4,279 results on '"Hoang, T."'
Search Results
2. Efficacy of cattle manure in improving the productivity of peanut (Arachis hypogaea) in sandy soil of Central Vietnam
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Hoang, T. T. H., Do, D. T., Tran, T. D., Duong, C. B., and Do, H. T. P.
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- 2023
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3. Effect of biofoliar fertilizers extracted from aquatic weeds on Chinese mustard (Brassica juncea) a green vegetable in Central Vietnam
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Hoang, T. T. H., Do, D. T., Trinh, T. S., Nguyen, V. B., and Hoang, T. N. V.
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- 2021
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4. Double pot technique for assessing deficiencies of potassium and sulfur on peanut (Arachis hypogaea) production in the sands of South-Central coastal Vietnam
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Hoang, T. T. H., Do, D. T., Vu, T. M., Do, H. T. P., and Bell, R. W.
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- 2022
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5. The LiteBIRD mission to explore cosmic inflation
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Ghigna, T., Adler, A., Aizawa, K., Akamatsu, H., Akizawa, R., Allys, E., Anand, A., Aumont, J., Austermann, J., Azzoni, S., Baccigalupi, C., Ballardini, M., Banday, A. J., Barreiro, R. B., Bartolo, N., Basak, S., Basyrov, A., Beckman, S., Bersanelli, M., Bortolami, M., Bouchet, F., Brinckmann, T., Campeti, P., Carinos, E., Carones, A., Casas, F. J., Cheung, K., Chinone, Y., Clermont, L., Columbro, F., Coppolecchia, A., Curtis, D., de Bernardis, P., de Haan, T., de la Hoz, E., De Petris, M., Della Torre, S., Monache, G. Delle, Di Giorgi, E., Dickinson, C., Diego-Palazuelos, P., García, J. J. Díaz, Dobbs, M., Dotani, T., D'Alessandro, G., Eriksen, H. K., Errard, J., Essinger-Hileman, T., Farias, N., Ferreira, E., Franceschet, C., Fuskeland, U., Galloni, G., Galloway, M., Ganga, K., Gerbino, M., Gervasi, M., Génova-Santos, R. T., Giardiello, S., Gimeno-Amo, C., Gjerløw, E., González, R. González, Grandsire, L., Gruppuso, A., Halverson, N. W., Hargrave, P., Harper, S. E., Hazumi, M., Henrot-Versillé, S., Hergt, L. T., Herranz, D., Hivon, E., Hlozek, R. A., Hoang, T. D., Hubmayr, J., Ichiki, K., Ikuma, K., Ishino, H., Jaehnig, G., Jost, B., Kohri, K., Konishi, K., Lamagna, L., Lattanzi, M., Leloup, C., Levrier, F., Lonappan, A. I., Luzzi, G., Macias-Perez, J., Maffei, B., Marchitelli, E., Martínez-González, E., Masi, S., Matarrese, S., Matsumura, T., Micheli, S., Migliaccio, M., Monelli, M., Montier, L., Morgante, G., Mousset, L., Nagano, Y., Nagata, R., Natoli, P., Novelli, A., Noviello, F., Obata, I., Occhiuzzi, A., Odagiri, K., Omae, R., Pagano, L., Paiella, A., Paoletti, D., Pascual-Cisneros, G., Patanchon, G., Pavlidou, V., Piacentini, F., Piat, M., Piccirilli, G., Pinchera, M., Pisano, G., Porcelli, L., Raffuzzi, N., Raum, C., Remazeilles, M., Ritacco, A., Rubino-Martin, J., Ruiz-Granda, M., Sakurai, Y., Savini, G., Scott, D., Sekimoto, Y., Shiraishi, M., Signorelli, G., Stever, S. L., Sullivan, R. M., Suzuki, A., Takaku, R., Takakura, H., Takakura, S., Tartari, Y. Takase. A., Tassis, K., Thompson, K. L., Tomasi, M., Tristram, M., Tucker, C., Vacher, L., van Tent, B., Vielva, P., Watanuki, K., Wehus, I. K., Westbrook, B., Weymann-Despres, G., Winter, B., Wollack, E. J., Zacchei, A., Zannoni, M., Zhou, Y., and Collaboration, the LiteBIRD
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
LiteBIRD, the next-generation cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiment, aims for a launch in Japan's fiscal year 2032, marking a major advancement in the exploration of primordial cosmology and fundamental physics. Orbiting the Sun-Earth Lagrangian point L2, this JAXA-led strategic L-class mission will conduct a comprehensive mapping of the CMB polarization across the entire sky. During its 3-year mission, LiteBIRD will employ three telescopes within 15 unique frequency bands (ranging from 34 through 448 GHz), targeting a sensitivity of 2.2\,$\mu$K-arcmin and a resolution of 0.5$^\circ$ at 100\,GHz. Its primary goal is to measure the tensor-to-scalar ratio $r$ with an uncertainty $\delta r = 0.001$, including systematic errors and margin. If $r \geq 0.01$, LiteBIRD expects to achieve a $>5\sigma$ detection in the $\ell=$2-10 and $\ell=$11-200 ranges separately, providing crucial insight into the early Universe. We describe LiteBIRD's scientific objectives, the application of systems engineering to mission requirements, the anticipated scientific impact, and the operations and scanning strategies vital to minimizing systematic effects. We will also highlight LiteBIRD's synergies with concurrent CMB projects., Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, 1 table, SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024
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- 2024
6. Changes in heat waves characteristics over Extremadura (SW Spain)
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Acero, F. J., Fernández-Fernández, M. I., Carrasco, V. M. S., Parey, S., Hoang, T. T. Huong, Dacunha-Castelle, D., and García, J. A.
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Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics - Abstract
Heat wave (HW) events are becoming more frequent, and they have important consequences because of the negative effects they can have not only on the human population in health terms, but also on biodiversity and agriculture. This motivated a study of the trends in HW events over Extremadura, a region in the southwest of Spain, with much of its area in summer devoted to the production of irrigated crops such as maize and tomatoes. Heat waves were defined for the study as two consecutive days with temperatures above the 95th percentile of the summer (June-August) maximum temperature (Tmax) time series. Two datasets were used: one consisted of 13 daily temperature records uniformly distributed over the Region, and the other was the SPAIN02 gridded observational dataset, extracting just the points corresponding to Extremadura. The trends studied were in the duration, intensity, and frequency of HW events, and in other parameters such as the mean, low (25th percentile), and high (75th percentile) values. In general terms, the results showed significant positive trends in those parameters over the east, the northwest, and a small area in the south of the Region. In order to study changes in HW characteristics (duration, frequency and intensity) considering different subperiods, a stochastic model was used to generate 1000 time series equivalent to the observed ones. The results showed that there were no significant changes in HW duration in the last 10-year subperiod in comparison with the first. But the results were different for warm events (WE), defined with a lower threshold (the 75th percentile), which are also important for agriculture. For several sites, there were significant changes in WE duration, frequency, and intensity., Comment: 36 pages, 11 figures
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- 2024
7. Impact of beam far side-lobe knowledge in the presence of foregrounds for LiteBIRD
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Leloup, C., Patanchon, G., Errard, J., Franceschet, C., Gudmundsson, J. E., Henrot-Versillé, S., Imada, H., Ishino, H., Matsumura, T., Puglisi, G., Wang, W., Adler, A., Aumont, J., Aurlien, R., Baccigalupi, C., Ballardini, M., Banday, A. J., Barreiro, R. B., Bartolo, N., Basyrov, A., Bersanelli, M., Blinov, D., Bortolami, M., Brinckmann, T., Campeti, P., Carones, A., Carralot, F., Casas, F. J., Cheung, K., Clermont, L., Columbro, F., Conenna, G., Coppolecchia, A., Cuttaia, F., D'Alessandro, G., de Bernardis, P., de Haan, T., De Petris, M., Della Torre, S., Diego-Palazuelos, P., Eriksen, H. K., Finelli, F., Fuskeland, U., Galloni, G., Galloway, M., Georges, M., Gerbino, M., Gervasi, M., Génova-Santos, R. T., Ghigna, T., Giardiello, S., Gimeno-Amo, C., Gjerløw, E., Gruppuso, A., Hazumi, M., Hergt, L. T., Herranz, D., Hivon, E., Hoang, T. D., Jost, B., Kohri, K., Krachmalnicoff, N., Lee, A. T., Lembo, M., Levrier, F., Lonappan, A. I., López-Caniego, M., Macias-Perez, J., Martínez-González, E., Masi, S., Matarrese, S., Micheli, S., Monelli, M., Montier, L., Morgante, G., Mot, B., Mousset, L., Namikawa, T., Natoli, P., Novelli, A., Noviello, F., Obata, I., Odagiri, K., Pagano, L., Paiella, A., Paoletti, D., Pascual-Cisneros, G., Pavlidou, V., Piacentini, F., Piccirilli, G., Pisano, G., Polenta, G., Raffuzzi, N., Remazeilles, M., Ritacco, A., Rizzieri, A., Ruiz-Granda, M., Sakurai, Y., Shiraishi, M., Stever, S. L., Takase, Y., Tassis, K., Terenzi, L., Thompson, K. L., Tristram, M., Vacher, L., Vielva, P., Wehus, I. K., Weymann-Despres, G., Zannoni, M., and Zhou, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a study of the impact of an uncertainty in the beam far side-lobe knowledge on the measurement of the Cosmic Microwave Background $B$-mode signal at large scale. It is expected to be one of the main source of systematic effects in future CMB observations. Because it is crucial for all-sky survey missions to take into account the interplays between beam systematic effects and all the data analysis steps, the primary goal of this paper is to provide the methodology to carry out the end-to-end study of their effect for a space-borne CMB polarization experiment, up to the cosmological results in the form of a bias $\delta r$ on the tensor-to-scalar ratio $r$. LiteBIRD is dedicated to target the measurement of CMB primordial $B$ modes by reaching a sensitivity of $\sigma \left( r \right) \leq 10^{-3}$ assuming $r=0$. As a demonstration of our framework, we derive the relationship between the knowledge of the beam far side-lobes and the tentatively allocated error budget under given assumptions on design, simulation and component separation method. We assume no mitigation of the far side-lobes effect at any stage of the analysis pipeline. We show that $\delta r$ is mostly due to the integrated fractional power difference between the estimated beams and the true beams in the far side-lobes region, with little dependence on the actual shape of the beams, for low enough $\delta r$. Under our set of assumptions, in particular considering the specific foreground cleaning method we used, we find that the integrated fractional power in the far side-lobes should be known at a level as tight as $\sim 10^{-4}$, to achieve the required limit on the bias $\delta r < 1.9 \times 10^{-5}$. The framework and tools developed for this study can be easily adapted to provide requirements under different design, data analysis frameworks and for other future space-borne experiments beyond LiteBIRD.
