPOS ANTIRRECEPTOR DE ACETILCOLINA EN EL DIAGNÓSTICO Y PRONÓSTICO DE LA MIASTENIA GRAVIS
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J. Alemañ Díez, A. Llaurado Gayete, D. Sánchez-Tejerina San José, J. Sotoca Fernández, J. Restrepo Vera, M. Salvado Figueras, E. Laínez, N. Raguer, M. Gratacós Viñola, and R. Juntas Morales
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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7. 21252. DOLOR NEUROPÁTICO Y DISAUTONOMÍA EN ENFERMEDAD RELACIONADA CON RFC1: DESCRIPCIÓN CLÍNICA Y ELECTROFISIOLÓGICA
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M. Iza Achutegui, D. Sánchez Tejerina, E. Laínez, J. Alemañ, N. Raguer, J. Sotoca, A. Llauradó, J. Restrepo, V. López, M. Salvado, J. Hernández Vara, V. González Vara, and R. Juntas
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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8. 112. CAUSA ATÍPICA DE MIOPATÍA RÁPIDAMENTE PROGRESIVA DEL ADULTO
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A. Llauradó Gayete, V. González, E. Rivas, J. Camacho, M. Riba, J. Restrepo Vera, D. Sánchez-Tejerina, J. Sotoca, M. Salvadó, J. Alemañ, R. Juntas, and E. Martínez Sáez
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Published
- 2024
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9. TREE-LEVEL FUEL CONNECTIVITY TO ASSESS CROWN WILDFIRE POTENTIAL BY UAS-BASED PHOTOGRAMMETRY
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M. Herrero-Huerta, D. Sánchez-Jiménez, A. del Campo-Sanchez, D. Cifuentes-Jimenez, L. Piedelobo-Martín, P. de Andres-Anaya, E. Gonzalez-Gonzalez, R. Yali Samaniego, S. del Pozo, D. Hernandez-Lopez, S. Lagüela, and D. González-Aguilera
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
Evaluating the potential for crown fires remains a pivotal concern in wildfire management because it affects fire behavior, causing them to spread further. In this work, we propose a methodology to assess crown fire potential based on the tree connectivity at crown level from UAS (Unmanned Aircraft Systems)-based Structure-from-Motion Photogrammetry. The approach is usable in a large landscape with the aim of reducing crown fire potential by considering the spatial variability of fuels within a stand. The utilization of UAS for photogrammetry holds immense promise in transforming the approach to assessing and managing forest fires. This cutting-edge technology offers the potential to deliver highly precise and comprehensive data concerning forest structure and connectivity, thereby presenting a groundbreaking opportunity for enhanced forest fire analysis and control.
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- 2023
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10. Immunogenicity and safety assessment of a SARS-CoV-2 recombinant spike RBD protein vaccine (Abdala) in paediatric ages 3–18 years old: a double-blinded, multicentre, randomised, phase 1/2 clinical trial (ISMAELILLO study)Research in context
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Zurina Cinza-Estévez, Sonia Resik-Aguirre, Nelvis L. Figueroa-Baile, Rachel Oquendo-Martínez, Ivan Campa-Legrá, Alina Tejeda-Fuentes, Marila Rivero-Caballero, Gloria González-García, Cristina O. Chávez-Chong, Marel Alonso-Valdés, Francisco Hernández-Bernal, Gilda Lemos-Pérez, Ana Campal-Espinosa, Giselle Freyre-Corrales, Delia Benítez-Gordillo, Evelyn Gato-Orozco, Greter Susana Pérez Bartutis, Iliana Mesa-Pedroso, Nilda Bueno-Alemani, Elizabeth Infante-Aguilar, José Luis Rodríguez Reinoso, Grettel Melo-Suarez, Miladys Limonta-Fernández, Marta Ayala-Ávila, Verena L. Muzio-González, M.A. López-Machado, D Alonso Rodriguez, J.C. Basulto-Puig, T. Martin-Hernandez, D. Sánchez-Miranda, C.M. Agüero-Betancourt, B. Besú-García, Y. Rodríguez-Fernández, L. Guerrero-Vega, I. GómezFonseca, O. Ramos-Pérez, I. Acosta-Domínguez, D. Ronquillo-Ramirez, Y. Díaz-Fernández, L. Aguilar-Soto, J. Reíd-Montejo, Y. Palomo-Leyva, M.R. LandinFaria, R.M. Rosendo-Domínguez, C. Alonso-Manresa, D.M. Marín-Pérez, Y. Malo-Lantigua, M.C. Rodríguez-Florat, Y. Delgado-Laborit, Y. RodriguezGuevara, M. Peláez-González, Y. Torres-Mora, O.S. Cabrera-Hernández, F.J. Gimarais-Varona, M. Hormigot-Hernández, L.V. Artola-Gutiérrez, L. Gallardo-Martí, J. Porro-Verdecia, R. Castro-Bistorte, E. RobertsDandie, S. Berenguer-Pedroso, Yudith Manso-García, C.V. Mora-García, Y. Lastre-Muñoz, O. Duran-Rivero, B. Hernández-García, K. Escobar-Escobar, M.K. CarmenatesGutiérrez, B. Conde-Bello, E.L. Olazabal-Linares, I. Bringas-Labrada, M. Noy-León, N. Velazco-González, B. Bursosa-Moreno, Y. Morell-Padrón, Y. Rodríguez-Matos, Y.M. Treto-Torguet, L. Comas-Díaz, F. Miranda, Y. FigueredoGonzález, A. Quiñones-Juan, I. Mursuli-García, V.M. Giménez-Velásquez, A. Hernández-Ávila, T. Hernández-Cabrera, T. García-Zulueta, A. Parra-Pérez, D. Cintra-Jacob, M. Mendoza-Jiménez, S.M. de la Fuente-Carbonell, B. Hernández-Eduard, M. Ochoa-García, E. Garcia-Iglesias, A. Álvarez-Acosta, R.U. Martínez-Rosales, L. Ávila-Díaz, Z. Santana-Vázquez, L. Mila-Cáceres, G.E. Guillén-Nieto, F. Fuentes-Aguilar, A. Nordelo-Valdivia, N. GonzálezFernández, M. González-Sarmientos, A. Rubio-Salinas, L.C. Domínguez-Rabilero, R.A. Espinosa-Peña, Y. Ramírez-Núñez, J. Junco-Barranco, O. Díaz-González, A. Fragas-Quintero, M.T. Pérez-Guevara, J.M. Enriquez-Puertas, Y. Infante-Hernández, O. Cruz-Sui, E. NoaRomero, Yizel Hernández López, J.E. Sánchez-García, E. Rodríguez-Martínez, E. Pimentel-Vázquez, and E. Martínez-Díaz
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Abdala vaccine ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Children ,Adolescents ,Randomised clinical trial ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: COVID-19 in paediatric ages could result in hospitalizations and death. In addition, excluding children from vaccination could turn them into reservoirs of the SARS-COV-2. Safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines are urgently needed for large-scale paediatric vaccination. ISMAELILLO study aimed to evaluate safety and immunogenicity of two strengths of a new recombinant receptor-binding domain (RBD) protein vaccine (Abdala) in paediatric population. Methods: A double-blinded, multicentre, randomised, phase 1/2 clinical trial was conducted in nine polyclinics in the province of Camagüey, Cuba. Healthy children and adolescents were stratified according to age (3–11 years old, or 12–18 years old) and they were randomly assigned (1:1; block size four) in two dosage level groups of vaccine to receive three intramuscular doses of 25 μg or 50 μg of RBD, 14 days apart. Main safety endpoint was analyzed as the percentage of serious adverse reactions during vaccination up to 28 days after the third dose (Day 56) in participants who received at least one dose vaccination. The primary immunogenicity endpoint assessed was seroconversion rate of anti-RBD IgG antibody at day 56. The immunogenicity outcomes were assessed in the per-protocol population. This trial is registered with Cuban Public Registry of Clinical Trials, RPCEC00000381. Findings: Between July 15, 2021, and August 16, 2021, 644 paediatric subjects were screened, of whom 592 were enrolled after verifying that they met the selection criteria: firstly 88 were included in Phase 1 of the study and 504 who completed Phase 2. The vaccine was well tolerated. Injection site pain was the most frequently reported local event (143 [8·4%] of 1707 total doses applied), taking place in 66/851 (7·8%) in the 25 μg group and in 77/856 (9·0%) in the 50 μg. The most common systemic adverse event (AE) was headache: 23/851 (2·7%) in the 25 μg group and 19/856 (2·2%) in the 50 μg. Reactogenicity was mild or moderate in severity, represented in 75% of cases by local symptoms, completely resolved in the first 24–48 h. Twenty-eight days after the third dose, seroconversion anti-RBD IgG were observed in 98·2% of the children and adolescents (231/234) for the 50 μg group and 98·7% (224/228) for the 25 μg group without differences between both strength. The specific IgG antibody geometric mean titres (GMT) showed higher titres between participants who received Abdala 50 μg (231·3; 95% CI 222·6–240·4) compared to those who received 25 μg (126·7; 95% CI 121·9–131·7). The mean ACE2 inhibition %, were 59·4% for 25 μg, and for 50 μg, 72·9% (p
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- 2023
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11. Can COVID-19 pandemic worsen previous neurological/psychiatric diseases?
