56,185 results on '"Giannini A"'
Search Results
2. 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
3. Improving Galaxy Cluster Selection with the Outskirt Stellar Mass of Galaxies
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Kwiecien, Matthew, Jeltema, Tesla, Leauthaud, Alexie, Huang, Song, Rykoff, Eli, Heydenreich, Sven, Lange, Johannes, Everett, Spencer, Zhou, Conghao, Kelly, Paige, Zhang, Yuanyuan, Shin, Tae-Hyeon, Golden-Marx, Jesse, Marshall, J. L., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Lee, S., Miquel, R., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Santiago, B., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The number density and redshift evolution of optically selected galaxy clusters offer an independent measurement of the amplitude of matter fluctuations, $S_8$. However, recent results have shown that clusters chosen by the redMaPPer algorithm show richness-dependent biases that affect the weak lensing signals and number densities of clusters, increasing uncertainty in the cluster mass calibration and reducing their constraining power. In this work, we evaluate an alternative cluster proxy, outskirt stellar mass, $M_{\textrm{out}}$, defined as the total stellar mass within a $[50,100]$ kpc envelope centered on a massive galaxy. This proxy exhibits scatter comparable to redMaPPer richness, $\lambda$, but is less likely to be subject to projection effects. We compare the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 redMaPPer cluster catalog with a $M_{\textrm{out}}$ selected cluster sample from the Hyper-Suprime Camera survey. We use weak lensing measurements to quantify and compare the scatter of $M_{\textrm{out}}$ and $\lambda$ with halo mass. Our results show $M_{\textrm{out}}$ has a scatter consistent with $\lambda$, with a similar halo mass dependence, and that both proxies contain unique information about the underlying halo mass. We find $\lambda$-selected samples introduce features into the measured $\Delta \Sigma$ signal that are not well fit by a log-normal scatter only model, absent in $M_{\textrm{out}}$ selected samples. Our findings suggest that $M_{\textrm{out}}$ offers an alternative for cluster selection with more easily calibrated selection biases, at least at the generally lower richnesses probed here. Combining both proxies may yield a mass proxy with a lower scatter and more tractable selection biases, enabling the use of lower mass clusters in cosmology. Finally, we find the scatter and slope in the $\lambda-M_{\textrm{out}}$ scaling relation to be $0.49 \pm 0.02$ and $0.38 \pm 0.09$., Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables, submitted to PRD
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- 2024
4. A Case for AI Consciousness: Language Agents and Global Workspace Theory
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Goldstein, Simon and Kirk-Giannini, Cameron Domenico
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
It is generally assumed that existing artificial systems are not phenomenally conscious, and that the construction of phenomenally conscious artificial systems would require significant technological progress if it is possible at all. We challenge this assumption by arguing that if Global Workspace Theory (GWT) - a leading scientific theory of phenomenal consciousness - is correct, then instances of one widely implemented AI architecture, the artificial language agent, might easily be made phenomenally conscious if they are not already. Along the way, we articulate an explicit methodology for thinking about how to apply scientific theories of consciousness to artificial systems and employ this methodology to arrive at a set of necessary and sufficient conditions for phenomenal consciousness according to GWT.
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- 2024
5. JWST Observations of Young protoStars (JOYS). HH 211: the textbook case of a protostellar jet and outflow
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Garatti, A. Caratti o, Ray, T. P., Kavanagh, P. J., McCaughrean, M. J., Gieser, C., Giannini, T., van Dishoeck, E. F., Justtanont, K., van Gelder, M. L., Francis, L., Beuther, H., Tychoniec, Ł., Nisini, B., Navarro, M. G., Devaraj, R., Reyes, S., Nazar, P., Klaassen, P., Güdel, M., Henning, Th., Lagage, P. O., Östlin, G., Vandenbussche, B., Waelkens, C., and Wright, G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and its Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) (5-28 um), to study the embedded HH 211 flow. We map a 0.95'x0.22' region, covering the full extent of the blue-shifted lobe, the central protostellar region, and a small portion of the red-shifted lobe. The jet driving source is not detected even at the longest mid-IR wavelengths. The overall morphology of the flow consists of a highly collimated jet, mostly molecular (H2, HD) with an inner atomic ([FeI], [FeII], [SI], [NiII]) structure. The jet shocks the ambient medium, producing several large bow-shocks, rich in forbidden atomic and molecular lines, and is driving an H2 molecular outflow, mostly traced by low-J, v=0 transitions. Moreover, 0-0 S(1) uncollimated emission is also detected down to 2"-3" (~650-1000 au) from the source, tracing a cold (T=200-400 K), less dense and poorly collimated molecular wind. The atomic jet ([FeII] at 26 um) is detected down to ~130 au from source, whereas the lack of H2 emission close to the source is likely due to the large visual extinction. Dust continuum-emission is detected at the terminal bow-shocks, and in the blue- and red-shifted jet, being likely dust lifted from the disk. The jet shows an onion-like structure, with layers of different size, velocity, temperature, and chemical composition. Moreover, moving from the inner jet to the outer bow-shocks, different physical, kinematic and excitation conditions for both molecular and atomic gas are observed. The jet mass-flux rate, momentum, and momentum flux of the warm H2 component are up to one order of magnitude higher than those inferred from the atomic jet component. Our findings indicate that the warm H2 component is the primary mover of the outflow, namely it is the most significant dynamical component of the jet, in contrast to jets from more evolved YSOs, where the atomic component is dominant., Comment: Paper accepted in A&A for publication
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- 2024
6. Constraints on $f(R)$ gravity from tSZE-selected SPT galaxy clusters and weak lensing mass calibration from DES and HST
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Vogt, S. M. L., Bocquet, S., Davies, C. T., Mohr, J. J., Schmidt, F., Ruan, C. -Z., Li, B., Hernández-Aguayo, C., Grandis, S., Bleem, L. E., Klein, M., Schrabback, T., Aguena, M., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Lee, S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Paterno, M., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Reichardt, C. L., Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sarkar, A., Sanchez, E., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Weller, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present constraints on the $f(R)$ gravity model using a sample of 1,005 galaxy clusters in the redshift range $0.25 - 1.78$ that have been selected through the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (tSZE) from South Pole Telescope (SPT) data and subjected to optical and near-infrared confirmation with the Multi-component Matched Filter (MCMF) algorithm. We employ weak gravitational lensing mass calibration from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 3 data for 688 clusters at $z < 0.95$ and from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) for 39 clusters with $0.6 < z < 1.7$. Our cluster sample is a powerful probe of $f(R)$ gravity, because this model predicts a scale-dependent enhancement in the growth of structure, which impacts the halo mass function (HMF) at cluster mass scales. To account for these modified gravity effects on the HMF, our analysis employs a semi-analytical approach calibrated with numerical simulations. Combining calibrated cluster counts with primary cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and polarization anisotropy measurements from the Planck2018 release, we derive robust constraints on the $f(R)$ parameter $f_{R0}$. Our results, $\log_{10} |f_{R0}| < -5.32$ at the 95 % credible level, are the tightest current constraints on $f(R)$ gravity from cosmological scales. This upper limit rules out $f(R)$-like deviations from general relativity that result in more than a $\sim$20 % enhancement of the cluster population on mass scales $M_\mathrm{200c}>3\times10^{14}M_\odot$., Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. D