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- 2023
8. A Differential Particle Swarm Optimization-based Support Vector Machine Classifier for Fault Diagnosis in Power Distribution Systems
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CHO, M. Y. and HOANG, T. T.
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fault diagnosis ,particle swarm optimization ,power distribution lines ,reflectometry ,support vector machines ,Electrical engineering. Electronics. Nuclear engineering ,TK1-9971 ,Computer engineering. Computer hardware ,TK7885-7895 - Abstract
This paper proposes a new differential particle swarm optimization (DPSO) method for obtaining optimum support vector machine (SVM) parameters used for electrical fault diagnosis in radial distribution systems. Further, a multiple-stage DPSO-SVM classifier is developed to enhance classification accuracy in the fault diagnosis. Also, time-domain reflectometry (TDR) method with pseudo-random binary sequence (PRBS) excitation is utilized for generating the dataset required for validating this proposed approach. According to the characteristic of echo responses found in different types of faults, 12 features are extracted as input vectors for purposes of classification. The proposed fault diagnosis approach is tested on a typical radial distribution system to classify ten types of short-circuit faults accurately. Further, to demonstrate the superiority of the proposed DPSO algorithm, comparative studies of fault diagnosis are performed using SVM having parameters selected using cross-validation, GA and PSO. The overall classification accuracy obtained for fault diagnosis is 98.5%, which shows the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
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- 2017
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9. Correction: Cost analysis of establishing and operating the first human milk bank at Da Nang Hospital for women and children in Vietnam: an activity-based costing ingredients study
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Hoang, Minh V., Nguyen, Tuan T., Tran, Anh T., Luu, Toan Q., Vu, Mai Q., Tran, Hoang T., Nguyen, Oanh T. X., and Mathisen, Roger
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- 2024
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10. Cost analysis of establishing and operating the first human milk bank at Da Nang Hospital for Women and Children in Vietnam: an activity-based costing ingredients study
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Hoang, Minh V., Nguyen, Tuan T., Tran, Anh T., Luu, Toan Q., Vu, Mai Q., Tran, Hoang T., Nguyen, Oanh T. X., and Mathisen, Roger
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- 2024
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11. Assessing and forecasting collective urban heat exposure with smart city digital twins
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Pan, Xiyu, Mavrokapnidis, Dimitris, Ly, Hoang T., Mohammadi, Neda, and Taylor, John E.
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- 2024
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12. Cost analysis of establishing and operating the first human milk bank at Da Nang Hospital for Women and Children in Vietnam: an activity-based costing ingredients study
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Minh V. Hoang, Tuan T. Nguyen, Anh T. Tran, Toan Q. Luu, Mai Q. Vu, Hoang T. Tran, Oanh T. X. Nguyen, and Roger Mathisen
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Activity-based costing ingredients (ABC-I) ,Cost analysis ,Donor human milk (DHM) ,Human milk bank (HMB) ,Vietnam ,Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Breastfeeding is the biological norm for feeding infants and young children. When mothers’ breastmilk is unavailable, donor human milk (DHM) from a human milk bank (HMB) becomes the next option for small vulnerable newborns. A comprehensive cost analysis is essential for understanding the investments needed to establish, operate, and scale up HMBs. This study aims to estimate and analyze such costs at the first facility established in Vietnam. Methods An activity-based costing ingredients (ABC-I) approach was employed, with the cost perspective from service provision agencies (specifically, the project conducted at Da Nang Hospital for Women and Children and Development Partners). Estimated financial costs, based on actual expenditures, were measured in 2023 local currency and then converted to 2023 US dollars (USD). We examined three scenarios: 1) direct start-up costs + indirect start-up costs + implementation costs, 2) direct start-up costs + implementation costs, and 3) capital costs + implementation costs over the 6.5 years of operation. Results The total start-up cost was USD 616,263, with total expenditure on direct activities at USD 228,131 and indirect activities at USD 388,132. Investment in equipment accounted for the largest proportion (USD 84,213). The monthly costs of Da Nang HMB were USD 25,217, 14,565, and 9,326, corresponding to scenarios 1, 2, and 3, respectively. Over HMB's 6.5 years of operation, on average, the unit costs were USD 166, USD 96, and USD 62 for DHM received and USD 201, USD 116, and USD 74 for pasteurized DHM meeting specified criteria in the corresponding scenarios. Unit costs were highest in the initial six months, decreased, and reached their lowest levels after a year. Then, the unit costs experienced an increase in late 2020 and early 2021. Conclusion Although the unit cost of DHM in Da Nang HMB is comparable to that in certain neighboring countries, intentional measures to reduce disposal rates, improve HMB efficiency, motivate more community-based donors, and establish an HMB service network should be implemented to lower costs.
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- 2024
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13. Mechanistic and kinetic insights of the formation of allene and propyne from the C3H3 reaction with water
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Trang, Hoang T. T. and Pham, Tien V.
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- 2024
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14. Tensor-to-scalar ratio forecasts for extended LiteBIRD frequency configurations
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Fuskeland, U., Aumont, J., Aurlien, R., Baccigalupi, C., Banday, A. J., Eriksen, H. K., Errard, J., Génova-Santos, R. T., Hasebe, T., Hubmayr, J., Imada, H., Krachmalnicoff, N., Lamagna, L., Pisano, G., Poletti, D., Remazeilles, M., Thompson, K. L., Vacher, L., Wehus, I. K., Azzoni, S., Ballardini, M., Barreiro, R. B., Bartolo, N., Basyrov, A., Beck, D., Bersanelli, M., Bortolami, M., Brilenkov, M., Calabrese, E., Carones, A., Casas, F. J., Cheung, K., Chluba, J., Clark, S. E., Clermont, L., Columbro, F., Coppolecchia, A., D'Alessandro, G., de Bernardis, P., de Haan, T., de la Hoz, E., De Petris, M., Della Torre, S., Diego-Palazuelos, P., Finelli, F., Franceschet, C., Galloni, G., Galloway, M., Gerbino, M., Gervasi, M., Ghigna, T., Giardiello, S., Gjerløw, E., Gruppuso, A., Hargrave, P., Hattori, M., Hazumi, M., Hergt, L. T., Herman, D., Herranz, D., Hivon, E., Hoang, T. D., Kohri, K., Lattanzi, M., Lee, A. T., Leloup, C., Levrier, F., Lonappan, A. I., Luzzi, G., Maffei, B., Martínez-González, E., Masi, S., Matarrese, S., Matsumura, T., Migliaccio, M., Montier, L., Morgante, G., Mot, B., Mousset, L., Nagata, R., Namikawa, T., Nati, F., Natoli, P., Nerval, S., Novelli, A., Pagano, L., Paiella, A., Paoletti, D., Pascual-Cisneros, G., Patanchon, G., Pelgrims, V., Piacentini, F., Piccirilli, G., Polenta, G., Puglisi, G., Raffuzzi, N., Ritacco, A., Rubino-Martin, J. A., Savini, G., Scott, D., Sekimoto, Y., Shiraishi, M., Signorelli, G., Stever, S. L., Stutzer, N., Sullivan, R. M., Takakura, H., Terenzi, L., Thommesen, H., Tristram, M., Tsuji, M., Vielva, P., Weller, J., Westbrook, B., Weymann-Despres, G., Wollack, E. J., and Zannoni, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
LiteBIRD is a planned JAXA-led CMB B-mode satellite experiment aiming for launch in the late 2020s, with a primary goal of detecting the imprint of primordial inflationary gravitational waves. Its current baseline focal-plane configuration includes 15 frequency bands between 40 and 402 GHz, fulfilling the mission requirements to detect the amplitude of gravitational waves with the total uncertainty on the tensor-to-scalar ratio, $\delta r$, down to $\delta r<0.001$. A key aspect of this performance is accurate astrophysical component separation, and the ability to remove polarized thermal dust emission is particularly important. In this paper we note that the CMB frequency spectrum falls off nearly exponentially above 300 GHz relative to the thermal dust SED, and a relatively minor high frequency extension can therefore result in even lower uncertainties and better model reconstructions. Specifically, we compare the baseline design with five extended configurations, while varying the underlying dust modeling, in each of which the HFT (High-Frequency Telescope) frequency range is shifted logarithmically towards higher frequencies, with an upper cutoff ranging between 400 and 600 GHz. In each case, we measure the tensor-to-scalar ratio $r$ uncertainty and bias using both parametric and minimum-variance component-separation algorithms. When the thermal dust sky model includes a spatially varying spectral index and temperature, we find that the statistical uncertainty on $r$ after foreground cleaning may be reduced by as much as 30--50 % by extending the upper limit of the frequency range from 400 to 600 GHz, with most of the improvement already gained at 500 GHz. We also note that a broader frequency range leads to better ability to discriminate between models through higher $\chi^2$ sensitivity. (abridged), Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures. Published in A&A
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- 2023
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15. A Novel Method for Straight Take-Off of Quadrotors in GPS-Denied Environments Utilizing Optical Flow
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Tran, Dong L. T., Vo, Thanh C., Do, Hai T., Nguyen, Vinh Q., Nguyen, Anh D., Hoang, Thang, Nguyen, Quan N. A., Tran, Hoang T., Nguyen, Minh T., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Duy Cuong, editor, Hai, Do Trung, editor, Vu, Ngoc Pi, editor, Long, Banh Tien, editor, Puta, Horst, editor, and Sattler, Kai-Uwe, editor