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A. Fleury, M.A. Del Rio Quiñones, L. Aguirre-Cruz, A. Toledo, I. Murrieta, K. Santiago, E. Uribe, L. Miranda, V. Toledo, W. Soto, D. Sánchez, and L. Cruz
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SARS COV-2 ,COVID-19 ,Enfermedad neurologica ,Enfermedad psiquiátrica ,Manifestaciones clínicas ,Pandemia ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Introduction: The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has been affecting the world since January 2020. Although its pathogenesis is primarily directed to the respiratory tract, other organs may be affected, including the nervous system. It has also been shown that the social context (confinement, lack of treatment) has affected neurological patients during this period. The aim of the study it was to assess the subjective worsening of neurological/psychiatric diseases in the context of the SARS-Cov-2 pandemic. Methods: Three groups of neurological/psychiatric patients were included: Patients who had symptomatic COVID-19 (n = 89), patients who had asymptomatic COVID-19 (n = 40), and a control group (n = 47), consisting of neurological/psychiatric patients without a history of SARS-Cov-2 infection. Results: 30.7% of the included individuals considered that their basal pathology had worsened during the study period. This feeling was significantly more frequent (P = 0.01) in patients with symptomatic COVID-19 (39.3%) than in patients of the other 2 groups (21.8%). Worsening was not related to the severity of COVID-19. The neurological conditions that significantly worsened after COVID-19, comparing symptomatic COVID-19 with the other 2 groups, were demyelinating and degenerative diseases. Conclusions: These results confirmed the impact of the SARS-Cov-2 pandemic on patients with neurological/psychiatric diseases. Confinement, lack of medical care, and the threat of diagnosis are surely contributing factors. Although the finding of a higher frequency of worsening in symptomatic COVID-19 patients may be related to greater anxiety/depression in this group of patients, we cannot exclude the role of direct affectation of the nervous system by the virus or damage due to neuroinflammation. Resumen: Introducción: La pandemia por SARS-CoV-2 afecta al mundo desde enero de 2020. Aunque su patogenia se dirige principalmente a las vías respiratorias, otros órganos pueden verse afectados, incluido el sistema nervioso. También se ha demostrado que el contexto social (confinamiento, falta de tratamiento) ha afectado a los pacientes neurológicos durante este periodo. El objetivo del estudio fue evaluar el empeoramiento subjetivo de enfermedades neurológicas/psiquiátricas en el contexto de la pandemia por SARS-Cov-2. Métodos: Se incluyeron tres grupos de pacientes neurológicos/psiquiátricos: pacientes que tenían COVID-19 sintomático (n = 89), pacientes que tenían COVID-19 asintomático (n = 40) y un grupo control (n = 47), formado por pacientes neurológicos/psiquiátricos sin antecedentes de infección por SARS-Cov-2. Resultados: El 30,7% de los individuos incluidos consideró que su patología basal había empeorado durante el período de estudio. Este sentimiento fue significativamente más frecuente (p = 0,01) en pacientes con COVID-19 sintomático (39,3%) que en pacientes de los otros 2 grupos (21,8%). El empeoramiento no estuvo relacionado con la gravedad de COVID-19. Las condiciones neurológicas que empeoraron significativamente después de la COVID-19, comparando la COVID-19 sintomática con los otros 2 grupos, fueron las enfermedades desmielinizantes y degenerativas. Conclusiones: estos resultados confirmaron el impacto de la pandemia del SARS-Cov-2 en pacientes con enfermedades neurológicas/psiquiátricas. El encierro, la falta de atención médica y la amenaza del diagnóstico son seguramente factores contribuyentes. Aunque el hallazgo de una mayor frecuencia de empeoramiento en pacientes sintomáticos de COVID-19 puede estar relacionado con una mayor ansiedad/depresión en este grupo de pacientes, no podemos excluir el papel de la afectación directa del sistema nervioso por el virus o el daño por neuroinflamación.
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- 2022
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12. High-Significance Detection of Correlation Between the Unresolved Gamma-Ray Background and the Large Scale Cosmic Structure
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Thakore, B., Negro, M., Regis, M., Camera, S., Gruen, D., Fornengo, N., Roodman, A., Porredon, A., Schutt, T., Cuoco, A., Alarcon, A., Amon, A., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Cordero, J., Davis, C., DeRose, J., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eckert, K., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferté, A., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Harrison, I., Hartley, W. G., Huff, E. M., Jarvis, M., Kuropatkin, N., Leget, P. -F., MacCrann, N., McCullough, J., Myles, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Pandey, S., Prat, J., Raveri, M., Rollins, R. P., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sánchez, C., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Troxel, M. A., Tutusaus, I., Yanny, B., Yin, B., Zhang, Y., Aguena, M., Brooks, D., Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Doel, P., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Our understanding of the $\gamma$-ray sky has improved dramatically in the past decade, however, the unresolved $\gamma$-ray background (UGRB) still has a potential wealth of information about the faintest $\gamma$-ray sources pervading the Universe. Statistical cross-correlations with tracers of cosmic structure can indirectly identify the populations that most characterize the $\gamma$-ray background. In this study, we analyze the angular correlation between the $\gamma$-ray background and the matter distribution in the Universe as traced by gravitational lensing, leveraging more than a decade of observations from the Fermi-Large Area Telescope (LAT) and 3 years of data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES). We detect a correlation at signal-to-noise ratio of 8.9. Most of the statistical significance comes from large scales, demonstrating, for the first time, that a substantial portion of the UGRB aligns with the mass clustering of the Universe as traced by weak lensing. Blazars provide a plausible explanation for this signal, especially if those contributing to the correlation reside in halos of large mass ($\sim 10^{14} M_{\odot}$) and account for approximately 30-40 % of the UGRB above 10 GeV. Additionally, we observe a preference for a curved $\gamma$-ray energy spectrum, with a log-parabolic shape being favored over a power-law. We also discuss the possibility of modifications to the blazar model and the inclusion of additional $gamma$-ray sources, such as star-forming galaxies or particle dark matter., Comment: 34 pages, 15 figures
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- 2025
13. Comparing the DES-SN5YR and Pantheon+ SN cosmology analyses: Investigation based on 'Evolving Dark Energy or Supernovae systematics?'
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Vincenzi, M., Kessler, R., Shah, P., Lee, J., Davis, T. M., Scolnic, D., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Rose, B., Sako, M., Sánchez, B. O., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Myles, J., Palmese, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., and Collaboration, DES
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent cosmological analyses measuring distances of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) have all given similar hints at time-evolving dark energy. To examine whether underestimated SN Ia systematics might be driving these results, Efstathiou (2024) compared overlapping SN events between Pantheon+ and DES-SN5YR (20% SNe are in common), and reported evidence for a $\sim$0.04 mag offset between the low and high-redshift distance measurements of this subsample of events. If these offsets are arbitrarily subtracted from the entire DES-SN5YR sample, the preference for evolving dark energy is reduced. In this paper, we reproduce this offset and show that it has two sources. First, 43% of the offset is due to DES-SN5YR improvements in the modelling of supernova intrinsic scatter and host galaxy properties. These are scientifically-motivated modelling updates implemented in DES-SN5YR and their associated uncertainties are captured within the DES-SN5YR systematic error budget. Even if the less accurate scatter model and host properties from Pantheon+ are used instead, the DES-SN5YR evidence for evolving dark energy is only reduced from 3.9$\sigma$ to 3.3$\sigma$. Second, 38% of the offset is due to a misleading comparison because different selection functions characterize the DES subsets included in Pantheon+ and DES-SN5YR and therefore individual SN distance measurements are expected to be different because of different bias corrections. In conclusion, we confirm the validity of the published DES-SN5YR results., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures
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- 2025
14. Dark Energy Survey Year 6 Results: Point-Spread Function Modeling
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Schutt, T., Jarvis, M., Roodman, A., Amon, A., Becker, M. R., Gruendl, R. A., Yamamoto, M., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Gatti, M., Rykoff, E. S., Sheldon, E., Troxel, M. A., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Chang, C., Choi, A., da Costa, L. N., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Ferté, A., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruen, D., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the point-spread function (PSF) modeling for weak lensing shear measurement using the full six years of the Dark Energy Survey (DES Y6) data. We review the PSF estimation procedure using the PIFF (PSFs In the Full FOV) software package and describe the key improvements made to PIFF and modeling diagnostics since the DES year three (Y3) analysis: (i) use of external Gaia and infrared photometry catalogs to ensure higher purity of the stellar sample used for model fitting, (ii) addition of color-dependent PSF modeling, the first for any weak lensing analysis, and (iii) inclusion of model diagnostics inspecting fourth-order moments, which can bias weak lensing measurements to a similar degree as second-order modeling errors. Through a comprehensive set of diagnostic tests, we demonstrate the improved accuracy of the Y6 models evident in significantly smaller systematic errors than those of the Y3 analysis, in which all $g$ band data were excluded due to insufficiently accurate PSF models. For the Y6 weak lensing analysis, we include $g$ band photometry data in addition to the $riz$ bands, providing a fourth band for photometric redshift estimation. Looking forward to the next generation of wide-field surveys, we describe several ongoing improvements to PIFF, which will be the default PSF modeling software for weak lensing analyses for the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time., Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures
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- 2025
15. Dark Energy Survey Year 6 Results: Photometric Data Set for Cosmology
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Bechtol, K., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Drlica-Wagner, A., Yanny, B., Gruendl, R. A., Sheldon, E., Rykoff, E. S., De Vicente, J., Adamow, M., Anbajagane, D., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Rosell, A. Carnero, Gschwend, J., Gorsuch, M., Hartley, W. G., Jarvis, M., Jeltema, T., Kron, R., Manning, T. A., O'Donnell, J., Pieres, A., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Cid, D. Sanchez, Tabbutt, M., Cipriano, L. Toribio San, Tucker, D. L., Weaverdyck, N., Yamamoto, M., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Alarcón, A., Allam, S., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Avila, S., Bernardinelli, P. H., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Choi, A., Conselice, C., Costanzi, M., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Doux, C., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., Jeffrey, N., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lidman, C., Lima, M., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Muir, J., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Prat, J., Raveri, M., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Scarpine, V., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Troxel, M. A., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., Weller, J., Wiseman, P., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the photometric data set assembled from the full six years of observations by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) in support of static-sky cosmology analyses. DES Y6 Gold is a curated data set derived from DES Data Release 2 (DR2) that incorporates improved measurement, photometric calibration, object classification and value added information. Y6 Gold comprises nearly $5000~{\rm deg}^2$ of $grizY$ imaging in the south Galactic cap and includes 669 million objects with a depth of $i_{AB} \sim 23.4$ mag at S/N $\sim 10$ for extended objects and a top-of-the-atmosphere photometric uniformity $< 2~{\rm mmag}$. Y6 Gold augments DES DR2 with simultaneous fits to multi-epoch photometry for more robust galaxy shapes, colors, and photometric redshift estimates. Y6 Gold features improved morphological star-galaxy classification with efficiency $98.6\%$ and contamination $0.8\%$ for galaxies with $17.5 < i_{AB} < 22.5$. Additionally, it includes per-object quality information, and accompanying maps of the footprint coverage, masked regions, imaging depth, survey conditions, and astrophysical foregrounds that are used for cosmology analyses. After quality selections, benchmark samples contain 448 million galaxies and 120 million stars. This paper will be complemented by online data access and documentation., Comment: Data products and documentation are publicly available at https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases
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- 2025
16. Dark Energy Survey Year 6 Results: Synthetic-source Injection Across the Full Survey Using Balrog
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Anbajagane, D., Tabbutt, M., Beas-Gonzalez, J., Yanny, B., Everett, S., Becker, M. R., Yamamoto, M., Legnani, E., De Vicente, J., Bechtol, K., Elvin-Poole, J., Bernstein, G. M., Choi, A., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Jarvis, M., Lee, S., Mena-Fernández, J., Porredon, A., Rodriguez-Monroy, M., Rozo, E., Rykoff, E. S., Schutt, T., Sheldon, E., Troxel, M. A., Weaverdyck, N., Wetzell, V., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Chang, C., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Ferté, A., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruen, D., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Marshall, J. L., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Myles, J., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Prat, J., Raveri, M., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R., Wiseman, P., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Synthetic source injection (SSI), the insertion of sources into pixel-level on-sky images, is a powerful method for characterizing object detection and measurement in wide-field, astronomical imaging surveys. Within the Dark Energy Survey (DES), SSI plays a critical role in characterizing all necessary algorithms used in converting images to catalogs, and in deriving quantities needed for the cosmology analysis, such as object detection rates, galaxy redshift estimation, galaxy magnification, star-galaxy classification, and photometric performance. We present here a source injection catalog of $146$ million injections spanning the entire 5000 deg$^2$ DES footprint, generated using the Balrog SSI pipeline. Through this sample, we demonstrate that the DES Year 6 (Y6) image processing pipeline provides accurate estimates of the object properties, for both galaxies and stars, at the percent-level, and we highlight specific regimes where the accuracy is reduced. We then show the consistency between SSI and data catalogs, for all galaxy samples developed within the weak lensing and galaxy clustering analyses of DES Y6. The consistency between the two catalogs also extends to their correlations with survey observing properties (seeing, airmass, depth, extinction, etc.). Finally, we highlight a number of applications of this catalog to the DES Y6 cosmology analysis. This dataset is the largest SSI catalog produced at this fidelity and will serve as a key testing ground for exploring the utility of SSI catalogs in upcoming surveys such as the Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time.