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- 2024
7. Doping Tunable CDW Phase Transition in Bulk 1T-ZrSe$_2$
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Ørsted, Andreas, Scarfato, Alessandro, Barreteau, Céline, Giannini, Enrico, and Renner, Christoph
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Tuneable electronic properties in transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are essential to further their use in device applications. Here, we present a comprehensive scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy study of a doping-induced charge density wave (CDW) in semiconducting bulk 1T-ZrSe$_2$. We find that atomic impurities which locally shift the Fermi level ($E_F$) into the conduction band trigger a CDW reconstruction concomitantly to the opening of a gap at $E_F$. Our findings shed new light on earlier photoemission spectroscopy and theoretical studies of bulk 1T-ZrSe$_2$, and provide a local understanding of the electron-doping mediated CDW transition observed in semiconducting TMDs., Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures
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- 2024
8. Counting points on character varieties
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Kamgarpour, Masoud, Nam, GyeongHyeon, Whitbread, Bailey, and Giannini, Stefano
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Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,Mathematics - Representation Theory - Abstract
We count points on the character varieties associated with punctured surfaces and regular semisimple generic conjugacy classes in reductive groups. We find that the number of points are palindromic polynomials. This suggests a $P=W$ conjecture for these varieties. We also count points on the corresponding additive character varieties and find that the number of points are also polynomials, which we conjecture have non-negative coefficients. These polynomials can be considered as the reductive analogues of the Kac polynomials of comet-shaped quivers.
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- 2024
9. 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
- Published
- 2024
10. The Hierarchical Growth of Bright Central Galaxies and Intracluster Light as Traced by the Magnitude Gap
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Golden-Marx, Jesse B., Zhang, Y., Ogando, R. L. C., Yanny, B., Pereira, M. E. S., Hilton, M., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Cheng, T. -Y., da Costa, L. N., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lee, S., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Using a sample of 2800 galaxy clusters identified in the Dark Energy Survey across the redshift range $0.20 < z < 0.60$, we characterize the hierarchical assembly of Bright Central Galaxies (BCGs) and the surrounding intracluster light (ICL). To quantify hierarchical formation we use the stellar mass - halo mass (SMHM) relation for the BCG+ICL system and incorporate the magnitude gap (M14), the difference in brightness between the BCG (measured within 30kpc) and 4th brightest cluster member galaxy within 0.5 $R_{200,c}$. The inclusion of M14, which traces BCG hierarchical growth, increases the slope and decreases the intrinsic scatter in the SMHM relation, highlighting that it is a latent variable within the BCG+ICL SMHM relation. Moreover, the correlation with M14 decreases at large radii from the BCG's centre. However, the stellar light within the BCG+ICL transition region (30kpc - 80kpc) most strongly correlates with the dark matter halo mass and has a statistically significant correlation with M14. As the light in the transition region and M14 are independent measurements, the transition region may grow as a result of the BCG's hierarchical two-phase formation. Additionally, as M14 and ICL result from hierarchical growth, we use a stacked sample and find that clusters with large M14 values are characterized by larger ICL and BCG+ICL fractions, which illustrates that the merger processes that build the BCG stellar mass also grow the ICL. Furthermore, this may suggest that M14 combined with the ICL fraction can be used as a method to identify dynamically relaxed clusters., Comment: 16 pages, 5 Figures, submitted to MNRAS on 8/30/2024
- Published
- 2024
11. 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
- Published
- 2024
12. Calibrating the Absolute Magnitude of Type Ia Supernovae in Nearby Galaxies using [OII] and Implications for $H_{0}$
- Author
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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
- Published
- 2024
13. 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
14. 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
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- 2024
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15. 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
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- 2024
16. Interpretable Concept-Based Memory Reasoning
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Debot, David, Barbiero, Pietro, Giannini, Francesco, Ciravegna, Gabriele, Diligenti, Michelangelo, and Marra, Giuseppe
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The lack of transparency in the decision-making processes of deep learning systems presents a significant challenge in modern artificial intelligence (AI), as it impairs users' ability to rely on and verify these systems. To address this challenge, Concept Bottleneck Models (CBMs) have made significant progress by incorporating human-interpretable concepts into deep learning architectures. This approach allows predictions to be traced back to specific concept patterns that users can understand and potentially intervene on. However, existing CBMs' task predictors are not fully interpretable, preventing a thorough analysis and any form of formal verification of their decision-making process prior to deployment, thereby raising significant reliability concerns. To bridge this gap, we introduce Concept-based Memory Reasoner (CMR), a novel CBM designed to provide a human-understandable and provably-verifiable task prediction process. Our approach is to model each task prediction as a neural selection mechanism over a memory of learnable logic rules, followed by a symbolic evaluation of the selected rule. The presence of an explicit memory and the symbolic evaluation allow domain experts to inspect and formally verify the validity of certain global properties of interest for the task prediction process. Experimental results demonstrate that CMR achieves comparable accuracy-interpretability trade-offs to state-of-the-art CBMs, discovers logic rules consistent with ground truths, allows for rule interventions, and allows pre-deployment verification.