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- 2024
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16. AR Marker Detection Based Autonomous Attitude Control for an Indoor Non-GPS Aided Quadcopter
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Do, Hai T., Nguyen, Cuong V., Tran, Hoang T., Nguyen, Vinh Q., Nguyen, Hoa TT., Nguyen, Nam H., Vo, Ha T., Trinh, Mien L., Nguyen, Huy D., Nguyen, Minh T., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Duy Cuong, editor, Hai, Do Trung, editor, Vu, Ngoc Pi, editor, Long, Banh Tien, editor, Puta, Horst, editor, and Sattler, Kai-Uwe, editor
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- 2024
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17. The JCMT BISTRO Survey: Multi-wavelength polarimetry of bright regions in NGC 2071 in the far-infrared/submillimetre range, with POL-2 and HAWC+
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Fanciullo, L., Kemper, F., Pattle, K., Koch, P. M., Sadavoy, S., Coudé, S., Soam, A., Hoang, T., Onaka, T., Gouellec, V. J. M. Le, Arzoumanian, D., Berry, D., Eswaraiah, C., Chung, E. J., Furuya, R., Hull, C. L. H., Hwang, J., Johnstone, D., Kang, J. -h., Kim, K. H., Kirchschlager, F., Könyves, V., Kwon, J., Kwon, W., Lai, S. -P., Lee, C. W., Liu, T., Lyo, A. -R., Stephens, I., Tamura, M., Tang, X., Ward-Thompson, D., Whitworth, A., and Shinnaga, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Polarized dust emission is a key tracer in the study of interstellar medium and of star formation. The observed polarization, however, is a product of magnetic field structure, dust grain properties and grain alignment efficiency, as well as their variations in the line of sight, making it difficult to interpret polarization unambiguously. The comparison of polarimetry at multiple wavelengths is a possible way of mitigating this problem. We use data from HAWC+/SOFIA and from SCUBA-2/POL-2 (from the BISTRO survey) to analyse the NGC 2071 molecular cloud at 154, 214 and 850 $\mu$m. The polarization angle changes significantly with wavelength over part of NGC 2071, suggesting a change in magnetic field morphology on the line of sight as each wavelength best traces different dust populations. Other possible explanations are the existence of more than one polarization mechanism in the cloud or scattering from very large grains. The observed change of polarization fraction with wavelength, and the 214-to-154 $\mu$m polarization ratio in particular, are difficult to reproduce with current dust models under the assumption of uniform alignment efficiency. We also show that the standard procedure of using monochromatic intensity as a proxy for column density may produce spurious results at HAWC+ wavelengths. Using both long-wavelength (POL-2, 850 $\mu$m) and short-wavelength (HAWC+, $\lesssim 200\, \mu$m) polarimetry is key in obtaining these results. This study clearly shows the importance of multi-wavelength polarimetry at submillimeter bands to understand the dust properties of molecular clouds and the relationship between magnetic field and star formation., Comment: Main article: 18 pages, 11 figures. Online supplemental material: 2 pages, 3 figures
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- 2022
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18. BeyondPlanck IV. On end-to-end simulations in CMB analysis -- Bayesian versus frequentist statistics
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Brilenkov, M., Fornazier, K. S. F., Hergt, L. T., Hoerning, G. A., Marins, A., Murokoshi, T., Rahman, F., Stutzer, N. -O., Zhou, Y., Abdalla, F. B., Andersen, K. J., Aurlien, R., Banerji, R., Basyrov, A., Battista, A., Bersanelli, M., Bertocco, S., Bollanos, S., Colombo, L. P. L., Eriksen, H. K., Eskilt, J. R., Foss, M. K., Franceschet, C., Fuskeland, U., Galeotta, S., Galloway, M., Gerakakis, S., Gjerlow, E., Hensley, B., Herman, D., Hoang, T. D., Ieronymaki, M., Ihle, H. T., Jewell, J. B., Karakci, A., Keihanen, E., Keskitalo, R., Maggio, G., Maino, D., Maris, M., Paradiso, S., Partridge, B., Reinecke, M., Suur-Uski, A. -S., Svalheim, T. L., Tavagnacco, D., Thommesen, H., Tomasi, M., Watts, D. J., Wehus, I. K., and Zacchei, A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
End-to-end simulations play a key role in the analysis of any high-sensitivity CMB experiment, providing high-fidelity systematic error propagation capabilities unmatched by any other means. In this paper, we address an important issue regarding such simulations, namely how to define the inputs in terms of sky model and instrument parameters. These may either be taken as a constrained realization derived from the data, or as a random realization independent from the data. We refer to these as Bayesian and frequentist simulations, respectively. We show that the two options lead to significantly different correlation structures, as frequentist simulations, contrary to Bayesian simulations, effectively include cosmic variance, but exclude realization-specific correlations from non-linear degeneracies. Consequently, they quantify fundamentally different types of uncertainties, and we argue that they therefore also have different and complementary scientific uses, even if this dichotomy is not absolute. Before BeyondPlanck, most pipelines have used a mix of constrained and random inputs, and used the same hybrid simulations for all applications, even though the statistical justification for this is not always evident. BeyondPlanck represents the first end-to-end CMB simulation framework that is able to generate both types of simulations, and these new capabilities have brought this topic to the forefront. The Bayesian BeyondPlanck simulations and their uses are described extensively in a suite of companion papers. In this paper we consider one important applications of the corresponding frequentist simulations, namely code validation. That is, we generate a set of 1-year LFI 30 GHz frequentist simulations with known inputs, and use these to validate the core low-level BeyondPlanck algorithms; gain estimation, correlated noise estimation, and mapmaking.
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- 2022
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19. Occurrence and removal of antibiotic resistant Escherichia coli and antibiotic resistance genes in an urban wastewater treatment plant
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Le, T H, Tong, D K, Pham, T T V, Hoang, T L, Tran, T K, and Ng, C
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- 2023
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20. Assessing and forecasting collective urban heat exposure with smart city digital twins
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Xiyu Pan, Dimitris Mavrokapnidis, Hoang T. Ly, Neda Mohammadi, and John E. Taylor
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Due to population growth, climate change, and the urban heat island effect, heat exposure is becoming an important issue faced by urban built environments. Heat exposure assessment is a prerequisite for mitigation measures to reduce the impact of heat exposure. However, there is limited research on urban heat exposure assessment approaches that provides fine-scale spatiotemporal heat exposure information, integrated with meteorological status and human collective exposure as they move about in cities, to enable proactive heat exposure mitigation measures. Smart city digital twins (SCDTs) provide a new potential avenue for addressing this gap, enabling fine spatiotemporal scales, human-infrastructure interaction modeling, and predictive and decision support capabilities. This study aims to develop and test an SCDT for collective urban heat exposure assessment and forecasting. Meteorological sensors and computer vision techniques were implemented in Columbus, Georgia, to acquire temperature, humidity, and passersby count data. These data were then integrated into a collective temperature humidity index. A time-series prediction model and a crowd simulation were employed to predict future short-term heat exposures based on the data accumulated by this SCDT and to support heat exposure mitigation efforts. The results demonstrate the potential of SCDT to enhance public safety by providing city officials with a tool for discovering, predicting, and, ultimately, mitigating community exposure to extreme heat.
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- 2024
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21. Intelligent mobile robot for contagious disease treatments in hospitals
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Hoang T. Tran, Dong TL. Tran, Minh T. Nguyen, and Thang C. Vu
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Design an Intelligent Mobile Robot for Contagious Disease Treatments in Hospitals ,Science - Abstract
This paper provides a novel and applicable work that builds a real system for disinfecting the air and surfaces of the environment in a hospital room, with a non-contact measurement system for supporting contagious disease treatments in hospitals. The system is built on an intelligent mobile robot system that operates autonomously in a simulated real treatment room. The research team uses a new positioning algorithm. It is a combination of data from the Lidar sensor, encoder, and Extended Kalman filter. The program that applies segmentation and image feature extraction algorithms is developed to meet requirements of real-time environment mapping in the room. Control algorithms for moving and avoiding obstacles are also proposed. Next, techniques for collecting health data including patient identification, body temperature, and blood oxygen index via wireless sensor network are also mentioned in the article. Analysis and experimental results show qualified outcomes and promise. The main contribution of the paper can be listed as follows. • Design and build a new CEE-IMR, an intelligent mobile robot that can regconize patients, guide and lead them walking in hospitals, especially keep a safe distance avoiding contagious deseases. • A novel framework for controlling the robot is proposed. The robot can move flexible, avoid obstacles, etc. based on advanced control algorithms. A new control mechanism is also proposed. • Methods of collecting data and processing medical data to support either patients or doctors to improve the effecency in hospitals in contagious disease management.