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- 2025
17. Dark Energy Survey Year 6 Results: Cell-based Coadds and Metadetection Weak Lensing Shape Catalogue
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Yamamoto, M., Becker, M. R., Sheldon, E., Jarvis, M., Gruendl, R. A., Menanteau, F., Rykoff, E. S., Mau, S., Schutt, T., Gatti, M., Troxel, M. A., Amon, A., Anbajagane, D., Bernstein, G. M., Gruen, D., Huff, E. M., Tabbutt, M., Tong, A., Yanny, B., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bechtol, K., Blazek, J., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Chang, C., Choi, A., Costanzi, M., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Muir, J., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Prat, J., Raveri, M., Rodriguez-Monroy, M., Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Scarpine, V., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., Wiseman, P., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the Metadetection weak lensing galaxy shape catalogue from the six-year Dark Energy Survey (DES Y6) imaging data. This dataset is the final release from DES, spanning 4422 deg$^2$ of the southern sky. We describe how the catalogue was constructed, including the two new major processing steps, cell-based image coaddition and shear measurements with Metadetection. The DES Y6 Metadetection weak lensing shape catalogue consists of 151,922,791 galaxies detected over riz bands, with an effective number density of $n_{\rm eff}$ =8.22 galaxies per arcmin$^2$ and shape noise of $\sigma_e$ = 0.29. We carry out a suite of validation tests on the catalogue, including testing for PSF leakage, testing for the impact of PSF modeling errors, and testing the correlation of the shear measurements with galaxy, PSF, and survey properties. In addition to demonstrating that our catalogue is robust for weak lensing science, we use the DES Y6 image simulation suite (Mau, Becker et al. 2025) to estimate the overall multiplicative shear bias of our shear measurement pipeline. We find no detectable multiplicative bias at the roughly half-percent level, with m = (3.4 $\pm$ 6.1) x $10^{-3}$, at 3$\sigma$ uncertainty. This is the first time both cell-based coaddition and Metadetection algorithms are applied to observational data, paving the way to the Stage-IV weak lensing surveys., Comment: 30 pages, 22 figures
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- 2025
18. Anatomy of the optic nerve based on cadaveric dissections and its neurosurgical approaches: a comprehensive review
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R. López-Elizalde, M. Godínez-Rubí, Ya. Lemus-Rodríguez, E. Mercado-Rojas, T. Sánchez-Delgadillo, D. Sánchez-Delgadillo, A. Campero, and R. G. Párraga
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optic nerve ,visual pathway ,cranial nerves ,neuroanatomy ,neurosurgical procedures ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Vision is a complex sense that is widely represented in the cortex and involves multiple pathways that can be affected by conditions amenable to surgical treatment. From a neurosurgical point of view, the treatment of major lesions affecting the optic nerve, such as tumours, intracranial hypertension, trauma and aneurysms, can be approached depending on the segment to be worked on and the surrounding structures to be manipulated. Therefore, surgical manipulation of the visual pathway requires a detailed knowledge of functional neuroanatomy. The aim of this review is to present the functional and microsurgical anatomy of the second cranial nerve, through illustrations and cadaveric dissections, to support the choice of the best surgical approach and avoid iatrogenic injuries. For this purpose, a literature search was performed using the PubMed database. Additionally, cadaveric dissections were performed on adult cadaver heads fixed with formaldehyde and injected with coloured silicone.
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- 2021
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19. Numerical simulation of the heat transfer process of a coiled tube for viscous fluids
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D. Sánchez, J.A. Almendros-Ibáñez, A. Molina, F. Bozzoli, L. Cattani, and J.I. Córcoles
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Heat transfer ,Coiled tube ,Computational fluid dynamics ,Non-Newtonian fluid ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 - Abstract
This study presents the results of a numerical simulation in a helical coiled tube for Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids in laminar regime. As a practical contribution, the numerical simulations use non-Newtonian fluids, the rheological properties of which are experimentally measured.In both non-Newtonian fluids, at the helical section, the heat transfer rate was higher than that at the straight section. For the fruit juice, the heat transfer coefficient (hw) reached values of 1000 and 1350 W/m2 K at the coil, which were 73% and 126% higher than in the straight section, for an Reg of 255 and 634, respectively. For the carboxyl methyl cellulose solution, these differences ranged between 76% (Reg = 255) and 210% (Reg = 634), reaching hw values at the coil of 1950 and 2700 W/m2 K.In all non-Newtonian cases, fluid mixing was improved at the coil section. This influenced the viscosity variability along the coil, especially for the fruit juice, with a pronounced pseudoplastic behaviour (flow behaviour index of 0.5). This viscosity variation was more influenced by the strain rate than the viscosity change with temperature, as the fruit juice showed a moderate energy activation (8.2 kJ/mol).
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- 2022
- Full Text
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20. Dark Energy Survey Year 3: Blue Shear
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McCullough, J., Amon, A., Legnani, E., Gruen, D., Roodman, A., Friedrich, O., MacCrann, N., Becker, M. R., Myles, J., Dodelson, S., Samuroff, S., Blazek, J., Prat, J., Honscheid, K., Pieres, A., Ferté, A., Alarcon, A., Drlica-Wagner, A., Choi, A., Navarro-Alsina, A., Campos, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Farahi, A., Ross, A. J., Rosell, A. Carnero, Yin, B., Flaugher, B., Yanny, B., Sánchez, C., Chang, C., Davis, C., To, C., Doux, C., Brooks, D., James, D. J., Cid, D. Sanchez, Hollowood, D. L., Huterer, D., Rykoff, E. S., Gaztanaga, E., Huff, E. M., Suchyta, E., Sheldon, E., Sanchez, E., Tarsitano, F., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Castander, F. J., Bernstein, G. M., Gutierrez, G., Giannini, G., Tarle, G., Diehl, H. T., Huang, H., Harrison, I., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Tutusaus, I., Ferrero, I., Elvin-Poole, J., Marshall, J. L., Muir, J., Weller, J., Zuntz, J., Carretero, J., DeRose, J., Frieman, J., Cordero, J., De Vicente, J., García-Bellido, J., Mena-Fernández, J., Eckert, K., Romer, A. K., Bechtol, K., Herner, K., Kuehn, K., Secco, L. F., da Costa, L. N., Paterno, M., Soares-Santos, 21 M., Gatti, M., Raveri, M., Yamamoto, M., Smith, M., Kind, M. Carrasco, Troxel, M. A., Aguena, M., Jarvis, M., Swanson, M. E. C., Weaverdyck, N., Lahav, O., Doel, P., Wiseman, P., Miquel, R., Gruendl, R. A., Cawthon, R., Allam, S., Hinton, S. R., Bridle, S. L., Bocquet, S., Desai, S., Pandey, S., Everett, S., Lee, S., Shin, T., Palmese, A., Conselice, C., Burke, D. L., Buckley-Geer, E., Lima, M., Vincenzi, M., Pereira, M. E. S., Crocce, M., Schubnell, M., Jeffrey, N., Alves, O., Vikram, V., Zhang, Y., and Collaboration, DES
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Modeling the intrinsic alignment (IA) of galaxies poses a challenge to weak lensing analyses. The Dark Energy Survey is expected to be less impacted by IA when limited to blue, star-forming galaxies. The cosmological parameter constraints from this blue cosmic shear sample are stable to IA model choice, unlike passive galaxies in the full DES Y3 sample, the goodness-of-fit is improved and the $\Omega_{m}$ and $S_8$ better agree with the cosmic microwave background. Mitigating IA with sample selection, instead of flexible model choices, can reduce uncertainty in $S_8$ by a factor of 1.5., Comment: Data access available at https://jamiemccullough.github.io/data/blueshear/
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- 2024
21. Superclustering with the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and Dark Energy Survey: II. Anisotropic large-scale coherence in hot gas, galaxies, and dark matter
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Lokken, M., van Engelen, A., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Anbajagane, D., Bacon, D., Baxter, E., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Bond, J. R., Brooks, D., Calabrese, E., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., Coulton, W. R., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Doel, P., Doux, C., Duivenvoorden, A. J., Dunkley, J., Huang, Z., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gluscevic, V., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Guan, Y., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hložek, R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Li, Z., Madhavacheril, M., Marques, G. A., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Niemack, M. D., Pandey, S., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Santiago, B., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sifón, C., Smith, M., Staggs, S., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C-H., Weaverdyck, N., Wiseman, P., and Wollack, E. J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Statistics that capture the directional dependence of the baryon distribution in the cosmic web enable unique tests of cosmology and astrophysical feedback. We use constrained oriented stacking of thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (tSZ) maps to measure the anisotropic distribution of hot gas $2.5-40$ Mpc away from galaxy clusters embedded in massive filaments and superclusters. The cluster selection and orientation (at a scale of $\sim15$ Mpc) use Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 3 data, while expanded tSZ maps from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Data Release 6 enable a $\sim3\times$ more significant measurement of the extended gas compared to the technique's proof-of-concept. Decomposing stacks into cosine multipoles of order $m$, we detect a dipole ($m=1$) and quadrupole ($m=2$) at $8-10\sigma$, as well as evidence for $m=4$ signal at up to $6\sigma$, indicating sensitivity to late-time non-Gaussianity. We compare to the Cardinal simulations with spherical gas models pasted onto dark matter halos. The fiducial tSZ data can discriminate between two models that deplete pressure differently in low-mass halos (mimicking astrophysical feedback), preferring higher average pressure in extended structures. However, uncertainty in the amount of cosmic infrared background contamination reduces the constraining power. Additionally, we apply the technique to DES galaxy density and weak lensing to study for the first time their oriented relationships with tSZ. In the tSZ-to-lensing relation, averaged on 7.5 Mpc (transverse) scales, we observe dependence on redshift but not shape or radial distance. Thus, on large scales, the superclustering of gas pressure, galaxies, and total matter is coherent in shape and extent., Comment: 45 pages, 18 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2024
22. Suppression of the type Ia supernova host galaxy step in the outer regions of galaxies