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- 2024
17. Thermoelectric transport in molecular crystals driven by gradients of thermal electronic disorder
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Elsner, Jan, Xu, Yucheng, Goldberg, Elliot D., Ivanovic, Filip, Dines, Aaron, Giannini, Samuele, Sirringhaus, Henning, and Blumberger, Jochen
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Thermoelectric materials convert a temperature gradient into a voltage. This phenomenon is relatively well understood for inorganic materials, but much less so for organic semiconductors (OSs). These materials present a challenge because the strong thermal fluctuations of electronic coupling between the molecules result in partially delocalized charge carriers that cannot be treated with traditional theories for thermoelectricity. Here we develop a novel quantum dynamical simulation approach revealing in atomistic detail how the charge carrier wavefunction moves along a temperature gradient in an organic molecular crystal. We find that the wavefunction propagates from hot to cold in agreement with experiment and we obtain a Seebeck coefficient in good agreement with values obtained from experimental measurements that are also reported in this work. Detailed analysis of the dynamics reveals that the directional charge carrier motion is due to the gradient in thermal electronic disorder, more specifically in the spatial gradient of thermal fluctuations of electronic couplings. It causes an increase in the density of thermally accessible electronic states, the delocalization of states and the non-adiabatic coupling between states with decreasing temperature. As a result, the carrier wavefunction transitions with higher probability to a neighbouring electronic state towards the cold side compared to the hot side generating a thermoelectric current. Our dynamical perspective of thermoelectricity suggests that the temperature dependence of electronic disorder plays an important role in determining the magnitude of the Seebeck coefficient in this class of materials, opening new avenues for design of OSs with improved Seebeck coefficients.
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- 2024
18. Universality of scaled particle spectra in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions
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Muncinelli, Cicero D., Gardim, Fernando G., Chinellato, David D., Denicol, Gabriel S., Giannini, Andre V., Luzum, Matthew, Noronha, Jorge, da Silva, Tiago Nunes, Takahashi, Jun, and Torrieri, Giorgio
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Nuclear Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We propose a new observable derived from a centrality-dependent scaling of transverse particle spectra. By removing the global scales of total particle number and mean transverse momentum, we isolate the shape of the spectrum. In hydrodynamic simulations, while the multiplicity and mean transverse momentum fluctuate significantly, the scaled spectrum is found to be almost constant even at an event-by-event level and after resonance decays. This universality survives when averaging over events in each centrality bin before scaling. We then investigate the presence of this scaling in experimental data from the ALICE collaboration in Pb-Pb, Xe-Xe, and p-Pb collisions. We find a remarkable universality in the experimentally observed scaled spectra at low transverse momentum, compatible with hydrodynamic predictions. The data show a minor breaking of universality at large transverse momentum and hints of evolution with the system size that are not seen in simulations. Our results motivate further theoretical and experimental investigations of this new observable to bring to light the collective and non-collective behavior encoded in the transverse particle spectrum of different collision systems., Comment: V1: 6 pages, 3 figures
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- 2024
19. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results: Cosmology from galaxy clustering and galaxy-galaxy lensing in harmonic space
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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
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- 2024
20. Controlling the Magnetic Properties of the van der Waals Multiferroic Crystals Co$_{1-x}$Ni$_{x}$I$_2$
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Lukovkina, Anastasiia, Lopez-Paz, Sara A., Besnard, Celine, Guenee, Laure, von Rohr, Fabian O., and Giannini, Enrico
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The structurally related compounds NiI$_2$ and CoI$_2$ are multiferroic van der Waals materials, in which helimagnetic orders exist simultaneously with electric polarization. Here, we report on the evolution of the crystal structure and of the magnetic properties across the solid solution Co$_{1-x}$Ni$_{x}$I$_2$. We have successfully grown crystals of the whole range of the solid solution, i.e. $x = 0-1$, by employing the self-selecting vapor growth (SSVG) technique and by carefully tuning the synthesis conditions according to the chemical composition. Our structural investigations show that the crystal symmetry changes from $P\bar{3}m1$ to $R\bar{3}m$ when Ni substitutes for Co beyond $x = 0.2$. Both the lattice parameters and magnetic properties evolve continuously and smoothly from one end member to the other, showing that they can be finely tuned by the chemical composition. We also observe that the Ni substitution degree in the solid solution affects the metamagnetic transition typical for CoI$_2$ at high magnetic fields. In particular, we find the existence of the metamagnetic transition similar to that for CoI$_2$ in the NiI$_2$ structure. Based on magnetic measurements we construct the phase diagram of the Co$_{1-x}$Ni$_{x}$I$_2$ system. Controlling the magnetic properties by the chemical composition may open new pathways for the fabrication of electronic devices made of two-dimensional (2D) flakes of multiferroic van der Waals materials., Comment: Accepted for publication in Chemistry of Materials
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- 2024
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21. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Light curves and 5-Year data release
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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 ($0.1
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- 2024
22. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Investigating Beyond-$\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
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- 2024
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23. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Slow supernovae show cosmological time dilation out to $z \sim 1$
- Author
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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
24. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: An updated measurement of the Hubble constant using the Inverse Distance Ladder
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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
25. Feedback loop dependent charge density wave imaging by scanning tunneling spectroscopy
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Scarfato, Alessandro, Pásztor, Árpád, Sun, Lihuan, Maggio-Aprile, Ivan, Pasquier, Vincent, Singar, Tejas Parasram, Ørsted, Andreas, Pushkarna, Ishita, Spera, Marcello, Giannini, Enrico, and Renner, Christoph
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy (STS) is a unique technique to probe the local density of states (LDOS) at the atomic scale by measuring the tunneling conductance between a sharp tip and a sample surface. However, the technique suffers of well-known limitations, the so-called set-point effect, which can potentially introduce artifacts in the measurements. We compare several STS imaging schemes applied to the LDOS modulations of the charge density wave state on atomically flat surfaces, and demonstrate that only constant-height STS is capable of mapping the intrinsic LDOS. In the constant-current STS, commonly used and easier-to-implement, the tip-sample distance variations imposed by the feedback loop result in set-point-dependent STS images and possibly mislead the identification of the CDW gap edges., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