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- 2024
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22. Electric monopole transition from the superdeformed band in $^{40}$Ca
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Ideguchi, E., Kibédi, T., Dowie, J. T. H., Hoang, T. H., Raju, M. Kumar, Aoi, N., Mitchell, A. J., Stuchbery, A. E., Shimizu, N., Utsuno, Y., Akber, A., Bignell, L. J., Coombes, B. J., Eriksen, T. K., Gray, T. J., Lane, G. J., and McCormick, B. P.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The electric monopole ($E0$) transition strength $\rho^2$ for the transition connecting the third 0$^+$ level, a "superdeformed" band head, to the "spherical" 0$^+$ ground state in doubly magic $^{40}$Ca has been determined via $e^+e^-$ pair-conversion spectroscopy. The measured value, $\rho^2(E0; 0^+_3 \to 0^+_1)~=~2.3(5)\times10^{-3}$, is the smallest $\rho^2(E0; 0^+ \to 0^+)$ found in $A<50$ nuclei. In contrast, the $E0$ transition strength to the ground state observed from the second 0$^+$ state, a band head of "normal" deformation, is an order of magnitude larger, $\rho^2(E0; 0^+_2 \to 0^+_1)~=~25.9(16)\times~10^{-3}$, which shows significant mixing between these two states. Large-Scale Shell Model (LSSM) calculations were performed to understand the microscopic structure of the excited states, and the configuration mixing between them; experimental $\rho^2$ values in $^{40}$Ca and neighboring isotopes were well reproduced by the LSSM calculations. The unusually small $\rho^2(E0; 0^+_3 \to 0^+_1)$ value is due to destructive interference in the mixing of shape-coexisting structures, which are based on several different multiparticle-multihole excitations. This observation goes beyond the usual treatment of $E0$ strengths, where two-state shape mixing cannot result in destructive interference.
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- 2022
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23. Prevalence of exposure to domestic and family violence among Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children in the Northern Territory of Australia
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Phan, Hoang T., He, Vincent Y.F., Clifford, Sarah, Jackson, Warren, and Guthridge, Steven
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- 2024
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24. Potential risks of soil erosion in North-Central Vietnam using remote sensing and GIS /Riscos potenciais de erosão do solo no centro-norte do Vietnã usando sensoriamento remoto e GIS
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Ha, Nguyen T.T., Tuyen, Tran T., Sarzhanovna, Astarkhanova T., Thuy, Hoang T., Luong, Vu V., Du, Tran D., Tai, Dau K., The, Hoang A., Thanh, Nguyen N., Duong, Phung T., Ha, Vo T.T., and Khanh, Vo T.N.
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- 2023
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25. Prediction of temperature and structural properties of fibre-reinforced polymer laminates under simulated fire exposure using artificial neural networks
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Loh, Thomas W., Nguyen, Hoang T., and Nguyen, Kate T.Q.
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- 2024
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26. Lighting the way: recent developments and applications in molecular optogenetics
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Armbruster, Anja, Mohamed, Asim ME, Phan, Hoang T, and Weber, Wilfried
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- 2024
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27. Early-life nasal microbiota dynamics relate to longitudinal respiratory phenotypes in urban children
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McCauley, Kathryn E., Durack, Juliana, Lynch, Kole V., Fadrosh, Douglas W., Fujimura, Kei E., Vundla, Faith, Özçam, Mustafa, LeBeau, Petra, Caltroni, Agustin, Burns, Preston, Tran, Hoang T., Bacharier, Leonard B., Kattan, Meyer, O’Connor, George T., Wood, Robert A., Togias, Alkis, Boushey, Homer A., Jackson, Daniel J., Gern, James E., and Lynch, Susan V.
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- 2024
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28. Automated Generation of Accurate \& Fluent Medical X-ray Reports
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Nguyen, Hoang T. N., Nie, Dong, Badamdorj, Taivanbat, Liu, Yujie, Zhu, Yingying, Truong, Jason, and Cheng, Li
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Our paper focuses on automating the generation of medical reports from chest X-ray image inputs, a critical yet time-consuming task for radiologists. Unlike existing medical re-port generation efforts that tend to produce human-readable reports, we aim to generate medical reports that are both fluent and clinically accurate. This is achieved by our fully differentiable and end-to-end paradigm containing three complementary modules: taking the chest X-ray images and clinical his-tory document of patients as inputs, our classification module produces an internal check-list of disease-related topics, referred to as enriched disease embedding; the embedding representation is then passed to our transformer-based generator, giving rise to the medical reports; meanwhile, our generator also pro-duces the weighted embedding representation, which is fed to our interpreter to ensure consistency with respect to disease-related topics.Our approach achieved promising results on commonly-used metrics concerning language fluency and clinical accuracy. Moreover, noticeable performance gains are consistently ob-served when additional input information is available, such as the clinical document and extra scans of different views., Comment: accepted in emnlp
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- 2021
29. Free boundary equilibrium determination of HL-3 discharges
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Zhong, Y.Y., Xue, L., Zhong, W.L., Li, J.X., Hoang, T., Garcia, J., Artaud, J.F., Song, X., Yan, Z., Ma, R., Liu, L., Wu, N., and Heumann, H.
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- 2024
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30. QUBIC IV: Performance of TES Bolometers and Readout Electronics
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Piat, M., Stankowiak, G., Battistelli, E. S., de Bernardis, P., Alessandro, G. D, De Petris, M., Grandsire, L., Hamilton, J. -Ch., Hoang, T. D., Marnieros, S., Masi, S., Mennella, A., Mousset, L., Sullivan, C. O, Prele, D., Tartari, A., Thermeau, J. -P., Torchinsky, S. A., Voisin, F., Zannoni, M., Ade, P., Alberro, J. G., Almela, A., Amico, G., Arnaldi, L. H., Auguste, D., Aumont, J., Azzoni, S., Banfi, S., Belier, B., Bau, A., Bennett, D., Berge, L., Bernard, J. -Ph., Bersanelli, M., Bigot-Sazy, M. -A., Bonaparte, J., Bonis, J., Bunn, E., Burke, D., Buzi, D., Cavaliere, F., Chanial, P., Chapron, C., Charlassier, R., Cerutti, A. C. Cobos, Columbro, F., Coppolecchia, A., De Gasperis, G., De Leo, M., Dheilly, S., Duca, C., Dumoulin, L., Etchegoyen, A., Fasciszewski, A., Ferreyro, L. P., Fracchia, D., Franceschet, C., Lerena, M. M. Gamboa, Ganga, K. M., Garcia, B., Redondo, M. E. Garcia, Gaspard, M., Gayer, D., Gervasi, M., Giard, M., Gilles, V., Giraud-Heraud, Y., Berisson, M. Gomez, Gonzalez, M., Gradziel, M., Hampel, M. R., Harari, D., Henrot-Versille, S., Incardona, F., Jules, E., Kaplan, J., Kristukat, C., Lamagna, L., Loucatos, S., Louis, T., Maffei, B., Marty, W., Mattei, A., May, A., McCulloch, M., Mele, L., Melo, D., Montier, L., Mundo, L. M., Murphy, J. A., Murphy, J. D., Nati, F., Olivieri, E., Oriol, C., Paiella, A., Pajot, F., Passerini, A., Pastoriza, H., Pelosi, A., Perbost, C., Perciballi, M., Pezzotta, F., Piacentini, F., Piccirillo, L., Pisano, G., Platino, M., Polenta, G., Puddu, R., Rambaud, D., Rasztocky, E., Ringegni, P., Romero, G. E., Salum, J. M., Schillaci, A., Scoccola, C. G., Scully, S., Spinelli, S., Stolpovskiy, M., Supanitsky, A. D., Timbie, P., Tomasi, M., Tucker, C., Tucker, G., Vigano, D., Vittorio, N., Wicek, F., Wright, M., and Zullo, A.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A prototype version of the Q & U bolometric interferometer for cosmology (QUBIC) underwent a campaign of testing in the laboratory at Astroparticle Physics and Cosmology laboratory in Paris (APC). The detection chain is currently made of 256 NbSi transition edge sensors (TES) cooled to 320 mK. The readout system is a 128:1 time domain multiplexing scheme based on 128 SQUIDs cooled at 1 K that are controlled and amplified by an SiGe application specific integrated circuit at 40 K. We report the performance of this readout chain and the characterization of the TES. The readout system has been functionally tested and characterized in the lab and in QUBIC. The low noise amplifier demonstrated a white noise level of 0.3 nV.Hz^-0.5. Characterizations of the QUBIC detectors and readout electronics includes the measurement of I-V curves, time constant and the noise equivalent power. The QUBIC TES bolometer array has approximately 80% detectors within operational parameters. It demonstrated a thermal decoupling compatible with a phonon noise of about 5.10^-17 W.Hz^-0.5 at 410 mK critical temperature. While still limited by microphonics from the pulse tubes and noise aliasing from readout system, the instrument noise equivalent power is about 2.10^-16 W.Hz^-0.5, enough for the demonstration of bolometric interferometry., Comment: Accepted for publication in JCAP
