201 results on '"Lin, Hsiu-Hsien"'
Search Results
2. Comprehensive Bayesian analysis of FRB-like bursts from SGR 1935+2154 observed by CHIME/FRB
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Giri, Utkarsh, Andersen, Bridget C., Chawla, Pragya, Curtin, Alice P., Fonseca, Emmanuel, Kaspi, Victoria M., Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Sand, Ketan R., Scholz, Paul, Abbott, Thomas C., Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Gaensler, B. M., Leung, Calvin, Michilli, Daniele, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Münchmeyer, Moritz, Pandhi, Ayush, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Reda, Alex, Shin, Kaitlyn, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid H., Stenning, David C., and Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The bright millisecond-duration radio burst from the Galactic magnetar SGR 1935+2154 in 2020 April was a landmark event, demonstrating that at least some fast radio burst (FRB) sources could be magnetars. The two-component burst was temporally coincident with peaks observed within a contemporaneous short X-ray burst envelope, marking the first instance where FRB-like bursts were observed to coincide with X-ray counterparts. In this study, we detail five new radio burst detections from SGR 1935+2154, observed by the CHIME/FRB instrument between October 2020 and December 2022. We develop a fast and efficient Bayesian inference pipeline that incorporates state-of-the-art Markov chain Monte Carlo techniques and use it to model the intensity data of these bursts under a flexible burst model. We revisit the 2020 April burst and corroborate that both the radio sub-components lead the corresponding peaks in their high-energy counterparts. For a burst observed in 2022 October, we find that our estimated radio pulse arrival time is contemporaneous with a short X-ray burst detected by GECAM and HEBS, and Konus-Wind and is consistent with the arrival time of a radio burst detected by GBT. We present flux and fluence estimates for all five bursts, employing an improved estimator for bursts detected in the side-lobes. We also present upper limits on radio emission for X-ray emission sources which were within CHIME/FRB's field-of-view at trigger time. Finally, we present our exposure and sensitivity analysis and estimate the Poisson rate for FRB-like events from SGR 1935+2154 to be $0.005^{+0.082}_{-0.004}$ events/day above a fluence of $10~\mathrm{kJy~ms}$ during the interval from 28 August 2018 to 1 December 2022, although we note this was measured during a time of great X-ray activity from the source., Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables. To be submitted to ApJ
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- 2023
3. A fast radio burst localized at detection to an edge-on galaxy using very-long-baseline interferometry
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Cassanelli, Tomas, Leung, Calvin, Sanghavi, Pranav, Mena-Parra, Juan, Cary, Savannah, Mckinven, Ryan, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Michilli, Daniele, Bandura, Kevin, Chatterjee, Shami, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Kaczmarek, Jane, Patel, Chitrang, Rahman, Mubdi, Shin, Kaitlyn, Vanderlinde, Keith, Berger, Sabrina, Brar, Charanjot, Boyle, P. J., Breitman, Daniela, Chawla, Pragya, Curtin, Alice P., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Ibik, Adaeze, Kaspi, Victoria M., Kholoud, Khairy, Lanman, Adam E., Lazda, Mattias, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Luo, Jing, Meyers, Bradley W., Milutinovic, Nikola, Ng, Cherry, Noble, Gavin, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Quine, Brendan, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Renard, Andre, Sand, Ketan R., Schoen, Eve, Scholz, Paul, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, and Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration, luminous radio transients of extragalactic origin. These events have been used to trace the baryonic structure of the Universe using their dispersion measure (DM) assuming that the contribution from host galaxies can be reliably estimated. However, contributions from the immediate environment of an FRB may dominate the observed DM, thus making redshift estimates challenging without a robust host galaxy association. Furthermore, while at least one Galactic burst has been associated with a magnetar, other localized FRBs argue against magnetars as the sole progenitor model. Precise localization within the host galaxy can discriminate between progenitor models, a major goal of the field. Until now, localizations on this spatial scale have only been carried out in follow-up observations of repeating sources. Here we demonstrate the localization of FRB 20210603A with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) on two baselines, using data collected only at the time of detection. We localize the burst to SDSS J004105.82+211331.9, an edge-on galaxy at $z\approx 0.177$, and detect recent star formation in the kiloparsec-scale vicinity of the burst. The edge-on inclination of the host galaxy allows for a unique comparison between the line of sight towards the FRB and lines of sight towards known Galactic pulsars. The DM, Faraday rotation measure (RM), and scattering suggest a progenitor coincident with the host galactic plane, strengthening the link between the environment of FRB 20210603A and the disk of its host galaxy. Single-pulse VLBI localizations of FRBs to within their host galaxies, following the one presented here, will further constrain the origins and host environments of one-off FRBs., Comment: 40 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Nature Astronomy, changed title