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26. Bilateral Theta Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation (tACS) Modulates EEG Activity: When tACS Works Awake It Also Works Asleep
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D'Atri A, Scarpelli S, Gorgoni M, Alfonsi V, Annarumma L, Giannini AM, Ferrara M, Ferlazzo F, Rossini PM, and De Gennaro L
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transcranial alternating current stimulation ,sleep ,eeg ,slow wave activity ,sleep onset ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 ,Neurophysiology and neuropsychology ,QP351-495 - Abstract
Aurora D’Atri,1,2 Serena Scarpelli,1 Maurizio Gorgoni,1 Valentina Alfonsi,1 Ludovica Annarumma,1 Anna Maria Giannini,1 Michele Ferrara,3 Fabio Ferlazzo,1 Paolo Maria Rossini,4,5 Luigi De Gennaro1,2 1Department of Psychology, University of Rome “Sapienza”, Rome, Italy; 2Area of Neuroscience, IRCCS San Raffaele Pisana, Rome, Italy; 3Department of Biotechnological and Applied Clinical Sciences, University of L’Aquila, L’Aquila, Italy; 4Institute of Neurology, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy; 5Department Geriatrics, Neuroscience & Orthopaedics, Policlinic A. Gemelli Foundation-IRCCS, Rome, ItalyCorrespondence: Luigi De GennaroDepartment of Psychology, University of Rome “Sapienza”, Via Dei Marsi, 78, Rome 00185, Italy, Tel +39 06-49917647Fax +39 06-49917711Email luigi.degennaro@uniroma1.itPurpose: Recent studies demonstrate that 5-Hz bilateral transcranial alternating current stimulation (θ-tACS) on fronto-temporal areas affects resting EEG enhancing cortical synchronization, but it does not affect subjective sleepiness. This dissociation raises questions on the resemblance of this effect to the physiological falling asleep process. The current study aimed to evaluate the ability of fronto-temporal θ-tACS to promote sleep.Subjects and methods: Twenty subjects (10 F/10 M; mean age: 24.60 ± 2.9 y) participated in a single-blind study consisting of two within-subject sessions (active/sham), one week apart in counterbalanced order. Stimulation effects on EEG were assessed during wake and post-stimulation nap. The final sample included participants who fell asleep in both sessions (n=17).Results: Group analyses on the whole sample reported no θ-tACS effects on subjective sleepiness and sleep measures, while a different scenario came to light by analysing data of responders to the stimulation (ie, subjects actually showing the expected increase of theta activity in the wake EEG after the θ-tACS, n=7). Responders reported a significant increase in subjective sleepiness during wakefulness after the active stimulation as compared to the sham. Moreover, the sleep after the θ-tACS compared to sham in this sub-group showed: (1) greater slow-wave activity (SWA); (2) SWA time-course revealing increases much larger as closer to the sleep onset; (3) stimulation-induced changes in SWA during sleep topographically associated to those in theta activity during wake.Conclusion: Subjects who show the expected changes during wake after the stimulation also had a consistent pattern of changes during sleep. The enhancement of cortical synchronization by θ-tACS during wakefulness actually corresponds to increased sleep pressure, but it occurs only in some individuals. Thus, θ-tACS can enhance sleep, although individual factors to be further investigated affect the actual responsiveness to this treatment.Keywords: transcranial alternating current stimulation, sleep, EEG, slow-wave activity, sleep onset
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- 2019
27. “My friend, the pain”: does altered body awareness affect the valence of pain descriptors?
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Galli G, Lenggenhager B, Scivoletto G, Giannini AM, and Pazzaglia M
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spinal cord injury ,chronic pain ,lexical pain descriptors ,positive representations of pain ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
G Galli,1 B Lenggenhager,2 G Scivoletto,1 AM Giannini,3 M Pazzaglia1,31IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy; 2Neuropsychology Unit, Department of Neurology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; 3Dipartimento di Psicologia, University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’, Rome, ItalyBackground: Pain is a marker of bodily status, that despite being aversive under most conditions, may also be perceived as a positive experience. However, how bodily states represent, define, and interpret pain signals, and how these processes might be reflected in common language, remains unclear.Methods: Qualitative and quantitative methods were used to explore the relationship between bodily awareness, pain reactions, and descriptions. A list of pain-related terms was generated from open-ended interviews with persons with spinal cord injury (SCI), and 138 participants (persons with SCI, health professionals, and a healthy control group) rated each descriptor as representative of pain on a gradated scale. A lexical decision task was used to test the strength of the automatic association of the word “pain” with positive and negative concepts. The behavioral results were related to body awareness, experience of pain, and exposure to pain, by comparing the three groups.Results: Higher positive and lower negative pain descriptors, as well as slower response times when categorizing pain as an unpleasant experience were found in the SCI group. The effect was not modulated by either the time since the injury or the present pain intensity, but it was linked to the level of subjective bodily awareness. Compared with the SCI group, health experts and non-experts both associated more quickly the word “pain” and unpleasant in the lexical decision task. However, while health professionals attributed positive linguistic qualities to pain, pain was exclusively associated with negative descriptors in healthy controls group.Conclusions: These findings are discussed in terms of their theoretical and clinical implications. An awareness of bodily signals prominently affects both the sensory and linguistic responses in persons with SCI. Pain should be evaluated more broadly to understand and, by extension, to manage, experiences beyond its adverse side.Keywords: spinal cord injury, chronic pain, lexical pain descriptors, positive representations of pain
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- 2019
28. Dark Energy Survey Deep Field photometric redshift performance and training incompleteness assessment⋆
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San Cipriano, L Toribio, De Vicente, J, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Hartley, WG, Myles, J, Amon, A, Bernstein, GM, Choi, A, Eckert, K, Gruendl, RA, Harrison, I, Sheldon, E, Yanny, B, Aguena, M, Allam, SS, Alves, O, Bacon, D, Brooks, D, Campos, A, Rosell, A Carnero, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Conselice, C, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Davis, TM, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Doel, P, Ferrero, I, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gaztañaga, E, Giannini, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Lee, S, Lidman, C, Marshall, JL, Mena-Fernández, J, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Palmese, A, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Roodman, A, Sanchez, E, Smith, M, Soares-Santos, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, Vincenzi, M, Weaverdyck, N, Wiseman, P, and Collaboration, DES