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- 2021
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31. Correction: Cost analysis of establishing and operating the first human milk bank at Da Nang Hospital for women and children in Vietnam: an activity-based costing ingredients study
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Minh V. Hoang, Tuan T. Nguyen, Anh T. Tran, Toan Q. Luu, Mai Q. Vu, Hoang T. Tran, Oanh T. X. Nguyen, and Roger Mathisen
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Pediatrics ,RJ1-570 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Published
- 2024
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32. Dust polarized emission observations of NGC 6334; BISTRO reveals the details of the complex but organized magnetic field structure of the high-mass star-forming hub-filament network
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Arzoumanian, D., Furuya, R., Hasegawa, T., Tahani, M., Sadavoy, S., Hull, C. L. H., Johnstone, D., Koch, P. M., Inutsuka, S. -i., Doi, Y., Hoang, T., Onaka, T., Iwasaki, K., Shimajiri, Y., Inoue, T., Peretto, N., André, P., Bastien, P., Berry, D., Chen, H. -R. V., Di Francesco, J., Eswaraiah, C., Fanciullo, L., Fissel, L. M., Hwang, J., Kang, J. -h., Kim, G., Kim, K. -T., Kirchschlager, F., Kwon, W., Lee, C. W., Liu, H. -L., Lyo, A. -R., Pattle, K., Soam, A., Tang, X., Whitworth, A., Ching, T. -C., Coudé, S., Wang, J. -W., Ward-Thompson, D., Lai, S. -P., Qiu, K., Bourke, T. L., Byun, D. -Y., Chen, M., Chen, Z., Chen, W. P., Cho, J., Choi, Y., Choi, M., Chrysostomou, A., Chung, E. J., Dai, S., Diep, P. N., Duan, H. -Y., Duan, Y., Eden, D., Fiege, J., Franzmann, E., Friberg, P., Fuller, G., Gledhill, T., Graves, S., Greaves, J., Griffin, M., Gu, Q., Han, I., Hatchell, J., Hayashi, S., Houde, M., Jeong, I. -G., Kang, M., Kang, S. -j., Kataoka, A., Kawabata, K., Kemper, F., Kim, M. -R., Kim, K. H., Kim, J., Kim, S., Kirk, J., Kobayashi, M. I. N., Konyves, V., Kusune, T., Kwon, J., Lacaille, K., Law, C. -Y., Lee, C. -F., Lee, Y. -H., Lee, S. -S., Lee, H., Lee, J. -E., Li, H. -b., Li, D., Liu, J., Liu, T., Liu, S. -Y., Lu, X., Mairs, S., Matsumura, M., Matthews, B., Moriarty-Schieven, G., Nagata, T., Nakamura, F., Nakanishi, H., Ngoc, N. B., Ohashi, N., Park, G., Parsons, H., Pyo, T. -S., Qian, L., Rao, R., Rawlings, J., Rawlings, M., Retter, B., Richer, J., Rigby, A., Saito, H., Savini, G., Scaife, A., Seta, M., Shinnaga, H., Tamura, M., Tang, Y. -W., Tomisaka, K., Tram, L. N., Tsukamoto, Y., Viti, S., Wang, H., Xie, J., Yen, H. -W., Yoo, H., Yuan, J., Yun, H. -S., Zenko, T., Zhang, G., Zhang, C. -P., Zhang, Y., Zhou, J., Zhu, L., de Looze, I., Dowell, C. D., Eyres, S., Falle, S., Friesen, R., Robitaille, J. -F., and van Loo, S.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
[Abridged] Filaments and hubs have received special attention recently thanks to studies showing their role in star formation. While the column density and velocity structures of both filaments and hubs have been studied, their magnetic fields (B-field) are not yet characterized. We aim to understand the role of the B-field in the dynamical evolution of the NGC 6334 hub-filament network. We present new observations of the dust polarized emission at 850$\mu$m towards NGC 6334 obtained with the JCMT/POL-2. We study the distribution and dispersion of the polarized intensity ($PI$), the polarization fraction ($PF$), and the B-field angle ($\theta_{B}$). We derive the power spectrum of the intensity and $\theta_{B}$ along the ridge crest. Our analyses show a complex B-field structure when observed over the whole region ($\sim10$ pc), however, at smaller scales ($\sim1$ pc), $\theta_{B}$ varies coherently along the filaments. The observed power spectrum of $\theta_{B}$ can be well represented with a power law function with a slope $-1.33\pm0.23$, which is $\sim20\%$ shallower than that of $I$. This result is compatible with the properties of simulated filaments and may indicate the processes at play in the formation of filaments. $\theta_{B}$ rotates from being mostly perpendicular to the filament crests to mostly parallel as they merge with the hubs. This variation of $\theta_{B}$ may be tracing local velocity flows of matter in-falling onto the hubs. Our analysis suggests a variation of the energy balance along the crests of these filaments, from magnetically critical/supercritical at their far ends to magnetically subcritical near the hubs. We detect an increase of $PF$ towards the high-column density star cluster-forming hubs that may result from the increase of grain alignment efficiency due to stellar radiation from the newborn stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2020
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33. Comparison of $pp$ and $p \bar{p}$ differential elastic cross sections and observation of the exchange of a colorless $C$-odd gluonic compound
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Abazov, V. M., Abbott, B., Acharya, B. S., Adams, M., Adams, T., Agnew, J. P., Alexeev, G. D., Alkhazov, G., Alton, A., Alves, G. A., Antchev, G., Askew, A., Aspell, P., Jesus, A. C. S. Assis, Atanassov, I., Atkins, S., Augsten, K., Aushev, V., Aushev, Y., Avati, V., Avila, C., Badaud, F., Baechler, J., Bagby, L., Barrera, C. Baldenegro, Baldin, B., Bandurin, D. V., Banerjee, S., Barberis, E., Baringer, P., Barreto, J., Bartlett, J. F., Bassler, U., Bazterra, V., Bean, A., Begalli, M., Bellantoni, L., Berardi, V., Beri, S. B., Bernardi, G., Bernhard, R., Berretti, M., Bertram, I., Besanccon, M., Beuselinck, R., Bhat, P. C., Bhatia, S., Bhatnagar, V., Blazey, G., Blessing, S., Bloom, K., Boehnlein, A., Boline, D., Boos, E. E., Borchsh, V., Borissov, G., Borysova, M., Bossini, E., Bottigli, U., Bozzo, M., Brandt, A., Brandt, O., Brochmann, M., Brock, R., Bross, A., Brown, D., Bu, X. B., Buehler, M., Buescher, V., Bunichev, V., Burdin, S., Burkhardt, H., Buszello, C. P., Cafagna, F. S., Camacho-P'erez, E., Carvahlo, W., Casey, B. C. K., Castilla-Valdez, H., Catanesi, M. G., Caughron, S., Chakrabarti, S., Chan, K. M., Chandra, A., Chapon, E., Chen, G., Cho, S. W., Choi, S., Choudhary, B., Cihangir, S., Claes, D., Clutter, J., Cooke, M., Cooper, W. E., Corcoran, M., Couderc, F., Cousinou, M. -C., Csan'ad, M., Cs"orgHo, T., Cuth, J., Cutts, D., Das, A., Davies, G., Deile, M., de Jong, S. J., De La Cruz-Burelo, E., De Leonardis, F., D'eliot, F., Demina, R., Denisov, D., Denisov, S. P., Desai, S., Deterre, C., DeVaughan, K., Diehl, H. T., Diesburg, M., Ding, P. F., Dominguez, A., Doubek, M., Drutskoy, A., Druzhkin, D., Dubey, A., Dudko, L. V., Duperrin, A., Dutt, S., Eads, M., Edmunds, D., Eggert, K., Ellison, J., Elvira, V. D., Enari, Y., Eremin, V., Evans, H., Evdokimov, A., Evdokimov, V. N., Faur'e, A., Feng, L., Ferbel, T., Ferro, F., Fiedler, F., Fiergolski, A., Filthaut, F., Fisher, W., Fisk, H. E., Forthomme, L., Fortner, M., Fox, H., Franc, J., Fuess, S., Garbincius, P. H., Garcia, F., Garcia-Bellido, A., Garc'ia-Gonz'alez, J. A., Gavrilov, V., Geng, W., Georgiev, V., Gerber, C. E., Gershtein, Y., Giani, S., Ginther, G., Gogota, O., Golovanov, G., Grannis, P. D., Greder, S., Greenlee, H., Grenier, G., Gris, Ph., Grivaz, J. -F., Grohsjean, A., Gr"unendahl, S., Gr"unewald, M. W., Grzanka, L., Guillemin, T., Gutierrez, G., Gutierrez, P., Haley, J., Hammerbauer, J., Han, L., Harder, K., Harel, A., Hauptman, J. M., Hays, J., Head, T., Hebbeker, T., Hedin, D., Hegab, H., Heinson, A. P., Heintz, U., Hensel, C., La