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- 2023
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4. Do All Fast Radio Bursts Repeat? Constraints from CHIME/FRB Far Side-Lobe FRBs
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Scholz, Paul, Ng, Cherry, Pen, Ue-Li, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Chawla, Pragya, Curtin, Alice P., Li, Dongzi, Newburgh, Laura, Reda, Alex, Sand, Ketan R., Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Andersen, Bridget, Bandura, Kevin, Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Cook, Amanda M., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Eadie, Gwendolyn, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, Bryan M., Giri, Utkarsh, Herrera-Martin, Antonio, Hill, Alex S., Kaczmarek, Jane, Kania, Joseph, Kaspi, Victoria, Khairy, Kholoud, Lanman, Adam E., Leung, Calvin, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mena-Parra, Juan, Meyers, Bradley W., Michilli, Daniele, Milutinovic, Nikola, Ordog, Anna, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott, Sanghavi, Pranav, Shin, Kaitlyn, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Stenning, David C., Vanderlinde, Keith, and Wulf, Dallas
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report ten fast radio bursts (FRBs) detected in the far side-lobe region (i.e., $\geq 5^\circ$ off-meridian) of the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) from 2018 August 28 to 2021 August 31. We localize the bursts by fitting their spectra with a model of the CHIME/FRB synthesized beam response. We find that the far side-lobe events have on average ~500 times greater fluxes than events detected in CHIME's main lobe. We show that the side-lobe sample is therefore statistically ~20 times closer than the main-lobe sample. We find promising host galaxy candidates (P$_{\rm cc}$ < 1%) for two of the FRBs, 20190112B and 20210310B, at distances of 38 and 16 Mpc, respectively. CHIME/FRB did not observe repetition of similar brightness from the uniform sample of 10 side-lobe FRBs in a total exposure time of 35580 hours. Under the assumption of Poisson-distributed bursts, we infer that the mean repetition interval above the detection threshold of the far side-lobe events is longer than 11880 hours, which is at least 2380 times larger than the interval from known CHIME/FRB detected repeating sources, with some caveats, notably that very narrow-band events could have been missed. Our results from these far side-lobe events suggest one of two scenarios: either (1) all FRBs repeat and the repetition intervals span a wide range, with high-rate repeaters being a rare subpopulation, or (2) non-repeating FRBs are a distinct population different from known repeaters., Comment: 27 pages, 20 figures. This version is the result of the merger of arxiv:2307.05262 and the previous version of this paper. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2023
5. Constraints on the Intergalactic and Local Dispersion Measure of Fast Radio Bursts with the CHIME/FRB far side-lobe events
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Scholz, Paul, Ng, Cherry, Pen, Ue-Li, Li, D. Z., Newburgh, Laura, Reda, Alex, Andersen, Bridget, Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Cook, Amanda M., Curtin, Alice P., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, Bryan M., Giri, Utkarsh, Hill, Alex S., Kaczmarek, Jane, Kania, Joseph, Kaspi, Victoria, Khairy, Kholoud, Leung, Calvin, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mena-Parra, Juan, Meyers, Bradley W., Ordog, Anna, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott, Sand, Ketan R., Sanghavi, Pranav, Shin, Kaitlyn, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, and Wulf, Dallas
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We study the 10 fast radio bursts (FRBs) detected in the far side-lobe region of the CHIME telescope from 2018 August 28 to 2021 August 31. We find that the far side-lobe events have on average $\sim$500 times greater fluxes than events detected in CHIME's main lobe. We show that the side-lobe sample is therefore statistically $\sim$20 times closer than the main-lobe sample. The median dispersion measure (DM) excess, after removing the Galactic disk component using the NE2001 for the free electron density distribution of the Milky Way, of the 10 far side-lobe and 471 non-repeating main-lobe FRBs in the first CHIME/FRB catalog is 183.0 and 433.9 pc\;cm$^{-3}$, respectively. By comparing the DM excesses of the two populations under reasonable assumptions, we statistically constrain that the local degenerate contributions (from the Milky Way halo and the host galaxy) and the intergalactic contribution to the excess DM of the 471 non-repeating main-lobe FRBs for the NE2001 model are 131.2$-$158.3 and 302.7$-$275.6 pc cm$^{-3}$, respectively, which corresponds to a median redshift for the main-lobe FRB sample of $\sim$0.3. These constraints are useful for population studies of FRBs, and in particular for constraining the location of the missing baryons., Comment: This paper has been merged with arxiv:2307.05261. Refer to that article for the latest version