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Toy, M., Wiseman, P., Sullivan, M., Scolnic, D., Vincenzi, M., Brout, D., Davis, T. M., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., Lidman, C., Lee, J., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Sánchez, B. O., Shah, P., Smith, M., Allam, S., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using 1533 type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the five-year sample of the Dark Energy Survey (DES), we investigate the effects of projected galactocentric separation between the SNe and their host galaxies on their light curves and standardization. We show, for the first time, that the difference in SN Ia post-standardization brightnesses between high and low-mass hosts reduces from $0.078\pm0.011$ mag in the full sample to $0.036 \pm 0.018$ mag for SNe Ia located in the outer regions of their host galaxies, while increasing to $0.100 \pm 0.014$ mag for SNe in the inner regions. In these inner regions, the step can be reduced (but not removed) using a model where the $R_V$ of dust along the line-of-sight to the SN changes as a function of galaxy properties. To explain the remaining difference, we use the distributions of the SN Ia stretch parameter to test whether the inferred age of SN progenitors are more varied in the inner regions of galaxies. We find that the proportion of high-stretch SNe Ia in red (older) environments is more prominent in outer regions and that the outer regions stretch distributions are overall more homogeneous compared to inner regions, but conclude that this effect cannot explain the reduction in significance of any Hubble residual step in outer regions. We conclude that the standardized distances of SNe Ia located in the outer regions of galaxies are less affected by their global host galaxy properties than those in the inner regions., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures
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- 2024
23. Calibrating the Absolute Magnitude of Type Ia Supernovae in Nearby Galaxies using [OII] and Implications for $H_{0}$
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Dixon, M., Mould, J., Lidman, C., Taylor, E. N., Flynn, C., Duffy, A. R., Galbany, L., Scolnic, D., Davis, T. M., Möller, A., Kelsey, L., Lee, J., Wiseman, P., Vincenzi, M., Shah, P., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Nichol, R. C., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, B. E., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The present state of cosmology is facing a crisis where there is a fundamental disagreement in measurements of the Hubble constant ($H_{0}$), with significant tension between the early and late universe methods. Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are important to measuring $H_{0}$ through the astronomical distance ladder. However, there remains potential to better standardise SN Ia light curves by using known dependencies on host galaxy properties after the standard light curve width and colour corrections have been applied to the peak SN Ia luminosities. To explore this, we use the 5-year photometrically identified SNe Ia sample obtained by the Dark Energy Survey, along with host galaxy spectra obtained by the Australian Dark Energy Survey. Using host galaxy spectroscopy, we find a significant trend with the equivalent width (EW) of the [OII] $\lambda\lambda$ 3727, 29 doublet, a proxy for specific star formation rate, and Hubble residuals. We find that the correlation with [OII] EW is a powerful alternative to the commonly used mass step after initial light curve corrections. We applied our [OII] EW correction to a sample of 20 SN Ia hosted by calibrator galaxies observed using WiFeS, and examined the impact on both the SN Ia absolute magnitude and $H_{0}$. We then explored different [OII] EW corrections and found $H_{0}$ values ranging between $72.80$ to $73.28~\mathrm{km} \mathrm{s}^{-1} \mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$. Notably, even after using an additional [OII] EW correction, the impact of host galaxy properties in standardising SNe Ia appears limited in reducing the current tension ($\sim$5$\sigma$) with the Cosmic Microwave Background result for $H_{0}$., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. Submitting to MNRAS
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- 2024
24. Enhancing weak lensing redshift distribution characterization by optimizing the Dark Energy Survey Self-Organizing Map Photo-z method
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Campos, A., Yin, B., Dodelson, S., Amon, A., Alarcon, A., Sánchez, C., Bernstein, G. M., Giannini, G., Myles, J., Samuroff, S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Blazek, J., Camacho, H., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Cordero, J., Davis, C., DeRose, J., Diehl, H. T., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eckert, K., Eifler, T. F., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Fang, X., Ferté, A., Friedrich, O., Gatti, M., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Harrison, I., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Huang, H., Huff, E. M., Jarvis, M., Krause, E., Kuropatkin, N., Leget, P. -F., MacCrann, N., McCullough, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Pandey, S., Prat, J., Raveri, M., Rollins, R. P., Roodman, A., Rosenfeld, R., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sanchez, J., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Troxel, M. A., Tutusaus, I., Varga, T. N., Wechsler, R. H., Yanny, B., Zhang, Y., Zuntz, J., Aguena, M., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Paterno, M., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Vikram, V., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Characterization of the redshift distribution of ensembles of galaxies is pivotal for large scale structure cosmological studies. In this work, we focus on improving the Self-Organizing Map (SOM) methodology for photometric redshift estimation (SOMPZ), specifically in anticipation of the Dark Energy Survey Year 6 (DES Y6) data. This data set, featuring deeper and fainter galaxies than DES Year 3 (DES Y3), demands adapted techniques to ensure accurate recovery of the underlying redshift distribution. We investigate three strategies for enhancing the existing SOM-based approach used in DES Y3: 1) Replacing the Y3 SOM algorithm with one tailored for redshift estimation challenges; 2) Incorporating $\textit{g}$-band flux information to refine redshift estimates (i.e. using $\textit{griz}$ fluxes as opposed to only $\textit{riz}$); 3) Augmenting redshift data for galaxies where available. These methods are applied to DES Y3 data, and results are compared to the Y3 fiducial ones. Our analysis indicates significant improvements with the first two strategies, notably reducing the overlap between redshift bins. By combining strategies 1 and 2, we have successfully managed to reduce redshift bin overlap in DES Y3 by up to 66$\%$. Conversely, the third strategy, involving the addition of redshift data for selected galaxies as an additional feature in the method, yields inferior results and is abandoned. Our findings contribute to the advancement of weak lensing redshift characterization and lay the groundwork for better redshift characterization in DES Year 6 and future stage IV surveys, like the Rubin Observatory.
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- 2024
25. Assessment of the resilience of Barcelona urban services in case of flooding. The RESCCUE project
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B. Russo, M. Velasco, R. Monjo, E. Martínez-Gomariz, D. Sánchez, J. L. Domínguez, A. Gabàs, and A. Gonzalez
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resiliencia urbana ,efectos en cascada ,cambio climático ,inundaciones ,modelos 1d/2d ,Ocean engineering ,TC1501-1800 ,Hydraulic engineering ,TC1-978 - Abstract
Within the framework of the European RESCCUE Project, climate projections for the city of Barcelona show significant increases in maximum rainfall intensities for the 2071-2100 horizon. This paper presents the evaluation of the resilience of urban services in the city against flood episodes for current and future rainfall conditions. The use of sectorial and integrated models allows to assess the response of the city’s drainage system both at the underground sewer system level and at the surface level by analyzing the hydraulic behavior of all urban surfaces (streets, squares, parks, etc.). On the other hand, the parameters associated with surface flooding (extension of flood areas, flow depth and velocity) can be used to estimate potential impacts on other strategic urban services such as surface traffic, the electrical system and the waste collection service.
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- 2020
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- View/download PDF
26. Caracterización de las interrupciones que se producen en las consultas de los médicos de familia. Observatorio de la Medicina de Familia del Maresme
- Author
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Antonio Casanova Uclés, Estíbaliz López Torrent, Elena Zurilla Duarte, Juan-Jose Montero Alía, M. Català, M.J. Merino, A. Alba, J. Martí, E. Fabré, R.M. Castellanos, A. Saiz, M. Bartolomé, L. Villanueva, M.C. Barreiro, I. Monreal, R. Romeu, I. Buxadé, G. Hinojosa, M.V. Zamora, N. Mengual, A. Armada, T. Gros, J. Creus, J. Herreros, D. Sánchez, G. Casas, M. Aizpurúa, P. Gutièrrez, R. Coma, J. Massons, M. Bundó, S. Cid, J. Domènech, T. Jiménez, E. Miguel, S. Sancho, M. Sastre, A. Champer, M. Megías, M. Domínguez, A. Villar, M. Gàmez, M.J. Font, R. Francisco, C. Forcada, I. Moreno, J. Gerhard, C. Viñas, E. Valentín, R.M. Sierra, P. Roig, I. Damas, L. Rodríguez, A. Cardelus, C. Pascual, G. Estrada, and M. Navajas
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Published
- 2020
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27. To encourage the participation in class of university students and evaluate it as objectively as possible
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F. Moliní Fernández and D. Sánchez-González
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participación ,pensamiento crítico ,universidad ,educación ,estudiantes universitarios ,formación ,diálogo ,clases interactivas ,Education - Abstract
The objective of this research is to analyze a system the aim of which is to encourage the participation of students based on critical reflection. The method consists mainly of presenting material in the classroom to be constructively criticized by the students and assigning the task of noting down the participation by at least two randomly selected students. It is a relatively objective system of evaluating participation. The methodology is based on a mixed method, qualitative-quantitative. Participant observation together with a survey of 507 students was used, with a response rate of 55% of the students. 66% consider that students’ critical capacity must be developed in a high or very high degree (compared to 9% in low or very low degree) and 51% agree in a high o very high degree with the rotating system of recording the student’s participation in class (compared to 19% in a low or very low degree). There is a significant association between the size of the class group and the grade obtained in participation (r = -0.96), with worse scores in the most numerous groups. It is surprising that students with low participation (from 0 to 3 interventions) are the most numerous group, with 42.2%. It reflects that the method has excluded or almost excluded a very high percentage of students. If you add the average and high participation, the method works more or less well for a majority of students, the 58.2%, but we must make the maximum effort to integrate the large group of excluded people.
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- 2019
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28. Paraxial wave propagation: Operator techniques
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Moya-Cessa, H. M., Ramos-Prieto, I., Soto-Eguibar, F., Ruíz, U., and la Llave, D. Sánchez-de
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
The similarity between the Schr\"odinger equation and the paraxial wave equation permits numerous analogies linking these fields, which is pivotal in advancing both quantum mechanics and wave optics. In this study, we demonstrate the application of operator techniques to an electromagnetic field characterized by the function $f(x + ay)$, leveraging the structural analogies between these equations. Specifically, we employ initial conditions defined by Airy and Bessel functions to illustrate the practical implementation of these techniques.