Cruz, I. Heredia-De, Herner, K., Hesketh, G., Hildreth, M. D., Hirosky, R., Hoang, T., Hobbs, J. D., Hoeneisen, B., Hogan, J., Hohlfeld, M., Holzbauer, J. L., Howley, I., Hubacek, Z., Hynek, V., Iashvili, I., Ilchenko, Y., Illingworth, R., Isidori, T., Ito, A. S., Ivanchenko, V., Jabeen, S., Jaffr'e, M., Janda, M., Jayasinghe, A., Jeong, M. S., Jesik, R., Jiang, P., Johns, K., Johnson, E., Johnson, M., Jonckheere, A., Jonsson, P., Joshi, J., Jung, A. W., Juste, A., Kajfasz, E., Karev, A., Karmanov, D., Kavspar, J., Katsanos, I., Kaur, M., Kaynak, B., Kehoe, R., Kermiche, S., Khalatyan, N., Khanov, A., Kharchilava, A., Kharzheev, Y. N., Kiselevich, I., Kohli, J. M., Kopal, J., Kozelov, A. V., Kraus, J., Kumar, A., Kundr'at, V., Kupco, A., Kurvca, T., Kuzmin, V. A., Lami, S., Lammers, S., Latino, G., Lebrun, P., Lee, H. S., Lee, S. W., Lee, W. M., Le, X., Lellouch, J., Li, D., Li, H., Li, L., Li, Q. Z., Lim, J. K., Lincoln, D., Lindsey, C., Linhart, R., Linnemann, J., Lipaev, V. V., Lipton, R., Liu, H., Liu, Y., Lobodenko, A., Lokajicek, M., Lokaj'ivcek, M. V., de Sa, R. Lopes, Losurdo, L., Rodr'iguez, F. Lucas, Luna-Garcia, R., Lyon, A. L., Maciel, A. K. A., Macr'i, M., Madar, R., na-Villalba, R. Maga, Malawski, M., Malbouisson, H. B., Malik, S., Malyshev, V. L., Mansour, J., Mart'inez-Ortega, J., McCarthy, R., McGivern, C. L., Meijer, M. M., Melnitchouk, A., Menezes, D., Mercadante, P. G., Merkin, M., Meyer, A., Meyer, J., Miconi, F., Minafra, N., Minutoli, S., Molina, J., Mondal, N. K., Da Motta, H., Mulhearn, M., Mundim, L., Naaranoja, T., Nagy, E., Narain, M., Nayyar, R., Neal, H. A., Negret, J. P., Nemes, F., Neustroev, P., Nguyen, H. T., Niewiadomski, H., Nov'ak, T., Nunnemann, T., Oguri, V., Oliveri, E., Oljemark, F., Orduna, J., Oriunno, M., Osman, N., "Osterberg, K., Pal, A., Palazzi, P., Parashar, N., Parihar, V., Park, S. K., Partridge, R., Parua, N., Pasechnik, R., Passaro, V., Patwa, A., Penning, B., Perfilov, M., Peroutka, Z., Peters, Y., Petridis, K., Petrillo, G., P'etroff, P., Pleier, M. -A., Podstavkov, V. M., Popov, A. V., Da Silva, W. L. Prado, Prewitt, M., Price, D., Proch'azka, J., Prokopenko, N., Qian, J., Quadt, A., Quinn, B., Quinto, M., Raben, T. G., Radermacher, E., Rangel, M., Radicioni, E., Ratoff, P. N., Ravotti, F., Razumov, I., Ripp-Baudot, I., Rizatdinova, F., Robutti, E., Rodrigues, R. F., Rominsky, M., Ross, A., Royon, C., Rubinov, P., Ruchti, R., Ruggiero, G., Saarikko, H., Sajot, G., Samoylenko, V. D., S'anchez-Hern'andez, A., Sanders, M. P., Santoro, A., Santos, A. S., Savage, G., Savitskyi, M., Sawyer, L., Scanlon, T., Schamberger, R. D., Scheglov, Y., Schellman, H., Schott, M., Schwanenberger, C., Schwienhorst, R., Scribano, A., Sekaric, J., Severini, H., Shabalina, E., Shary, V., Shaw, S., Shchukin, A. A., Shkola, O., Simak, V., Siroky, J., Skubic, P., Slattery, P., Smajek, J., Snoeys, W., Snow, G. R., Snow, J., Snyder, S., S"oldner-Rembold, S., Sonnenschein, L., Soustruznik, K., Stark, J., Stefaniuk, N., Stefanovitch, R., Ster, A., Stoyanova, D. A., Strauss, M., Suter, L., Svoisky, P., Szanyi, I., Sziklai, J., Taylor, C., Tcherniaev, E., Titov, M., Tokmenin, V. V., Tsai, Y. -T., Tsybychev, D., Tuchming, B., Tully, C., Turini, N., Urban, O., Uvarov, L., Uvarov, S., Uzunyan, S., Vacek, V., Van Kooten, R., van Leeuwen, W. M., Varelas, N., Varnes, E. W., Vasilyev, I. A., Vavroch, O., Verkheev, A. Y., Vertogradov, L. S., Verzocchi, M., Vesterinen, M., Vilanova, D., Vokac, P., Wahl, H. D., Wang, C., Wang, M. H. L. S., Warchol, J., Watts, G., Wayne, M., Weichert, J., Welti, J., Welty-Rieger, L., Williams, J., Williams, M. R. J., Wilson, G. W., Wobisch, M., Wood, D. R., Wyatt, T. R., Xie, Y., Yamada, R., Yang, S., Yasuda, T., Yatsunenko, Y. A., Ye, W., Ye, Z., Yin, H., Yip, K., Youn, S. W., Yu, J. M., Zennamo, J., Zhao, T. G., Zhou, B., Zhu, J., Zich, J., Zielinski, K., Zielinski, M., Zieminska, D., and Zivkovic, L.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We describe an analysis comparing the $p\bar{p}$ elastic cross section as measured by the D0 Collaboration at a center-of-mass energy of 1.96 TeV to that in $pp$ collisions as measured by the TOTEM Collaboration at 2.76, 7, 8, and 13 TeV using a model-independent approach. The TOTEM cross sections extrapolated to a center-of-mass energy of $\sqrt{s} =$ 1.96 TeV are compared with the D0 measurement in the region of the diffractive minimum and the second maximum of the $pp$ cross section. The two data sets disagree at the 3.4$\sigma$ level and thus provide evidence for the $t$-channel exchange of a colorless, $C$-odd gluonic compound, also known as the odderon. We combine these results with a TOTEM analysis of the same $C$-odd exchange based on the total cross section and the ratio of the real to imaginary parts of the forward elastic scattering amplitude in $pp$ scattering. The combined significance of these results is larger than 5$\sigma$ and is interpreted as the first observation of the exchange of a colorless, $C$-odd gluonic compound., Comment: D0 and TOTEM Collaborations
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- 2020
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34. Fintech Approach to Real Estate Valuation in Vietnam Incorporating Land Pricing Legal Framework and Local Socio-Economic Characteristics.
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Dinh C. Hieu, Nguyen L. Phuong, Le D. Hieu, Hoang T. Hieu, Nguyen D. Thanh, Le T. Phong, Tran H. Nguyen, Pham M. Hien, and Dinh N. Son
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- 2023
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35. Improved Accuracy of Path System on Creating Intelligence Base
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Tran, Don T., Nguyen, Vinh Q., Nguyen, Cuong V., Tran, Dong L. T., Tran, Hoang T., Anh, N. D., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nghia, Phung Trung, editor, Thai, Vu Duc, editor, Thuy, Nguyen Thanh, editor, Son, Le Hoang, editor, and Huynh, Van-Nam, editor
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- 2023
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36. Novel Energy Efficient Schemes for Wireless Sensor Networks Utilizing Mobile Sensors
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Nguyen, Minh T., Nguyen, Cuong V., Le, Quynh C., Ha, Binh D., Tran, Hoang T., Dang, Vuong Q., Trinh, Mien L., Viola, Fabio, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Duy Cuong, editor, Vu, Ngoc Pi, editor, Long, Banh Tien, editor, Puta, Horst, editor, and Sattler, Kai-Uwe, editor
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- 2023
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37. A Design and Implement of Fuzzy Controller for Taking-off and Landing for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
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Tran, Dong L. T., Do, Hai T., Tran, Hoang T., Hoang, Thang, Nguyen, Minh T., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Duy Cuong, editor, Vu, Ngoc Pi, editor, Long, Banh Tien, editor, Puta, Horst, editor, and Sattler, Kai-Uwe, editor
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- 2023
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38. Asymptotically matched extrapolation of fishnet failure probability to continuum scale
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Xu, Houlin, Vievering, Joshua, Nguyen, Hoang T., Zhang, Yupeng, Le, Jia-Liang, and Bažant, Zdeněk P.
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- 2024
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39. Speciation and environmental risk assessment of heavy metals in soil from a lead/zinc mining site in Vietnam
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Vuong, X. T., Vu, L. D., Duong, A. T. T., Duong, H. T., Hoang, T. H. T., Luu, M. N. T., Nguyen, T. N., Nguyen, V. D., Nguyen, T. T. T., Van, T. H., and Minh, T. B.