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Space Sciences ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Context. The determination of accurate photometric redshifts (photo-zs) in large imaging galaxy surveys is key for cosmological studies. One of the most common approaches is machine learning techniques. These methods require a spectroscopic or reference sample to train the algorithms. Attention has to be paid to the quality and properties of these samples since they are key factors in the estimation of reliable photo-zs. Aims. The goal of this work is to calculate the photo-zs for the Year 3 (Y3) Dark Energy Survey (DES) Deep Fields catalogue using the Directional Neighborhood Fitting (DNF) machine learning algorithm. Moreover, we want to develop techniques to assess the incompleteness of the training sample and metrics to study how incompleteness affects the quality of photometric redshifts. Finally, we are interested in comparing the performance obtained by DNF on the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue with that of the EAzY template fitting approach. Methods. We emulated – at a brighter magnitude – the training incompleteness with a spectroscopic sample whose redshifts are known to have a measurable view of the problem. We used a principal component analysis to graphically assess the incompleteness and relate it with the performance parameters provided by DNF. Finally, we applied the results on the incompleteness to the photo-z computation on the Y3 DES Deep Fields with DNF and estimated its performance. Results. The photo-zs of the galaxies in the DES deep fields were computed with the DNF algorithm and added to the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue. We have developed some techniques to evaluate the performance in the absence of “true” redshift and to assess the completeness. We have studied the tradeoff in the training sample between the highest spectroscopic redshift quality versus completeness. We found some advantages in relaxing the highest-quality spectroscopic redshift requirements at fainter magnitudes in favour of completeness. The results achieved by DNF on the Y3 Deep Fields are competitive with the ones provided by EAzY, showing notable stability at high redshifts. It should be noted that the good results obtained by DNF in the estimation of photo-zs in deep field catalogues make DNF suitable for the future Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) and Euclid data, which will have similar depths to the Y3 DES Deep Fields.
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- 2024
29. AnyCBMs: How to Turn Any Black Box into a Concept Bottleneck Model
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Dominici, Gabriele, Barbiero, Pietro, Giannini, Francesco, Gjoreski, Martin, and Langhenirich, Marc
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Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Interpretable deep learning aims at developing neural architectures whose decision-making processes could be understood by their users. Among these techniqes, Concept Bottleneck Models enhance the interpretability of neural networks by integrating a layer of human-understandable concepts. These models, however, necessitate training a new model from the beginning, consuming significant resources and failing to utilize already trained large models. To address this issue, we introduce "AnyCBM", a method that transforms any existing trained model into a Concept Bottleneck Model with minimal impact on computational resources. We provide both theoretical and experimental insights showing the effectiveness of AnyCBMs in terms of classification performances and effectivenss of concept-based interventions on downstream tasks.
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- 2024
30. 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
31. OzDES Reverberation Mapping Program: Stacking analysis with H$\beta$, Mg II and C IV
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Malik, Umang, Sharp, Rob, Penton, A., Yu, Z., Martini, P., Tucker, B. E., Davis, T. M., Lewis, G. F., Lidman, C., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Annis, J., Asorey, J., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Cheng, T. -Y., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Reil, K., Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Schubnell, M., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Reverberation mapping is the leading technique used to measure direct black hole masses outside of the local Universe. Additionally, reverberation measurements calibrate secondary mass-scaling relations used to estimate single-epoch virial black hole masses. The Australian Dark Energy Survey (OzDES) conducted one of the first multi-object reverberation mapping surveys, monitoring 735 AGN up to $z\sim4$, over 6 years. The limited temporal coverage of the OzDES data has hindered recovery of individual measurements for some classes of sources, particularly those with shorter reverberation lags or lags that fall within campaign season gaps. To alleviate this limitation, we perform a stacking analysis of the cross-correlation functions of sources with similar intrinsic properties to recover average composite reverberation lags. This analysis leads to the recovery of average lags in each redshift-luminosity bin across our sample. We present the average lags recovered for the H$\beta$, Mg II and C IV samples, as well as multi-line measurements for redshift bins where two lines are accessible. The stacking analysis is consistent with the Radius-Luminosity relations for each line. Our results for the H$\beta$ sample demonstrate that stacking has the potential to improve upon constraints on the $R-L$ relation, which have been derived only from individual source measurements until now., Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures. Accepted by MNRAS
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- 2024
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32. $D^0$ meson production in $pp$ collisions at large $Q_s^2$
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Lima, Yuri N., Giannini, André V., and Goncalves, Victor P.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The impact of the non-linear effects in the QCD dynamics on the observables is directly related to the magnitude of the saturation scale $Q_s$, which is predicted to increase with the energy, rapidity and multiplicity. In this paper, we investigate the $D^0$ meson production in $pp$ collisions at forward rapidities and/or high multiplicities considering the Color Glass Condensate (CGC) formalism and the solutions of the running coupling Balitsky - Kovchegov (BK) equation. The contributions of gluon - and charm - initiated processes are taken into account, and a comparison with the current LHCb data is performed. The impact of an intrinsic charm component in the proton's wave function is also estimated. Predictions for the self-normalized yields of $D^0$ mesons as a function of the multiplicity of coproduced charged hadrons are presented, considering $pp$ collisions at $\sqrt{s} = 13$ TeV and different values of the meson rapidity. A comparison with the predictions for the kaon and isolated photon production is performed. Our results indicate that a future experimental analysis of the $D^0$ meson production at forward rapidities and high multiplicities can be useful to probe the CGC formalism and to disentangle the contribution of initial - and final - state effects., Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures
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- 2024
33. Explainable Malware Detection with Tailored Logic Explained Networks
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Anthony, Peter, Giannini, Francesco, Diligenti, Michelangelo, Homola, Martin, Gori, Marco, Balogh, Stefan, and Mojzis, Jan
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Malware detection is a constant challenge in cybersecurity due to the rapid development of new attack techniques. Traditional signature-based approaches struggle to keep pace with the sheer volume of malware samples. Machine learning offers a promising solution, but faces issues of generalization to unseen samples and a lack of explanation for the instances identified as malware. However, human-understandable explanations are especially important in security-critical fields, where understanding model decisions is crucial for trust and legal compliance. While deep learning models excel at malware detection, their black-box nature hinders explainability. Conversely, interpretable models often fall short in performance. To bridge this gap in this application domain, we propose the use of Logic Explained Networks (LENs), which are a recently proposed class of interpretable neural networks providing explanations in the form of First-Order Logic (FOL) rules. This paper extends the application of LENs to the complex domain of malware detection, specifically using the large-scale EMBER dataset. In the experimental results we show that LENs achieve robustness that exceeds traditional interpretable methods and that are rivaling black-box models. Moreover, we introduce a tailored version of LENs that is shown to generate logic explanations with higher fidelity with respect to the model's predictions.