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- 2024
29. Weak Gravitational Lensing around Low Surface Brightness Galaxies in the DES Year 3 Data
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Chicoine, N., Prat, J., Zacharegkas, G., Chang, C., Tanoglidis, D., Drlica-Wagner, A., Anbajagane, D., Adhikari, S., Amon, A., Wechsler, R. H., Alarcon, A., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Cawthon, R., Chen, R., Choi, A., Cordero, J., Davis, C., DeRose, J., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Eckert, K., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferté, A., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Harrison, I., Herner, K., Jarvis, M., Leget, P. -F., MacCrann, N., McCullough, J., Myles, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Pandey, S., Raveri, M., Rollins, R. P., Roodman, A., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sánchez, C., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Troxel, M. A., Tutusaus, I., Varga, T. N., Yanny, B., Yin, B., Zuntz, J., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., Desai, S., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lee, S., Lidman, C., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Walker, A. R., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present galaxy-galaxy lensing measurements using a sample of low surface brightness galaxies (LSBGs) drawn from the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 (Y3) data as lenses. LSBGs are diffuse galaxies with a surface brightness dimmer than the ambient night sky. These dark-matter-dominated objects are intriguing due to potentially unusual formation channels that lead to their diffuse stellar component. Given the faintness of LSBGs, using standard observational techniques to characterize their total masses proves challenging. Weak gravitational lensing, which is less sensitive to the stellar component of galaxies, could be a promising avenue to estimate the masses of LSBGs. Our LSBG sample consists of 23,790 galaxies separated into red and blue color types at $g-i\ge 0.60$ and $g-i< 0.60$, respectively. Combined with the DES Y3 shear catalog, we measure the tangential shear around these LSBGs and find signal-to-noise ratios of 6.67 for the red sample, 2.17 for the blue sample, and 5.30 for the full sample. We use the clustering redshifts method to obtain redshift distributions for the red and blue LSBG samples. Assuming all red LSBGs are satellites, we fit a simple model to the measurements and estimate the host halo mass of these LSBGs to be $\log(M_{\rm host}/M_{\odot}) = 12.98 ^{+0.10}_{-0.11}$. We place a 95% upper bound on the subhalo mass at $\log(M_{\rm sub}/M_{\odot})<11.51$. By contrast, we assume the blue LSBGs are centrals, and place a 95% upper bound on the halo mass at $\log(M_\mathrm{host}/M_\odot) < 11.84$. We find that the stellar-to-halo mass ratio of the LSBG samples is consistent with that of the general galaxy population. This work illustrates the viability of using weak gravitational lensing to constrain the halo masses of LSBGs., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures
- Published
- 2024
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30. Evaluating Cosmological Biases using Photometric Redshifts for Type Ia Supernova Cosmology with the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program
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Chen, R., Scolnic, D., Vincenzi, M., Rykoff, E. S., Myles, J., Kessler, R., Popovic, B., Sako, M., Smith, M., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Davis, T. M., Galbany, L., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Sánchez, B. O., Sullivan, M., Qu, H., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Choi, A., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Weller, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Cosmological analyses with Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) have traditionally been reliant on spectroscopy for both classifying the type of supernova and obtaining reliable redshifts to measure the distance-redshift relation. While obtaining a host-galaxy spectroscopic redshift for most SNe is feasible for small-area transient surveys, it will be too resource intensive for upcoming large-area surveys such as the Vera Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time, which will observe on the order of millions of SNe. Here we use data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) to address this problem with photometric redshifts (photo-z) inferred directly from the SN light-curve in combination with Gaussian and full p(z) priors from host-galaxy photo-z estimates. Using the DES 5-year photometrically-classified SN sample, we consider several photo-z algorithms as host-galaxy photo-z priors, including the Self-Organizing Map redshifts (SOMPZ), Bayesian Photometric Redshifts (BPZ), and Directional-Neighbourhood Fitting (DNF) redshift estimates employed in the DES 3x2 point analyses. With detailed catalog-level simulations of the DES 5-year sample, we find that the simulated w can be recovered within $\pm$0.02 when using SN+SOMPZ or DNF prior photo-z, smaller than the average statistical uncertainty for these samples of 0.03. With data, we obtain biases in w consistent with simulations within ~1$\sigma$ for three of the five photo-z variants. We further evaluate how photo-z systematics interplay with photometric classification and find classification introduces a subdominant systematic component. This work lays the foundation for next-generation fully photometric SNe Ia cosmological analyses., Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. Submitting to MNRAS, comments welcome
- Published
- 2024
31. Galaxy cluster matter profiles: I. Self-similarity and mass calibration
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Singh, A., Mohr, J. J., Davies, C. T., Bocquet, S., Grandis, S., Klein, M., Marshall, J. L., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Bhargava, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Pieres, A., Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a study of the weak lensing matter profiles of 698 South Pole Telescope (SPT) thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (tSZE) selected galaxy clusters in the redshift range $0.25
- Published
- 2024
32. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results: Cosmology from galaxy clustering and galaxy-galaxy lensing in harmonic space
- Author
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Faga, L., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Camacho, H., Rosenfeld, R., Lima, M., Doux, C., Fang, X., Prat, J., Porredon, A., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Alves, O., Amon, A., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Cordero, J., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., DeRose, J., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Drlica-Wagner, A., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Harrison, I., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Jarvis, M., Jeltema, T., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lidman, C., MacCrann, N., Marshall, J. L., McCullough, J., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Palmese, A., Pandey, S., Paterno, M., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Raveri, M., Rodriguez-Monroy, M., Rollins, R. P., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Samuroff, S., Sánchez, C., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., Troxel, M. A., Tutusaus, I., Weaverdyck, N., Wiseman, P., Yanny, B., and Yin, B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the joint tomographic analysis of galaxy-galaxy lensing and galaxy clustering in harmonic space, using galaxy catalogues from the first three years of observations by the Dark Energy Survey (DES Y3). We utilise the redMaGiC and MagLim catalogues as lens galaxies and the METACALIBRATION catalogue as source galaxies. The measurements of angular power spectra are performed using the pseudo-$C_\ell$ method, and our theoretical modelling follows the fiducial analyses performed by DES Y3 in configuration space, accounting for galaxy bias, intrinsic alignments, magnification bias, shear magnification bias and photometric redshift uncertainties. We explore different approaches for scale cuts based on non-linear galaxy bias and baryonic effects contamination. Our fiducial covariance matrix is computed analytically, accounting for mask geometry in the Gaussian term, and including non-Gaussian contributions and super-sample covariance terms. To validate our harmonic space pipelines and covariance matrix, we used a suite of 1800 log-normal simulations. We also perform a series of stress tests to gauge the robustness of our harmonic space analysis. In the $\Lambda$CDM model, the clustering amplitude $S_8 =\sigma_8(\Omega_m/0.3)^{0.5}$ is constrained to $S_8 = 0.704\pm 0.029$ and $S_8 = 0.753\pm 0.024$ ($68\%$ C.L.) for the redMaGiC and MagLim catalogues, respectively. For the $w$CDM, the dark energy equation of state is constrained to $w = -1.28 \pm 0.29$ and $w = -1.26^{+0.34}_{-0.27}$, for redMaGiC and MagLim catalogues, respectively. These results are compatible with the corresponding DES Y3 results in configuration space and pave the way for harmonic space analyses using the DES Y6 data., Comment: To be submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2024
33. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Light curves and 5-Year data release
- Author
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Sánchez, B. O., Brout, D., Vincenzi, M., Sako, M., Herner, K., Kessler, R., Davis, T. M., Scolnic, D., Acevedo, M., Lee, J., Möller, A., Qu, H., Kelsey, L., Wiseman, P., Armstrong, P., Rose, B., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Kovacs, E., Lidman, C., Popovic, B., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Toy, M., Carollo, D., Glazebrook, K., Lewis, G. F., Nichol, R. C., Tucker, B. E., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Annis, J., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Duarte, J., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present $griz$ photometric light curves for the full 5 years of the Dark Energy Survey Supernova program (DES-SN), obtained with both forced Point Spread Function (PSF) photometry on Difference Images (DIFFIMG) performed during survey operations, and Scene Modelling Photometry (SMP) on search images processed after the survey. This release contains $31,636$ DIFFIMG and $19,706$ high-quality SMP light curves, the latter of which contains $1635$ photometrically-classified supernovae that pass cosmology quality cuts. This sample spans the largest redshift ($z$) range ever covered by a single SN survey ($0.1
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- 2024
34. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Investigating Beyond-$\Lambda$CDM
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Camilleri, R., Davis, T. M., Vincenzi, M., Shah, P., Frieman, J., Kessler, R., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Carr, A., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Hinton, S. R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Qu, H., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Taylor, G., Toy, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Annis, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bertin, E., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Doux, C., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Rodriguez-Monroy, M., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report constraints on a variety of non-standard cosmological models using the full 5-year photometrically-classified type Ia supernova sample from the Dark Energy Survey (DES-SN5YR). Both Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and Suspiciousness calculations find no strong evidence for or against any of the non-standard models we explore. When combined with external probes, the AIC and Suspiciousness agree that 11 of the 15 models are moderately preferred over Flat-$\Lambda$CDM suggesting additional flexibility in our cosmological models may be required beyond the cosmological constant. We also provide a detailed discussion of all cosmological assumptions that appear in the DES supernova cosmology analyses, evaluate their impact, and provide guidance on using the DES Hubble diagram to test non-standard models. An approximate cosmological model, used to perform bias corrections to the data holds the biggest potential for harbouring cosmological assumptions. We show that even if the approximate cosmological model is constructed with a matter density shifted by $\Delta\Omega_m\sim0.2$ from the true matter density of a simulated data set the bias that arises is sub-dominant to statistical uncertainties. Nevertheless, we present and validate a methodology to reduce this bias., Comment: Published to MNRAS on 20 August 2024; v2 updates to the accepted version
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Modelling the impact of host galaxy dust on type Ia supernova distance measurements
- Author
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Popovic, B., Wiseman, P., Sullivan, M., Smith, M., González-Gaitán, S., Scolnic, D., Duarte, J., Armstrong, P., Asorey, J., Brout, D., Carollo, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Lidman, C., Lee, J., Lewis, G. F., Möller, A., Nichol, R. C., Sánchez, B. O., Toy, M., Tucker, B. E., Vincenzi, M., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) are a critical tool in measuring the accelerating expansion of the universe. Recent efforts to improve these standard candles have focused on incorporating the effects of dust on distance measurements with SNe Ia. In this paper, we use the state-of-the-art Dark Energy Survey 5 year sample to evaluate two different families of dust models: empirical extinction models derived from SNe Ia data, and physical attenuation models from the spectra of galaxies. Among the SNe Ia-derived models, we find that a logistic function of the total-to-selective extinction RV best recreates the correlations between supernova distance measurements and host galaxy properties, though an additional 0.02 magnitudes of grey scatter are needed to fully explain the scatter in SNIa brightness in all cases. These empirically-derived extinction distributions are highly incompatible with the physical attenuation models from galactic spectral measurements. From these results, we conclude that SNe Ia must either preferentially select extreme ends of galactic dust distributions, or that the characterisation of dust along the SNe Ia line-of-sight is incompatible with that of galactic dust distributions.