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- 2023
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40. Predicting Antibiotic Resistance in ICUs Patients by Applying Machine Learning in Vietnam
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Tran Quoc V, Nguyen Thi Ngoc D, Nguyen Hoang T, Vu Thi H, Tong Duc M, Do Pham Nguyet T, Nguyen Van T, Ho Ngoc D, Vu Son G, and Bui Duc T
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antibiotic resistance ,machine learning ,xgboost ,lightgbm ,random forest. ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
Viet Tran Quoc,1 Dung Nguyen Thi Ngoc,2,3 Trung Nguyen Hoang,4 Hoa Vu Thi,4 Minh Tong Duc,4 Thanh Do Pham Nguyet,2 Thanh Nguyen Van,5 Diep Ho Ngoc,2 Giang Vu Son,6 Thanh Bui Duc7 1Intensive Care Unit, Military Hospital 175, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; 2Department of Military Science and Training, Military Hospital 175, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; 3Hanoi University of Public Health, Hanoi, Vietnam; 4Department of Military Hygiene, Vietnam Military Medical University, Hanoi, Vietnam; 5Department of General Planning, Military Hospital 175, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; 6Department of Personnel, Military Hospital 175, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; 7Institute of Trauma and Orthopedics, Military hospital 175, Ho Chi Minh City, VietnamCorrespondence: Thanh Bui Duc, Military Hospital 175, 786 Nguyen Kiem, 3 Ward, Go Vap District, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, Tel +84 975 430 258, Email buiducthanh175@yahoo.comIntroduction: Artificial Intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) are used extensively in HICs to detect and control antibiotic resistance (AMR) in laboratories and clinical institutions. ML is designed to predict outcome variables using an algorithm to enable “machines” to learn the “rules” from the data. ML is increasingly being applied in intensive care units to identify AMR and to assist empiric antibiotic therapy. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of ML models for predicting AMR bacteria and resistance to antibiotics in two Vietnamese hospitals.Patients and Methods: A cross-sectional study combined with retrospective was conducted from 1st January 2020 to 30th June 2022. Five models were developed to predict antibiotic resistance of bacterial infections of ICU patients. Two datasets were prepared to predict AMR bacteria and antibiotics with ML models. The performance of the prediction models was evaluated by various indicators (sensitivity, specificity, precision, accuracy, F1-score, PRC, AuROC, and NormMCC) to determine the optimal time point for data selection. Python version 3.8 was used for statistical analyses.Results: The accuracy, F1-score, AuROC, and normMMC of LightGBM, XGBoost, and Random Forest models were higher than those of other models in both datasets. In both datasets 1 and 2, accuracy, F1-score, AuROC and normMCC of the XGBoost model were the highest among five models (from 0.890 to 1.000). Only Random Forest models had specificity scores higher than 0.850. High scores of sensitivity, accuracy, precision, F1-score, and normMCC indicated that the models were making accurate predictions for datasets 1 and 2.Conclusion: XGBoost, LightGBM, and Random Forest were the best-performed machine learning models to predict antibiotic resistance of bacterial infections of ICUs patients using the patients’ EMRs.Keywords: antibiotic resistance, machine learning, XGBoost, LightGBM, random forest
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- 2023
41. Improved precision on the experimental E0 decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state
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Eriksen, T. K., Kibédi, T., Reed, M. W., Stuchbery, A. E., Cook, K. J., Akber, A., Alshahrani, B., Avaa, A. A., Banerjee, K., Berriman, A. C., Bezzina, L. T., Bignell, L., Buete, J., Carter, I. P., Coombes, B. J., Dowie, J. T. H., Dasgupta, M., Evitts, L. J., Garnsworthy, A. B., Gerathy, M. S. M., Gray, T. J., Hinde, D. J., Hoang, T. H., Hota, S. S., Ideguchi, E., Jones, P., Lane, G. J., McCormick, B. P., Mitchell, A. J., Palalani, N., Palazzo, T., Ripper, M., Simpson, E. C., Smallcombe, J., Swinton-Bland, B. M. A., Tanaka, T., Tornyi, T. G., and de Vries, M. O.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Stellar carbon synthesis occurs exclusively via the $3\alpha$ process, in which three $\alpha$ particles fuse to form $^{12}$C in the excited Hoyle state, followed by electromagnetic decay to the ground state. The Hoyle state is above the $\alpha$ threshold, and the rate of stellar carbon production depends on the radiative width of this state. The radiative width cannot be measured directly, and must instead be deduced by combining three separately measured quantities. One of these quantities is the $E0$ decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state, and the current $10$\% uncertainty on the radiative width stems mainly from the uncertainty on this ratio. The $E0$ branching ratio was deduced from a series of pair conversion measurements of the $E0$ and $E2$ transitions depopulating the $0^+_2$ Hoyle state and $2^+_1$ state in $^{12}$C, respectively. The excited states were populated by the $^{12}$C$(p,p^\prime)$ reaction at 10.5 MeV beam energy, and the pairs were detected with the electron-positron pair spectrometer, Super-e, at the Australian National University. The deduced branching ratio required knowledge of the proton population of the two states, as well as the alignment of the $2^+_1$ state in the reaction. For this purpose, proton scattering and $\gamma$-ray angular distribution experiments were also performed. An $E0$ branching ratio of $\Gamma^{E0}_{\pi}/\Gamma=8.2(5)\times10^{-6}$ was deduced in the current work, and an adopted value of $\Gamma^{E0}_{\pi}/\Gamma=7.6(4)\times10^{-6}$ is recommended based on a weighted average of previous literature values and the new result. The new recommended value for the $E0$ branching ratio is about 14% larger than the previous adopted value of $\Gamma^{E0}_{\pi}/\Gamma=6.7(6)\times10^{-6}$, while the uncertainty has been reduced from 9% to 5%., Comment: Accepted for publication as a Regular Article in Phys. Rev. C on July 29 2020
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- 2020
42. Electric and magnetic dipole strength in 112,114,116,118,120,124Sn
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Bassauer, S., von Neumann-Cosel, P., Reinhard, P. -G., Tamii, A., Adachi, S., Bertulani, C. A., Chan, P. Y., D'Alessio, A., Fujioka, H., Fujita, H., Fujita, Y., Gey, G., Hilcker, M., Hoang, T. H., Inoue, A., Isaak, J., Iwamoto, C., Klaus, T., Kobayashi, N., Maeda, Y., Matsuda, M., Nakatsuka, N., Noji, S., Ong, H. J., Ou, I., Pietralla, N., Ponomarev, V. Yu., Reen, M. S., Richter, A., Singer, M., Steinhilber, G., Sudo, T., Togano, Y., Tsumura, M., Watanabe, Y., and Werner, V.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Inelastic proton scattering experiments were performed at the Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka, with a 295 MeV beam covering laboratory angles 0{\deg}-6{\deg} and excitation energies 6-22 MeV. Cross sections due to E1 and M1 excitations were extracted with a multipole decomposition analysis and then converted to reduced transition probabilities with the "virtual photon method" for E1 and the "unit cross section method" for M1 excitations, respectively. Including a theory-aided correction for the high excitation energy region not covered experimentally, the electric dipole polarizability was determined from the E1 strength distributions. Total photoabsorption cross sections derived from the E1 and M1 strength distributions show significant differences compared to those from previous ($\gamma$,xn) experiments in the energy region of the isocvector giant dipole resonance (IVGDR). The widths of the IVGDR deduced from the present data with a Lorentz parameterization show an approximately constant value of about 4.5 MeV in contrast to the large variations between isotopes observed in previous work. The IVGDR centroid energies are in good correspondence to expectations from systematics of their mass dependence. Furthermore, a study of the dependence of the IVGDR energies on bulk matter properties is presented. The E1 strengths below neutron threshold show fair agreement with results from ($\gamma$,$\gamma$') experiments on 112,116,120,124Sn in the energy region between 6 and 7 MeV. At higher excitation energies large differences are observed pointing to a different nature of the excited states with small ground state branching ratios. The isovector spin-M1 strengths exhibit a broad distribution between 6 and 12 MeV in all studied nuclei., Comment: 32 pages, 23 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. C
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- 2020
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43. Evolution of the dipole polarizability in the stable tin isotope chain
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Bassauer, S., von Neumann-Cosel, P., Reinhard, P. -G., Tamii, A., Adachi, S., Bertulani, C. A., Chan, P. Y., Colò, G., D'Alessio, A., Fujioka, H., Fujita, H., Fujita, Y., Gey, G., Hilcker, M., Hoang, T. H., Inoue, A., Isaak, J., Iwamoto, C., Klaus, T., Kobayashi, N., Maeda, Y., Matsuda, M., Nakatsuka, N., Noji, S., Ong, H. J., Ou, I., Paar, N., Pietralla, N., Ponomarev, V. Yu., Reen, M. S., Richter, A., Roca-Maza, X., Singer, M., Steinhilber, G., Sudo, T., Togano, Y., Tsumura, M., Watanabe, Y., and Werner, V.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The dipole polarizability of stable even-mass tin isotopes 112,114,116,118,120,124 was extracted from inelastic proton scattering experiments at 295 MeV under very forward angles performed at RCNP. Predictions from energy density functionals cannot account for the present data and the polarizability of 208Pb simultaneously. The evolution of the polarizabilities in neighboring isotopes indicates a kink at 120Sn while all model results show a nearly linear increase with mass number after inclusion of pairing corrections., Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Phys. Lett. B
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- 2020
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44. Reexamination of $^{6}$Li scattering as a Probe to Investigate the Isoscalar Giant Resonances in Nuclei