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- 2024
34. The Gravitational Lensing Imprints of DES Y3 Superstructures on the CMB: A Matched Filtering Approach
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Demirbozan, Umut, Nadathur, Seshadri, Ferrero, Ismael, Fosalba, Pablo, Kovacs, Andras, Miquel, Ramon, Davies, Christopher T., Pandey, Shivam, Adamow, Monika, Bechtol, Keith, Drlica-Wagner, Alex, Gruendl, Robert, Hartley, Will, Pieres, Adriano, Ross, Ashley, Rykoff, Eli, Sheldon, Erin, Yanny, Brian, Abbott, Tim, Aguena, Michel, Allam, Sahar, Alves, Otavio, Bacon, David, Bertin, Emmanuel, Bocquet, Sebastian, Brooks, David, Rosell, Aurelio Carnero, Carretero, Jorge, Cawthon, Ross, da Costa, Luiz, Pereira, Maria Elidaiana da Silva, De Vicente, Juan, Desai, Shantanu, Doel, Peter, Everett, Spencer, Flaugher, Brenna, Friedel, Douglas, Frieman, Josh, Gatti, Marco, Gaztanaga, Enrique, Giannini, Giulia, Gutierrez, Gaston, Hinton, Samuel, Hollowood, Devon L., James, David, Jeffrey, Niall, Kuehn, Kyler, Lahav, Ofer, Lee, Sujeong, Marshall, Jennifer, Mena-Fernández, Juan, Mohr, Joe, Myles, Justin, Ogando, Ricardo, Malagón, Andrés Plazas, Roodman, Aaron, Sanchez, Eusebio, Sevilla, Ignacio, Smith, Mathew, Soares-Santos, Marcelle, Suchyta, Eric, Swanson, Molly, Tarle, Gregory, Weaverdyck, Noah, Weller, Jochen, and Wiseman, Philip
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
$ $Low density cosmic voids gravitationally lens the cosmic microwave background (CMB), leaving a negative imprint on the CMB convergence $\kappa$. This effect provides insight into the distribution of matter within voids, and can also be used to study the growth of structure. We measure this lensing imprint by cross-correlating the Planck CMB lensing convergence map with voids identified in the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 data set, covering approximately 4,200 deg$^2$ of the sky. We use two distinct void-finding algorithms: a 2D void-finder which operates on the projected galaxy density field in thin redshift shells, and a new code, Voxel, which operates on the full 3D map of galaxy positions. We employ an optimal matched filtering method for cross-correlation, using the MICE N-body simulation both to establish the template for the matched filter and to calibrate detection significances. Using the DES Y3 photometric luminous red galaxy sample, we measure $A_\kappa$, the amplitude of the observed lensing signal relative to the simulation template, obtaining $A_\kappa = 1.03 \pm 0.22$ ($4.6\sigma$ significance) for Voxel and $A_\kappa = 1.02 \pm 0.17$ ($5.9\sigma$ significance) for 2D voids, both consistent with $\Lambda$CDM expectations. We additionally invert the 2D void-finding process to identify superclusters in the projected density field, for which we measure $A_\kappa = 0.87 \pm 0.15$ ($5.9\sigma$ significance). The leading source of noise in our measurements is Planck noise, implying that future data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), South Pole Telescope (SPT) and CMB-S4 will increase sensitivity and allow for more precise measurements., Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
35. PROJECT-J: JWST observations of HH46~IRS and its outflow. Overview and first results
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Nisini, B., Navarro, M. G., Giannini, T., Antoniucci, S., Kavanagh, P. J., Hartigan, P., Bacciotti, F., Garatti, A. Caratti o, Crespo, A. Noriega, van Dishoek, E., Whelan, E., Arce, H. G., Cabrit, S., Coffey, D., Fedele, D., Eisloeffel, J., Palumbo, M. E., Podio, L., Ray, T. P., Schultze, M., Urso, R. G., Alcala', J. M., Bautista, M. A., Codella, C., Greene, T. G., and Manara, C. F.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first results of the JWST program PROJECT-J (PROtostellar JEts Cradle Tested with JWST ), designed to study the Class I source HH46 IRS and its outflow through NIRSpec and MIRI spectroscopy (1.66 to 28 micron). The data provide line-images (~ 6.6" in length with NIRSpec, and up to 20" with MIRI) revealing unprecedented details within the jet, the molecular outflow and the cavity. We detect, for the first time, the red-shifted jet within ~ 90 au from the source. Dozens of shock-excited forbidden lines are observed, including highly ionized species such as [Ne III] 15.5 micron, suggesting that the gas is excited by high velocity (> 80 km/s) shocks in a relatively high density medium. Images of H2 lines at different excitations outline a complex molecular flow, where a bright cavity, molecular shells, and a jet-driven bow-shock interact with and are shaped by the ambient conditions. Additional NIRCam 2 micron images resolve the HH46 IRS ~ 110 au binary system and suggest that the large asymmetries observed between the jet and the H2 wide angle emission could be due to two separate outflows being driven by the two sources. The spectra of the unresolved binary show deep ice bands and plenty of gaseous lines in absorption, likely originating in a cold envelope or disk. In conclusion, JWST has unraveled for the first time the origin of the HH46 IRS complex outflow demonstrating its capability to investigate embedded regions around young stars, which remain elusive even at near-IR wavelengths., Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal (9 April 2024)
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- 2024
36. 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
37. 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
38. Gaia23bab : a new EXor
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Giannini, T., Schisano, E., Abraham, P., Antoniucci, S., Biazzo, K., de Miera, F. Cruz-Saenz, Fiorellino, E., Gangi, M., Kospal, A., Kuhn, M., Marini, E., Nagy, Z., and Paris, D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