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- 2024
36. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Slow supernovae show cosmological time dilation out to $z \sim 1$
- Author
-
White, R. M. T., Davis, T. M., Lewis, G. F., Brout, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Hinton, S. R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Shah, P., Vincenzi, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Asorey, J., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kessler, R., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Nichol, R. C., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Tucker, B. E., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a precise measurement of cosmological time dilation using the light curves of 1504 type Ia supernovae from the Dark Energy Survey spanning a redshift range $0.1\lesssim z\lesssim 1.2$. We find that the width of supernova light curves is proportional to $(1+z)$, as expected for time dilation due to the expansion of the Universe. Assuming type Ia supernovae light curves are emitted with a consistent duration $\Delta t_{\rm em}$, and parameterising the observed duration as $\Delta t_{\rm obs}=\Delta t_{\rm em}(1+z)^b$, we fit for the form of time dilation using two methods. Firstly, we find that a power of $b \approx 1$ minimises the flux scatter in stacked subsamples of light curves across different redshifts. Secondly, we fit each target supernova to a stacked light curve (stacking all supernovae with observed bandpasses matching that of the target light curve) and find $b=1.003\pm0.005$ (stat) $\pm\,0.010$ (sys). Thanks to the large number of supernovae and large redshift-range of the sample, this analysis gives the most precise measurement of cosmological time dilation to date, ruling out any non-time-dilating cosmological models at very high significance., Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures. Updated in response to reviewer feedback. Accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS)
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- 2024
37. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: An updated measurement of the Hubble constant using the Inverse Distance Ladder
- Author
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Camilleri, R., Davis, T. M., Hinton, S. R., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Shah, P., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Vincenzi, M., Wiseman, P., Allam, S., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Herner, K., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kent, S., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lewis, G. F., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Suntzeff, N., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, B. E., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the current expansion rate of the Universe, Hubble's constant $H_0$, by calibrating the absolute magnitudes of supernovae to distances measured by Baryon Acoustic Oscillations. This `inverse distance ladder' technique provides an alternative to calibrating supernovae using nearby absolute distance measurements, replacing the calibration with a high-redshift anchor. We use the recent release of 1829 supernovae from the Dark Energy Survey spanning $0.01\lt z \lt1.13$ anchored to the recent Baryon Acoustic Oscillation measurements from DESI spanning $0.30 \lt z_{\mathrm{eff}} \lt 2.33$. To trace cosmology to $z=0$, we use the third-, fourth- and fifth-order cosmographic models, which, by design, are agnostic about the energy content and expansion history of the universe. With the inclusion of the higher-redshift DESI-BAO data, the third-order model is a poor fit to both data sets, with the fourth-order model being preferred by the Akaike Information Criterion. Using the fourth-order cosmographic model, we find $H_0=67.19^{+0.66}_{-0.64}\mathrm{~km} \mathrm{~s}^{-1} \mathrm{~Mpc}^{-1}$, in agreement with the value found by Planck without the need to assume Flat-$\Lambda$CDM. However the best-fitting expansion history differs from that of Planck, providing continued motivation to investigate these tensions.
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- 2024
38. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: simulation-based cosmological inference with wavelet harmonics, scattering transforms, and moments of weak lensing mass maps II. Cosmological results
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Gatti, M., Campailla, G., Jeffrey, N., Whiteway, L., Porredon, A., Prat, J., Williamson, J., Raveri, M., Jain, B., Ajani, V., Giannini, G., Yamamoto, M., Zhou, C., Blazek, J., Anbajagane, D., Samuroff, S., Kacprzak, T., Alarcon, A., Amon, A., Bechtol, K., Becker, M., Bernstein, G., Campos, A., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Davis, C., Derose, J., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Eckert, K., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferte, A., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R., Harrison, I., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Huff, E. M., Jarvis, M., Kuropatkin, N., Leget, P. F., MacCrann, N., McCullough, J., Myles, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Pandey, S., Rollins, R. P., Roodman, A., Sanchez, C., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Troxel, M., Tutusaus, I., Varga, T. N., Yanny, B., Yin, B., Zhang, Y., Zuntz, J., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a simulation-based cosmological analysis using a combination of Gaussian and non-Gaussian statistics of the weak lensing mass (convergence) maps from the first three years (Y3) of the Dark Energy Survey (DES). We implement: 1) second and third moments; 2) wavelet phase harmonics; 3) the scattering transform. Our analysis is fully based on simulations, spans a space of seven $\nu w$CDM cosmological parameters, and forward models the most relevant sources of systematics inherent in the data: masks, noise variations, clustering of the sources, intrinsic alignments, and shear and redshift calibration. We implement a neural network compression of the summary statistics, and we estimate the parameter posteriors using a simulation-based inference approach. Including and combining different non-Gaussian statistics is a powerful tool that strongly improves constraints over Gaussian statistics (in our case, the second moments); in particular, the Figure of Merit $\textrm{FoM}(S_8, \Omega_{\textrm{m}})$ is improved by 70 percent ($\Lambda$CDM) and 90 percent ($w$CDM). When all the summary statistics are combined, we achieve a 2 percent constraint on the amplitude of fluctuations parameter $S_8 \equiv \sigma_8 (\Omega_{\textrm{m}}/0.3)^{0.5}$, obtaining $S_8 = 0.794 \pm 0.017$ ($\Lambda$CDM) and $S_8 = 0.817 \pm 0.021$ ($w$CDM). The constraints from different statistics are shown to be internally consistent (with a $p$-value>0.1 for all combinations of statistics examined). We compare our results to other weak lensing results from the DES Y3 data, finding good consistency; we also compare with results from external datasets, such as \planck{} constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background, finding statistical agreement, with discrepancies no greater than $<2.2\sigma$., Comment: 24 pages, 13 figures, to be submitted to PRD. Comments welcome!
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- 2024
39. Weak lensing combined with the kinetic Sunyaev Zel'dovich effect: A study of baryonic feedback
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Bigwood, L., Amon, A., Schneider, A., Salcido, J., McCarthy, I. G., Preston, C., Sanchez, D., Sijacki, D., Schaan, E., Ferraro, S., Battaglia, N., Chen, A., Dodelson, S., Roodman, A., Pieres, A., Ferte, A., Alarcon, A., Drlica-Wagner, A., Choi, A., Navarro-Alsina, A., Campos, A., Ross, A. J., Rosell, A. Carnero, Yin, B., Yanny, B., Sanchez, C., Chang, C., Davis, C., Doux, C., Gruen, D., Rykoff, E. S., Huff, E. M., Sheldon, E., Tarsitano, F., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bernstein, G. M., Giannini, G., Diehl, H. T., Huang, H., Harrison, I., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Tutusaus, I., Elvin-Poole, J., McCullough, J., Zuntz, J., Blazek, J., DeRose, J., Cordero, J., Prat, J., Myles, J., Eckert, K., Bechtol, K., Herner, K., Secco, L. F., Gatti, M., Raveri, M., Kind, M. Carrasco, Becker, M. R., Troxel, M. A., Jarvis, M., MacCrann, N., Friedrich, O., Alves, O., Leget, P. -F., Chen, R., Rollins, R. P., Wechsler, R. H., Gruendl, R. A., Cawthon, R., Allam, S., Bridle, S. L., Pandey, S., Everett, S., Shin, T., Hartley, W. G., Fang, X., Zhang, Y., Aguena, M., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bertin, E., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Garcia-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernandez, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Paterno, M., Malagon, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., Wiseman, P., and Yamamoto, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Extracting precise cosmology from weak lensing surveys requires modelling the non-linear matter power spectrum, which is suppressed at small scales due to baryonic feedback processes. However, hydrodynamical galaxy formation simulations make widely varying predictions for the amplitude and extent of this effect. We use measurements of Dark Energy Survey Year 3 weak lensing (WL) and Atacama Cosmology Telescope DR5 kinematic Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (kSZ) to jointly constrain cosmological and astrophysical baryonic feedback parameters using a flexible analytical model, `baryonification'. First, using WL only, we compare the $S_8$ constraints using baryonification to a simulation-calibrated halo model, a simulation-based emulator model and the approach of discarding WL measurements on small angular scales. We find that model flexibility can shift the value of $S_8$ and degrade the uncertainty. The kSZ provides additional constraints on the astrophysical parameters and shifts $S_8$ to $S_8=0.823^{+0.019}_{-0.020}$, a higher value than attained using the WL-only analysis. We measure the suppression of the non-linear matter power spectrum using WL + kSZ and constrain a mean feedback scenario that is more extreme than the predictions from most hydrodynamical simulations. We constrain the baryon fractions and the gas mass fractions and find them to be generally lower than inferred from X-ray observations and simulation predictions. We conclude that the WL + kSZ measurements provide a new and complementary benchmark for building a coherent picture of the impact of gas around galaxies across observations.
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- 2024
40. Mass calibration of DES Year-3 clusters via SPT-3G CMB cluster lensing
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Ansarinejad, B., Raghunathan, S., Abbott, T. M. C., Ade, P. A. R., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Anderson, A. J., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Archipley, M., Balkenhol, L., Benabed, K., Bender, A. N., Benson, B. A., Bertin, E., Bianchini, F., Bleem, L. E., Bocquet, S., Bouchet, F. R., Brooks, D., Bryant, L., Burke, D. L., Camphuis, E., Carlstrom, J. E., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cecil, T. W., Chang, C. L., Chaubal, P., Chichura, P. M., Chou, T. -L., Coerver, A., Costanzi, M., Crawford, T. M., Cukierman, A., da Costa, L. N., Daley, C., Davis, T. M., de Haan, T., Desai, S., De Vicente, J., Dibert, K. R., Dobbs, M. A., Doel, P., Doussot, A., Doux, C., Dutcher, D., Everett, W., Feng, C., Ferguson, K. R., Ferrero, I., Fichman, K., Foster, A., Frieman, J., Galli, S., Gambrel, A. E., García-Bellido, J., Gardner, R. W., Gaztanaga, E., Ge, F., Giannini, G., Goeckner-Wald, N., Grandis, S., Gruendl, R. A., Gualtieri, R., Guidi, F., Guns, S., Gutierrez, G., Halverson, N. W., Hinton, S. R., Hivon, E., Holder, G. P., Hollowood, D. L., Holzapfel, W. L., Honscheid, K., Hood, J. C., Huang, N., James, D. J., Kéruzoré, F., Knox, L., Korman, M., Kuo, C. -L., Lee, A. T., Lee, S., Levy, K., Lowitz, A. E., Lu, C., Maniyar, A., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Millea, M., Mohr, J. J., Montgomery, J., Nakato, Y., Natoli, T., Noble, G. I., Novosad, V., Ogando, R. L. C., Omori, Y., Padin, S., Palmese, A., Pan, Z., Paschos, P., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Prabhu, K., Quan, W., Rahlin, A., Rahimi, M., Reichardt, C. L., Reil, K., Romer, A. K., Rouble, M., Ruhl, J. E., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schiappucci, E., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smecher, G., Smith, M., Sobrin, J. A., Stark, A. A., Stephen, J., Suchyta, E., Suzuki, A., Swanson, M. E. C., Tandoi, C., Tarle, G., Thompson, K. L., Thorne, B., Trendafilova, C., Tucker, C., Umilta, C., Vieira, J. D., Wang, G., Weaverdyck, N., Whitehorn, N., Wiseman., P., Wu, W. L. K., Yefremenko, V., Young, M. R., and Zebrowski, J. A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the stacked lensing signal in the direction of galaxy clusters in the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 (DES Y3) redMaPPer sample, using cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature data from SPT-3G, the third-generation CMB camera on the South Pole Telescope (SPT). We estimate the lensing signal using temperature maps constructed from the initial 2 years of data from the SPT-3G 'Main' survey, covering 1500 deg$^2$ of the Southern sky. We then use this signal as a proxy for the mean cluster mass of the DES sample. In this work, we employ three versions of the redMaPPer catalogue: a Flux-Limited sample containing 8865 clusters, a Volume-Limited sample with 5391 clusters, and a Volume&Redshift-Limited sample with 4450 clusters. For the three samples, we find the mean cluster masses to be ${M}_{200{\rm{m}}}=1.66\pm0.13$ [stat.]$\pm0.03$ [sys.], $1.97\pm0.18$ [stat.]$\pm0.05$ [sys.], and $2.11\pm0.20$ [stat.]$\pm0.05$ [sys.]$\times{10}^{14}\ {\rm{M}}_{\odot }$, respectively. This is a factor of $\sim2$ improvement relative to the precision of measurements with previous generations of SPT surveys and the most constraining cluster mass measurements using CMB cluster lensing to date. Overall, we find no significant tensions between our results and masses given by redMaPPer mass-richness scaling relations of previous works, which were calibrated using CMB cluster lensing, optical weak lensing, and velocity dispersion measurements from various combinations of DES, SDSS and Planck data. We then divide our sample into 3 redshift and 3 richness bins, finding no significant tensions with optical weak-lensing calibrated masses in these bins. We forecast a $5.7\%$ constraint on the mean cluster mass of the DES Y3 sample with the complete SPT-3G surveys when using both temperature and polarization data and including an additional $\sim1400$ deg$^2$ of observations from the 'Extended' SPT-3G survey., Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in JCAP. Minor changes and corrections have been made relative to v1
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- 2024
41. Cohesion and Shear Strength of Compacted Lunar and Martian Regolith Simulants
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Dotson, B., Valencia, D. Sanchez, Millwater, C., Easter, P., Long-Fox, J., Britt, D., and Metzger, P.