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Zamora, J. C., Sullivan, C., Zegers, R. G. T., Aoi, N., Batail, L., Bazin, D., Carpenter, M., Carroll, J. J., Deloncle, I., Fang, Y. D., Fujita, H., Garg, U., Gey, G., Guess, C. J., Harakeh, M. N., Hoang, T. H., Hudson, E., Ichige, N., Ideguchi, E., Inoue, A., Isaak, J., Iwamoto, C., Kacir, C., Kobayashi, N., Koike, T., Raju, M. Kumar, Lipschutz, S., Liu, M., von Neumann-Cosel, P., Noji, S., Ong, H. J., Péru, S., Pereira, J., Schmitt, J., Tamii, A., Titus, R., Werner, V., Yamamoto, Y., Zhou, X., and Zhu, S.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Inelastic ${}^{6}$Li scattering at 100 MeV/u on ${}^{12}$C and ${}^{93}$Nb have been measured with the high-resolution magnetic spectrometer Grand Raiden. The magnetic-rigidity settings of the spectrometer covered excitation energies from 10 to 40 MeV and scattering angles in the range $0^\circ < \theta_{\text{lab.}}< 2^\circ$. The isoscalar giant monopole resonance was selectively excited in the present data. Measurements free of instrumental background and the very favorable resonance-to-continuum ratio of ${}^{6}$Li scattering allowed for precise determination of the $E0$ strengths in ${}^{12}$C and ${}^{93}$Nb. It was found that the monopole strength in ${}^{12}$C exhausts $52 \pm 3^\text{(stat.)} \pm 8 ^\text{(sys.)}$\% of the energy-weighted sum rule (EWSR), which is considerably higher than results from previous $\alpha$-scattering experiments. The monopole strength in ${}^{93}$Nb exhausts $92 \pm 4^\text{(stat.)} \pm 10 ^\text{(sys.)}$\% of the EWSR, and it is consistent with measurements of nuclei with mass number of $A\approx90$. Such comparison indicates that the isoscalar giant monopole resonance distributions in these nuclei are very similar, and no influence due to nuclear structure was observed., Comment: 6 Figures
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- 2020
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45. Modelling the strongest silicate emission features of local type 1 AGN
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Martínez-Paredes, M., González-Martín, O., Esparza-Arredondo, D., Kim, M., Alonso-Herrero, A., Krongold, Y., Hoang, T., Almeida, C. Ramos, Aretxaga, I., Dultzin, D., and Hodgson, J.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We measure the 10 and $18\mu$m silicate features in a sample of 67 local ($z<0.1$) type 1 active galactic nuclei (AGN) with available {\it Spitzer} spectra dominated by non-stellar processes. We find that the $10\mu$m silicate feature peaks at $10.3^{+0.7}_{-0.9}\mu$m with a strength (Si$_{p}$ = ln f$_{p}$(spectrum)/f$_{p}$(continuum)) of $0.11^{+0.15}_{-0.36}$, while the $18\mu$m one peaks at $17.3^{+0.4}_{-0.7}\mu$m with a strength of $0.14^{+0.06}_{-0.06}$. We select from this sample sources with the strongest 10$\mu$m silicate strength ($\sigma_{Si_{10\mu m}}>0.28$, 10 objects). We carry out a detailed modeling of the IRS/{\it Spitzer} spectra by comparing several models that assume different geometries and dust composition: a smooth torus model, two clumpy torus models, a two-phase medium torus model, and a disk+outflow clumpy model. We find that the silicate features are well modeled by the clumpy model of Nenkova et al. 2008, and among all models those including outflows and complex dust composition are the best (Hoenig et al. 2017). We note that even in AGN-dominated galaxies it is usually necessary to add stellar contributions to reproduce the emission at the shortest wavelengths., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2020
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46. Cooperative Tracking Framework for Multiple Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs)
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Do, Hai T., Hua, Hoang T., Nguyen, Hoa T. T., Nguyen, Minh T., Tran, Hoang T., Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Nguyen, Duy Cuong, editor, Vu, Ngoc Pi, editor, Long, Banh Tien, editor, Puta, Horst, editor, and Sattler, Kai-Uwe, editor
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- 2022
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47. Sex differences in the association between stroke risk factors and pre-clinical predictors of stroke in the childhood determinants of Adult Health study
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Shah, Mohammad, Buscot, Marie-Jeanne, Tian, Jing, Phan, Hoang T., Marwick, Thomas H., Dwyer, Terence, Venn, Alison, and Gall, Seana
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- 2023
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48. Is sex a predictor for delayed cerebral ischaemia (DCI) and hydrocephalus after aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage (aSAH)? A systematic review and meta-analysis
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Rehman, Sabah, Phan, Hoang T., Chandra, Ronil V., and Gall, Seana
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- 2023
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49. Toward Sustained Cultural Change through Chemistry Graduate Student Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Communities
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Deng, Jacky M., McMunn, Leah E., Oakley, Meagan S., Dang, Hoang T., and Rodriguez, Rebeca S.
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Evidence from the past several decades has repeatedly found that the chemical enterprise presents systemic barriers for people with marginalized identities. Initiatives and actions that remove systemic barriers and support the success of all students, especially those from equity-deserving groups, are essential. However, fostering a culture of inclusion requires actions that focus on not only immediate outcomes but also sustained and lasting impacts. Chemistry graduate student communities focused on diversity, equity, inclusion, and respect (DEIR) can contribute to the transformation of our shared chemistry community into one where DEIR principles are foundational. Chemistry graduate student DEIR communities (CGDEIRCs) are learning communities in which students from equity-deserving groups in chemistry gain various forms of cultural wealth that support their attainment of cultural capital. By supporting students' development of skills, networks, and resources to attain success, over time, CGDEIRCs may contribute to both short- and long-term DEIR cultural shifts in the broader chemistry community.
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- 2022
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50. Sensitivity Modeling for LiteBIRD
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Hasebe, T., Ade, P. A. R., Adler, A., Allys, E., Alonso, D., Arnold, K., Auguste, D., Aumont, J., Aurlien, R., Austermann, J., Azzoni, S., Baccigalupi, C., Banday, A. J., Banerji, R., Barreiro, R. B., Bartolo, N., Basak, S., Battistelli, E., Bautista, L., Beall, J., Beck, D., Beckman, S., Benabed, K., Bermejo-Ballesteros, J., Bersanelli, M., Bonis, J., Borrill, J., Bouchet, F., Boulanger, F., Bounissou, S., Brilenkov, M., Brown, M. L., Bucher, M., Calabrese, E., Calvo, M., Campeti, P., Carones, A., Casas, F. J., Catalano, A., Challinor, A., Chan, V., Cheung, K., Chinone, Y., Cliche, J., Columbro, F., Coulton, W., Cubas, J., Cukierman, A., Curtis, D., D’Alessandro, G., Dachlythra, K., de Bernardis, P., de Haan, T., de la Hoz, E., De Petris, M., Torre, S. Della, Dickinson, C., Diego-Palazuelos, P., Dobbs, M., Dotani, T., Douillet, D., Duband, L., Ducout, A., Duff, S., Duval, J. M., Ebisawa, K., Elleflot, T., Eriksen, H. K., Errard, J., Essinger-Hileman, T., Finelli, F., Flauger, R., Franceschet, C., Fuskeland, U., Galli, S., Galloway, M., Ganga, K., Gao, J. R., Genova-Santos, R. T., Gerbino, M., Gervasi, M., Ghigna, T., Giardiello, S., Gjerløw, E., Gradziel, M. L., Grain, J., Grandsire, L., Grupp, F., Gruppuso, A., Gudmundsson, J. E., Halverson, N. W., Hamilton, J., Hargrave, P., Hasegawa, M., Hattori, M., Hazumi, M., Henrot-Versillé, S., Hergt, L. T., Herman, D., Herranz, D., Hill, C. A., Hilton, G., Hivon, E., Hlozek, R. A., Hoang, T. D., Hornsby, A. L., Hoshino, Y., Hubmayr, J., Ichiki, K., Iida, T., Imada, H., Ishimura, K., Ishino, H., Jaehnig, G., Jones, M., Kaga, T., Kashima, S., Katayama, N., Kato, A., Kawasaki, T., Keskitalo, R., Kisner, T., Kobayashi, Y., Kogiso, N., Kogut, A., Kohri, K., Komatsu, E., Komatsu, K., Konishi, K., Krachmalnicoff, N., Kreykenbohm, I., Kuo, C. L., Kushino, A., Lamagna, L., Lanen, J. V., Laquaniello, G., Lattanzi, M., Lee, A. T., Leloup, C., Levrier, F., Linder, E., Louis, T., Luzzi, G., Macias-Perez, J., Maciaszek, T., Maffei, B., Maino, D., Maki, M., Mandelli, S., Maris, M., Martínez-González, E., Masi, S., Massa, M., Matarrese, S., Matsuda, F. T., Matsumura, T., Mele, L., Mennella, A., Migliaccio, M., Minami, Y., Mitsuda, K., Moggi, A., Monfardini, A., Montgomery, J., Montier, L., Morgante, G., Mot, B., Murata, Y., Murphy, J. A., Nagai, M., Nagano, Y., Nagasaki, T., Nagata, R., Nakamura, S., Nakano, R., Namikawa, T., Nati, F., Natoli, P., Nerval, S., Nishibori, T., Nishino, H., Noviello, F., O’Sullivan, C., Odagiri, K., Ogawa, H., Ogawa, H., Oguri, S., Ohsaki, H., Ohta, I. S., Okada, N., Okada, N., Pagano, L., Paiella, A., Paoletti, D., Passerini, A., Patanchon, G., Pelgrim, V., Peloton, J., Piacentini, F., Piat, M., Pisano, G., Polenta, G., Poletti, D., Prouvé, T., Puglisi, G., Rambaud, D., Raum, C., Realini, S., Reinecke, M., Remazeilles, M., Ritacco, A., Roudil, G., Rubino-Martin, J., Russell, M., Sakurai, H., Sakurai, Y., Sandri, M., Sasaki, M., Savini, G., Scott, D., Seibert, J., Sekimoto, Y., Sherwin, B., Shinozaki, K., Shiraishi, M., Shirron, P., Signorelli, G., Smecher, G., Spinella, F., Stever, S., Stompor, R., Sugiyama, S., Sullivan, R., Suzuki, A., Suzuki, J., Svalheim, T. L., Switzer, E., Takaku, R., Takakura, H., Takakura, S., Takase, Y., Takeda, Y., Tartari, A., Tavagnacco, D., Taylor, A., Taylor, E., Terao, Y., Thermeau, J., Thommesen, H., Thompson, K. L., Thorne, B., Toda, T., Tomasi, M., Tominaga, M., Trappe, N., Tristram, M., Tsuji, M., Tsujimoto, M., Tucker, C., Ullom, J., Vacher, L., Vermeulen, G., Vielva, P., Villa, F., Vissers, M., Vittorio, N., Wandelt, B., Wang, W., Watanuki, K., Wehus, I. K., Weller, J., Westbrook, B., Wilms, J., Winter, B., Wollack, E. J., Yamasaki, N. Y., Yoshida, T., Yumoto, J., Zacchei, A., Zannoni, M., and Zonca, A.
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- 2022
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