On March 6 2023, the Gaia telescope has alerted a 2-magnitude burst from Gaia23bab, a Young Stellar Object in the Galactic plane. We observed Gaia23bab with the Large Binocular Telescope obtaining optical and near-infrared spectra close in time to the peak of the burst, and collected all public multi-band photometry to reconstruct the historical light curve. This latter shows three bursts in ten years (2013, 2017 and 2023), whose duration and amplitude are typical of EXor variables. We estimate that, due to the bursts, the mass accumulated on the star is about twice greater than if the source had remained quiescent for the same period of time. Photometric analysis indicates that Gaia23bab is a Class,II source with age < 1 Myr, spectral type G3-K0, stellar luminosity 4.0 L_sun, and mass 1.6 M_sun. The optical/near infrared spectrum is rich in emission lines. From the analysis of these lines we measured the accretion luminosity and the mass accretion rate L_acc(burst)=3.7 L_sun, M_acc(burst) 2.0 10 $^(-7) M_sun/yr, consistent with those of EXors. More generally, we derive the relationships between accretion and stellar parameters in a sample of EXors. We find that, when in burst, the accretion parameters become almost independent of the stellar parameters and that EXors, even in quiescence, are more efficient than classical T Tauri stars in assembling mass., Comment: Accepted by The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
39. Towards a Semantic Characterisation of Global Type Well-formedness
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Castellani, Ilaria and Giannini, Paola
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Computer Science - Logic in Computer Science - Abstract
We address the question of characterising the well-formedness properties of multiparty session types semantically, i.e., as properties of the semantic model used to interpret types. Choosing Prime Event Structures (PESs) as our semantic model, we present semantic counterparts for the two properties that underpin global type well-formedness, namely projectability and boundedness, in this model. As a first step towards a characterisation of the class of PESs corresponding to well-formed global types, we identify some simple structural properties satisfied by such PESs., Comment: In Proceedings PLACES 2024, arXiv:2404.03712
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- 2024
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40. The Enigma of Gaia18cjb: a Rare Hybrid of FUor and EXor?
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Fiorellino, Eleonora, Abraham, Peter, Kospal, Agnes, Kun, Maria, Alcala, Juan M., Garatti, Alessio Caratti o, de Miera, Fernando Cruz-Saenz, Garcia-Alvarez, David, Giannini, Teresa, Park, Sunkyung, Siwak, Michal, Szilagyi, Mate, Covino, Elvira, Marton, Gabor, Nagy, Zsofia, Nisini, Brunella, Szabo, Zsofia Marianna, Bora, Zsofia, Cseh, Borbala, Kalup, Csilla, Krezinger, Mate, Kriskovics, Levente, Ogloza, Waldemar, Pal, Andras, Sodor, Adam, Sonbas, Eda, Szakats, Robert, Vida, Krisztian, Vinko, Jozsef, Wyrzykowski, Lukasz, and Zielinski, Pawel
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. Gaia18cjb is one of the Gaia-alerted eruptive young star candidates which has been experiencing a slow and strong brightening during the last 13 years, similar to some FU Orionis-type objects. Aims. The aim of this work is to derive the young stellar nature of Gaia18cjb, determine its physical and accretion properties to classify its variability. Methods. We conducted monitoring observations using multi-filter optical and near-infrared photometry, as well as near-infrared spectroscopy. We present the analysis of pre-outburst and outburst optical and infrared light curves, color-magnitude diagrams in different bands, the detection of near-IR spectral lines, and estimates of both stellar and accretion parameters during the burst. Results. The optical light curve shows an unusually long (8 years) brightening event of 5 mag in the last 13 years, before reaching a plateau indicating that the burst is still on-going, suggesting a FUor-like nature. The same outburst is less strong in the infrared light curves. The near-infrared spectra, obtained during the outburst, exhibit emission lines typical of highly accreting low-intermediate mass young stars with typical EXor features. The spectral index of Gaia18cjb SED classifies it as a Class I in the pre-burst stage and a Flat Spectrum young stellar object (YSO) during the burst. Conclusions. Gaia18cjb is an eruptive YSO which shows FUor-like photometric features (in terms of brightening amplitude and length of the burst) and EXor-like spectroscopic features and accretion rate, as V350 Cep and V1647 Ori, classified as objects in between FUors and EXors, Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures
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- 2024
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41. Accessing the speed of sound in relativistic ultracentral nucleus-nucleus collisions using the mean transverse momentum
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Gardim, Fernando G., Giannini, Andre V., and Ollitrault, Jean-Yves
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Nuclear Theory ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
It has been argued that the speed of sound of the strong interaction at high temperature can be measured using the variation of the mean transverse momentum with the particle multiplicity in ultracentral heavy-ion collisions. We test this correspondence by running hydrodynamic simulations at zero impact parameter with several equations of state, at several colliding energies from 0.2 TeV to 15 TeV per nucleon pair. The correspondence is found to be precise and robust for a smooth, boost-invariant fluid and an ideal detector. We discuss the differences between this ideal setup and an actual experiment. We conclude that the extraction of the speed of sound from data is reliable, and that the main uncertainty comes from our poor knowledge of the distribution of density fluctuations at the early stages of the collision., Comment: v2: 8 pages, 4 figures. Added new section IV - E. Matches the published version