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Physics - Space Physics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Shear strength and cohesion of granular materials are important geotechnical properties that play a crucial role in the stability and behavior of lunar and Martian regolith, as well as their terrestrial analog materials. To characterize and predict shear strength and cohesion for future space missions, it is also important to understand the effects of particle size distribution and density on these fundamental geotechnical properties. Generalized equations have been established using empirical data from direct shear measurements of lunar and Martian regolith simulants to quantify the effects of particle size distribution and density on cohesion and shear strength. Preliminary results are also presented highlighting the effects of atmospheric absorbed water on shear strength and cohesion when conducting experiments in atmospheric conditions on Earth. The results of this study show that cohesion increases exponentially with bulk density, while the exponential growth constant is also dependent on particle size distribution.
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- 2024
42. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: likelihood-free, simulation-based $w$CDM inference with neural compression of weak-lensing map statistics
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Jeffrey, N., Whiteway, L., Gatti, M., Williamson, J., Alsing, J., Porredon, A., Prat, J., Doux, C., Jain, B., Chang, C., Cheng, T. -Y., Kacprzak, T., Lemos, P., Alarcon, A., Amon, A., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bernstein, G. M., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Chen, R., Choi, A., DeRose, J., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eckert, K., Everett, S., Ferté, A., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Herner, K., Jarvis, M., McCullough, J., Myles, J., Navarro-Alsina, A., Pandey, S., Raveri, M., Rollins, R. P., Rykoff, E. S., Sánchez, C., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Troxel, M. A., Tutusaus, I., Varga, T. N., Yanny, B., Yin, B., Zuntz, J., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., da Costa, L. N., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., Wiseman, P., and Yamamoto, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present simulation-based cosmological $w$CDM inference using Dark Energy Survey Year 3 weak-lensing maps, via neural data compression of weak-lensing map summary statistics: power spectra, peak counts, and direct map-level compression/inference with convolutional neural networks (CNN). Using simulation-based inference, also known as likelihood-free or implicit inference, we use forward-modelled mock data to estimate posterior probability distributions of unknown parameters. This approach allows all statistical assumptions and uncertainties to be propagated through the forward-modelled mock data; these include sky masks, non-Gaussian shape noise, shape measurement bias, source galaxy clustering, photometric redshift uncertainty, intrinsic galaxy alignments, non-Gaussian density fields, neutrinos, and non-linear summary statistics. We include a series of tests to validate our inference results. This paper also describes the Gower Street simulation suite: 791 full-sky PKDGRAV dark matter simulations, with cosmological model parameters sampled with a mixed active-learning strategy, from which we construct over 3000 mock DES lensing data sets. For $w$CDM inference, for which we allow $-1
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- 2024
43. The Dark Energy Survey 5-year photometrically classified type Ia supernovae without host-galaxy redshifts
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Möller, A., Wiseman, P., Smith, M., Lidman, C., Davis, T. M., Kessler, R., Sako, M., Sullivan, M., Galbany, L., Lee, J., Nichol, R. C., Sánchez, B. O., Vincenzi, M., Tucker, B. E., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Castander, F. J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., da Costa, L. N., and Pereira, M. E. S.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Current and future Type Ia Supernova (SN Ia) surveys will need to adopt new approaches to classifying SNe and obtaining their redshifts without spectra if they wish to reach their full potential. We present here a novel approach that uses only photometry to identify SNe Ia in the 5-year Dark Energy Survey (DES) dataset using the SuperNNova classifier. Our approach, which does not rely on any information from the SN host-galaxy, recovers SNe Ia that might otherwise be lost due to a lack of an identifiable host. We select 2,298 high-quality SNe Ia from the DES 5-year dataset an almost complete sample of detected SNe Ia. More than 700 of these have no spectroscopic host redshift and are potentially new SNIa compared to the DES-SN5YR cosmology analysis. To analyse these SNe Ia, we derive their redshifts and properties using only their light-curves with a modified version of the SALT2 light-curve fitter. Compared to other DES SN Ia samples with spectroscopic redshifts, our new sample has in average higher redshift, bluer and broader light-curves, and fainter host-galaxies. Future surveys such as LSST will also face an additional challenge, the scarcity of spectroscopic resources for follow-up. When applying our novel method to DES data, we reduce the need for follow-up by a factor of four and three for host-galaxy and live SN respectively compared to earlier approaches. Our novel method thus leads to better optimisation of spectroscopic resources for follow-up., Comment: Accepted MNRAS
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- 2024
44. Dark Energy Survey: Galaxy Sample for the Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation Measurement from the Final Dataset
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Mena-Fernández, J., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Avila, S., Porredon, A., Chan, K. C., Camacho, H., Weaverdyck, N., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sanchez, E., Cipriano, L. Toribio San, De Vicente, J., Ferrero, I., Cawthon, R., Rosell, A. Carnero, Elvin-Poole, J., Giannini, G., Adamow, M., Bechtol, K., Drlica-Wagner, A., Gruendl, R. A., Hartley, W. G., Pieres, A., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sheldon, E., Yanny, B., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Deiosso, N., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Everett, S., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lidman, C., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Percival, W. J., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Rosenfeld, R., Samuroff, S., Cid, D. Sanchez, Santiago, B., Schubnell, M., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R., Weller, J., Wiseman, P., and Yamamoto, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we present and validate the galaxy sample used for the analysis of the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) signal in the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Y6 data. The definition is based on a color and redshift-dependent magnitude cut optimized to select galaxies at redshifts higher than 0.6, while ensuring a high-quality photo-$z$ determination. The optimization is performed using a Fisher forecast algorithm, finding the optimal $i$-magnitude cut to be given by $i$<19.64+2.894$z_{\rm ph}$. For the optimal sample, we forecast an increase in precision in the BAO measurement of $\sim$25% with respect to the Y3 analysis. Our BAO sample has a total of 15,937,556 galaxies in the redshift range 0.6<$z_{\rm ph}$<1.2, and its angular mask covers 4,273.42 deg${}^2$ to a depth of $i$=22.5. We validate its redshift distributions with three different methods: directional neighborhood fitting algorithm (DNF), which is our primary photo-$z$ estimation; direct calibration with spectroscopic redshifts from VIPERS; and clustering redshift using SDSS galaxies. The fiducial redshift distribution is a combination of these three techniques performed by modifying the mean and width of the DNF distributions to match those of VIPERS and clustering redshift. In this paper we also describe the methodology used to mitigate the effect of observational systematics, which is analogous to the one used in the Y3 analysis. This paper is one of the two dedicated to the analysis of the BAO signal in DES Y6. In its companion paper, we present the angular diameter distance constraints obtained through the fitting to the BAO scale., Comment: 23 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to PRD
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- 2024
45. Dark Energy Survey: A 2.1% measurement of the angular Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation scale at redshift $z_{\rm eff}$=0.85 from the final dataset
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DES Collaboration, Abbott, T. M. C., Adamow, M., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Camacho, H., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chan, K. C., Chang, C., Conselice, C., Costanzi, M., Crocce, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Deiosso, N., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kent, S., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lidman, C., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Myles, J., Nichol, R. C., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Percival, W. J., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Prat, J., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rosenfeld, R., Ross, A. J., Rykoff, E. S., Sako, M., Samuroff, S., Sánchez, C., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Santiago, B., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sheldon, E., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Thomas, D., To, C., Cipriano, L. Toribio San, Troxel, M. A., Tucker, B. E., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., Wiseman, P., and Yanny, B.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the angular diameter distance measurement obtained with the Baryonic Acoustic Oscillation feature from galaxy clustering in the completed Dark Energy Survey, consisting of six years (Y6) of observations. We use the Y6 BAO galaxy sample, optimized for BAO science in the redshift range 0.6<$z$<1.2, with an effective redshift at $z_{\rm eff}$=0.85 and split into six tomographic bins. The sample has nearly 16 million galaxies over 4,273 square degrees. Our consensus measurement constrains the ratio of the angular distance to sound horizon scale to $D_M(z_{\rm eff})/r_d$ = 19.51$\pm$0.41 (at 68.3% confidence interval), resulting from comparing the BAO position in our data to that predicted by Planck $\Lambda$CDM via the BAO shift parameter $\alpha=(D_M/r_d)/(D_M/r_d)_{\rm Planck}$. To achieve this, the BAO shift is measured with three different methods, Angular Correlation Function (ACF), Angular Power Spectrum (APS), and Projected Correlation Function (PCF) obtaining $\alpha=$ 0.952$\pm$0.023, 0.962$\pm$0.022, and 0.955$\pm$0.020, respectively, which we combine to $\alpha=$ 0.957$\pm$0.020, including systematic errors. When compared with the $\Lambda$CDM model that best fits Planck data, this measurement is found to be 4.3% and 2.1$\sigma$ below the angular BAO scale predicted. To date, it represents the most precise angular BAO measurement at $z$>0.75 from any survey and the most precise measurement at any redshift from photometric surveys. The analysis was performed blinded to the BAO position and it is shown to be robust against analysis choices, data removal, redshift calibrations and observational systematics., Comment: Submitted to PRD, 39 pages, 12 figures
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- 2024
46. PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF CLASSIFICATION METHODS FOR INDOOR LOCALIZATION IN VLC NETWORKS
- Author
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D. Sánchez-Rodríguez, I. Alonso-González, J. Sánchez-Medina, C. Ley-Bosch, and L. Díaz-Vilariño
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Technology ,Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) ,TA1-2040 ,Applied optics. Photonics ,TA1501-1820 - Abstract
Indoor localization has gained considerable attention over the past decade because of the emergence of numerous location-aware services. Research works have been proposed on solving this problem by using wireless networks. Nevertheless, there is still much room for improvement in the quality of the proposed classification models. In the last years, the emergence of Visible Light Communication (VLC) brings a brand new approach to high quality indoor positioning. Among its advantages, this new technology is immune to electromagnetic interference and has the advantage of having a smaller variance of received signal power compared to RF based technologies. In this paper, a performance analysis of seventeen machine leaning classifiers for indoor localization in VLC networks is carried out. The analysis is accomplished in terms of accuracy, average distance error, computational cost, training size, precision and recall measurements. Results show that most of classifiers harvest an accuracy above 90 %. The best tested classifier yielded a 99.0 % accuracy, with an average error distance of 0.3 centimetres.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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47. Copacabana: A Probabilistic Membership Assignment Method for Galaxy Clusters
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Esteves, J. H., Pereira, M. E. S., Soares-Santos, M., Annis, J., Farahi, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Barchi, P., Palmese, A., Lin, H., Welch, B., Wu, H. -Y., Aguena, M., Bacon, O. Alves D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Everett, S., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lidman, C., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Santiago, B., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Weaverdyck, N., Wiseman, P., Yamamoto, M., and collaboration, DES
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Cosmological analyses using galaxy clusters in optical/NIR photometric surveys require robust characterization of their galaxy content. Precisely determining which galaxies belong to a cluster is crucial. In this paper, we present the COlor Probabilistic Assignment of Clusters And BAyesiaN Analysis (Copacabana) algorithm. Copacabana computes membership probabilities for {\it all} galaxies within an aperture centred on the cluster using photometric redshifts, colours, and projected radial probability density functions. We use simulations to validate Copacabana and we show that it achieves up to 89\% membership accuracy with a mild dependency on photometric redshift uncertainties and choice of aperture size. We find that the precision of the photometric redshifts has the largest impact on the determination of the membership probabilities followed by the choice of the cluster aperture size. We also quantify how much these uncertainties in the membership probabilities affect the stellar mass--cluster mass scaling relation, a relation that directly impacts cosmology. Using the sum of the stellar masses weighted by membership probabilities ($\mu_{\star}$) as the observable, we find that Copacabana can reach an accuracy of 0.06 dex in the measurement of the scaling relation. These results indicate the potential of Copacabana and $\mu_{\star}$ to be used in cosmological analyses of optically selected clusters in the future., Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
48. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Cosmological Analysis and Systematic Uncertainties
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Vincenzi, M., Brout, D., Armstrong, P., Popovic, B., Taylor, G., Acevedo, M., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Davis, T. M., Hinton, S. R., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Qu, H., Sako, M., Sanchez, B., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Wiseman, P., Asorey, J., Bassett, B. A., Carollo, D., Carr, A., Foley, R. J., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Graur, O., Kovacs, E., Kuehn, K., Malik, U., Nichol, R. C., Rose, B., Tucker, B. E., Toy, M., Tucker, D. L., Yuan, F., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the full Hubble diagram of photometrically-classified Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the Dark Energy Survey supernova program (DES-SN). DES-SN discovered more than 20,000 SN candidates and obtained spectroscopic redshifts of 7,000 host galaxies. Based on the light-curve quality, we select 1635 photometrically-identified SNe Ia with spectroscopic redshift 0.10$< z <$1.13, which is the largest sample of supernovae from any single survey and increases the number of known $z>0.5$ supernovae by a factor of five. In a companion paper, we present cosmological results of the DES-SN sample combined with 194 spectroscopically-classified SNe Ia at low redshift as an anchor for cosmological fits. Here we present extensive modeling of this combined sample and validate the entire analysis pipeline used to derive distances. We show that the statistical and systematic uncertainties on cosmological parameters are $\sigma_{\Omega_M,{\rm stat+sys}}^{\Lambda{\rm CDM}}=$0.017 in a flat $\Lambda$CDM model, and $(\sigma_{\Omega_M},\sigma_w)_{\rm stat+sys}^{w{\rm CDM}}=$(0.082, 0.152) in a flat $w$CDM model. Combining the DES SN data with the highly complementary CMB measurements by Planck Collaboration (2020) reduces uncertainties on cosmological parameters by a factor of 4. In all cases, statistical uncertainties dominate over systematics. We show that uncertainties due to photometric classification make up less than 10% of the total systematic uncertainty budget. This result sets the stage for the next generation of SN cosmology surveys such as the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time., Comment: 39 pages, 19 figures; Submitted to ApJ; companion paper Dark Energy Collaboration et al. on consecutive arxiv number 2401.02929
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- 2024
49. The Dark Energy Survey: Cosmology Results With ~1500 New High-redshift Type Ia Supernovae Using The Full 5-year Dataset
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DES Collaboration, Abbott, T. M. C., Acevedo, M., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Alves, O., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Armstrong, P., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bassett, B. A., Bechtol, K., Bernardinelli, P. H., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Camacho, H., Camilleri, R., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carr, A., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Conselice, C., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., Crocce, M., Davis, T. M., DePoy, D. L., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dixon, M., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Foley, R. J., Fosalba, P., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Glazebrook, K., Graur, O., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., Jain, B., James, D. J., Jeffrey, N., Kasai, E., Kelsey, L., Kent, S., Kessler, R., Kim, A. G., Kirshner, R. P., Kovacs, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, J., Lee, S., Lewis, G. F., Li, T. S., Lidman, C., Lin, H., Malik, U., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Mould, J., Muir, J., Möller, A., Neilsen, E., Nichol, R. C., Nugent, P., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pan, Y. -C., Paterno, M., Percival, W. J., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Popovic, B., Porredon, A., Prat, J., Qu, H., Raveri, M., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rose, B., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Scolnic, D., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Shah, P., Smith, J. Allyn., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Sullivan, M., Suntzeff, N., Swanson, M. E. C., Sánchez, B. O., Tarle, G., Taylor, G., Thomas, D., To, C., Toy, M., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, B. E., Tucker, D. L., Uddin, S. A., Vincenzi, M., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., Wechsler, R. H., Weller, J., Wester, W., Wiseman, P., Yamamoto, M., Yuan, F., Zhang, B., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present cosmological constraints from the sample of Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) discovered during the full five years of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program. In contrast to most previous cosmological samples, in which SN are classified based on their spectra, we classify the DES SNe using a machine learning algorithm applied to their light curves in four photometric bands. Spectroscopic redshifts are acquired from a dedicated follow-up survey of the host galaxies. After accounting for the likelihood of each SN being a SN Ia, we find 1635 DES SNe in the redshift range $0.10
0.5$ SNe compared to the previous leading compilation of Pantheon+, and results in the tightest cosmological constraints achieved by any SN data set to date. To derive cosmological constraints we combine the DES supernova data with a high-quality external low-redshift sample consisting of 194 SNe Ia spanning $0.025 - Published
- 2024
50. SPT Clusters with DES and HST Weak Lensing. II. Cosmological Constraints from the Abundance of Massive Halos
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Bocquet, S., Grandis, S., Bleem, L. E., Klein, M., Mohr, J. J., Schrabback, T., Abbott, T. M. C., Ade, P. A. R., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Allen, S. W., Alves, O., Amon, A., Anderson, A. J., Annis, J., Ansarinejad, B., Austermann, J. E., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bayliss, M., Beall, J. A., Bechtol, K., Becker, M. R., Bender, A. N., Benson, B. A., Bernstein, G. M., Bhargava, S., Bianchini, F., Brodwin, M., Brooks, D., Bryant, L., Campos, A., Canning, R. E. A., Carlstrom, J. E., Rosell, A. Carnero, Kind, M. Carrasco, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C. L., Chang, C., Chaubal, P., Chen, R., Chiang, H. C., Choi, A., Chou, T-L., Citron, R., Moran, C. Corbett, Cordero, J., Costanzi, M., Crawford, T. M., Crites, A. T., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, C., Davis, T. M., DeRose, J., Desai, S., de Haan, T., Diehl, H. T., Dobbs, M. A., Dodelson, S., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Eckert, K., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Everett, W., Ferrero, I., Ferté, A., Flores, A. M., Frieman, J., Gallicchio, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., George, E. M., Giannini, G., Gladders, M. D., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gupta, N., Gutierrez, G., Halverson, N. W., Harrison, I., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Holder, G. P., Hollowood, D. L., Holzapfel, W. L., Honscheid, K., Hrubes, J. D., Huang, N., Hubmayr, J., Huff, E. M., Huterer, D., Irwin, K. D., James, D. J., Jarvis, M., Khullar, G., Kim, K., Knox, L., Kraft, R., Krause, E., Kuehn, K., Kuropatkin, N., Kéruzoré, F., Lahav, O., Lee, A. T., Leget, P. -F., Li, D., Lin, H., Lowitz, A., MacCrann, N., Mahler, G., Mantz, A., Marshall, J. L., McCullough, J., McDonald, M., McMahon, J. J., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Meyer, S. S., Miquel, R., Montgomery, J., Myles, J., Natoli, T., Navarro-Alsina, A., Nibarger, J. P., Noble, G. I., Novosad, V., Ogando, R. L. C., Omori, Y., Padin, S., Pandey, S., Paschos, P., Patil, S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Prat, J., Pryke, C., Raveri, M., Reichardt, C. L., Roberson, J., Rollins, R. P., Romero, C., Roodman, A., Ruhl, J. E., Rykoff, E. S., Saliwanchik, B. R., Salvati, L., Sánchez, C., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Saro, A., Schaffer, K. K., Secco, L. F., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Sharon, K., Sheldon, E., Shin, T., Sievers, C., Smecher, G., Smith, M., Somboonpanyakul, T., Sommer, M., Stalder, B., Stark, A. A., Stephen, J., Strazzullo, V., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., To, C., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, C., Tutusaus, I., Varga, T. N., Veach, T., Vieira, J. D., Vikhlinin, A., von der Linden, A., Wang, G., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., Whitehorn, N., Wu, W. L. K., Yanny, B., Yefremenko, V., Yin, B., Young, M., Zebrowski, J. A., Zhang, Y., Zohren, H., and Zuntz, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present cosmological constraints from the abundance of galaxy clusters selected via the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect in South Pole Telescope (SPT) data with a simultaneous mass calibration using weak gravitational lensing data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The cluster sample is constructed from the combined SPT-SZ, SPTpol ECS, and SPTpol 500d surveys, and comprises 1,005 confirmed clusters in the redshift range $0.25-1.78$ over a total sky area of 5,200 deg$^2$. We use DES Year 3 weak-lensing data for 688 clusters with redshifts $z<0.95$ and HST weak-lensing data for 39 clusters with $0.6
- Published
- 2024
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