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- 2024
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42. $B$-meson production at forward rapidities in $pp$ collisions at the LHC: Estimating the intrinsic bottom contribution
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Lima, Yuri N., Goncalves, Victor P., and Giannini, André V.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The production of $B$ mesons at forward rapidities is strongly sensitive to the behavior of the gluon and bottom distribution functions for small and large values of the Bjorken - $x$ variable. In this exploratory study, we estimate the cross - section for the $B^{\pm}$ meson production in the kinematic range probed by the LHCb detector and that will be analyzed by the future Forward Physics Facility (FPF) considering the hybrid formalism, the solution of the running coupling Balitsky - Kovchegov equation and distinct descriptions for the bottom distribution function. We assume an ansatz for the intrinsic bottom component in the proton wave function, and estimate its impact on the transverse momentum, rapidity and Feynman - $x$ distributions. Our results indicate that the presence of an intrinsic bottom strongly modifies the magnitude of the cross - section at ultra - forward rapidities ($y \ge 6$), which implies an enhancement of the $B^{\pm}$ production at the FPF. Possible implications on the prompt neutrino flux at ultra-high energies are also briefly discussed., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Version to be published in European Physical Journal C
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- 2024
43. 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
44. Thrombectomy in ischemic stroke patients with tandem occlusion in the posterior versus anterior circulation
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Cappellari, Manuel, Pracucci, Giovanni, Saia, Valentina, Mandruzzato, Nicolò, Valletta, Francesco, Sallustio, Fabrizio, Casetta, Ilaria, Fainardi, Enrico, Da Ros, Valerio, Diomedi, Marina, Capasso, Francesco, Nencini, Patrizia, Vallone, Stefano, Bigliardi, Guido, Tessitore, Agostino, La Spina, Paolino, Bracco, Sandra, Tassi, Rossana, Bergui, Mauro, Cerrato, Paolo, Ruggiero, Maria, Longoni, Marco, Castellan, Lucio, Malfatto, Laura, Saletti, Andrea, De Vito, Alessandro, Menozzi, Roberto, Scoditti, Umberto, Simonetti, Luigi, Zini, Andrea, Lafe, Elvis, Cavallini, Anna, Lazzarotti, Guido Andrea, Giannini, Nicola, Boghi, Andrea, Naldi, Andrea, Romano, Daniele, Napoletano, Rosa, Comai, Alessio, Franchini, Enrica, Cavasin, Nicola, Critelli, Adriana, Giorgianni, Andrea, Cariddi, Lucia Princiotta, Semeraro, Vittorio, Boero, Giovanni, Zimatore, Domenico Sergio, Petruzzellis, Marco, Biraschi, Francesco, Nicolini, Ettore, Pedicelli, Alessandro, Frisullo, Giovanni, Calzoni, Andrea, Tassinari, Tiziana, Gallesio, Ivan, Sepe, Federica, Filauri, Pietro, Sacco, Simona, Lozupone, Emilio, Rizzo, Annalisa, Besana, Michele, Giossi, Alessia, Pavia, Marco, Invernizzi, Paolo, Amistà, Pietro, Russo, Monia, Florio, Francesco, Inchingolo, Vincenzo, Filizzolo, Marco, Mannino, Marina, Mangiafico, Salvatore, and Toni, Danilo
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- 2024
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45. Disordered regions in the IRE1α ER lumenal domain mediate its stress-induced clustering
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Kettel, Paulina, Marosits, Laura, Spinetti, Elena, Rechberger, Michael, Giannini, Caterina, Radler, Philipp, Niedermoser, Isabell, Fischer, Irmgard, Versteeg, Gijs A, Loose, Martin, Covino, Roberto, and Karagöz, G Elif
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- 2024
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46. Prognostic impact of microscopic residual disease after neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients undergoing interval debulking surgery for advanced ovarian cancer
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Di Donato, Violante, Caruso, Giuseppe, Golia D’Augè, Tullio, Perniola, Giorgia, Palaia, Innocenza, Tomao, Federica, Muzii, Ludovico, Pernazza, Angelina, Della Rocca, Carlo, Bogani, Giorgio, Benedetti Panici, Pierluigi, and Giannini, Andrea
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- 2024
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47. Exploring climate change adaptation options from climate analogues sites for wheat production in the Atsbi district Northern Ethiopia
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Kahsai, Yemane, Zenebe, Amanuel, Teklehaimanot, Abadi, Girma, Atkilt, Zenebe, Gebreyohannes, Shiferaw, Henok, and Giannini, Alessandra
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- 2024
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48. Evaluating the Role of Rectus Abdominis Fat Transfer (RAFT) in Improving Muscle Thickness: Does it Really Work? A 12-Month Follow-Up Cohort Study
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Borille, Giuliano B., Pereira Filho, Gustavo A., Zancanaro, Mariana, Ribeiro, Vinicius W, Giannini, Renato, and Danilla, Stefan
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- 2024
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49. Efficient near-infrared organic light-emitting diodes with emission from spin doublet excitons
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Cho, Hwan-Hee, Gorgon, Sebastian, Londi, Giacomo, Giannini, Samuele, Cho, Changsoon, Ghosh, Pratyush, Tonnelé, Claire, Casanova, David, Olivier, Yoann, Baikie, Tomi K., Li, Feng, Beljonne, David, Greenham, Neil C., Friend, Richard H., and Evans, Emrys W.
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- 2024
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50. 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
- Published
- 2024
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