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- 2023
6. CHIME/FRB Discovery of 25 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources
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Collaboration, The CHIME/FRB, Andersen, Bridget C., Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chatterjee, S., Chawla, Pragya, Cook, Amanda M., Curtin, Alice P., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Faber, Jakob T., Fandino, Mateus, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Herrera-Martin, Antonio, Hill, Alex S., Ibik, Adaeze, Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, Jane F., Kader, Zarif, Kaspi, Victoria, Landecker, T. L., Lanman, Adam E., Lazda, Mattias, Leung, Calvin, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mckinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Meyers, Bradley W., Michilli, D., Ng, Cherry, Pandhi, Ayush, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott M., Renard, Andre, Sand, Ketan R., Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shah, Vishwangi, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Su, Jianing, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, Wang, Haochen, Wulf, Dallas, and Zwaniga, Andrew
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the discovery of 25 new repeating fast radio burst (FRB) sources found among CHIME/FRB events detected between 2019 September 30 and 2021 May 1. The sources were found using a new clustering algorithm that looks for multiple events co-located on the sky having similar dispersion measures (DMs). The new repeaters have DMs ranging from $\sim$220 pc cm$^{-3}$ to $\sim$1700 pc cm$^{-3}$, and include sources having exhibited as few as two bursts to as many as twelve. We report a statistically significant difference in both the DM and extragalactic DM (eDM) distributions between repeating and apparently nonrepeating sources, with repeaters having lower mean DM and eDM, and we discuss the implications. We find no clear bimodality between the repetition rates of repeaters and upper limits on repetition from apparently nonrepeating sources after correcting for sensitivity and exposure effects, although some active repeating sources stand out as anomalous. We measure the repeater fraction over time and find that it tends to an equilibrium of $2.6_{-2.6}^{+2.9}$% over our total time-on-sky thus far. We also report on 14 more sources which are promising repeating FRB candidates and which merit follow-up observations for confirmation., Comment: ApJ in press. Comments are still welcome and follow-up observations are encouraged!
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- 2023
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7. DM-power: an algorithm for high precision dispersion measure with application to fast radio bursts
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Main, Robert, Pen, Ue-Li, Wharton, Robert, Bause, Marlon Luis, Bethapudi, Suryarao, Li, Dongzi, Lin, Fang Xi, Marthi, Visweshwar Ram, and Spitler, Laura G
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present DM-power, a new method for precisely determining the dispersion measure (DM) of radio bursts, and apply it to the Fast Radio Burst (FRB) source FRB~20180916B. Motivated by the complex structure on multiple time scales seen in FRBs, DM-power optimizes the DM by combining measurements at multiple Fourier frequencies in the power spectrum of the burst. By optimally weighting the measurements at each Fourier frequency, DM-power finds a burst DM that effectively incorporates information on many different burst timescales. We validate this technique on simulated Gaussian pulse profiles with a precision down to $\sigma_{\rm DM} \sim 0.001~{\rm pc~cm}^{-3}$, and then apply it to bursts from pulsar B0329+54 and FRB~20180916B. The precision of these DM measurements are sufficient to measure a statistically significant variation in DM over a $\approx 2$ hr span. While this variation could be the result of electron density variations along the line of sight, it is more like that the observed variation is the result of intrinsic frequency-dependent burst structure that can mimic a dispersive delay., Comment: Updated. The package is available on the GitHub page: https://github.com/hsiuhsil/DM-power
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- 2022
8. BURSTT: Bustling Universe Radio Survey Telescope in Taiwan
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Lin, Kai-yang, Li, Chao-Te, Tseng, Yao-Huan, Jiang, Homin, Wang, Jen-Hung, Cheng, Jen-Chieh, Pen, Ue-Li, Chen, Ming-Tang, Chen, Pisin, Chen, Yaocheng, Goto, Tomotsugu, Hashimoto, Tetsuya, Hwang, Yuh-Jing, King, Sun-Kun, Kubo, Derek, Kuo, Chung-Yun, Mills, Adam, Nam, Jiwoo, Oshiro, Peter, Shen, Chang-Shao, Tseng, Hsien-Chun, Wang, Shih-Hao, Wu, Vigo Feng-Shun, Bower, Geoffrey, Chang, Shu-Hao, Chen, Pai-An, Chen, Ying-Chih, Chiang, Yi-Kuan, Fedynitch, Anatoli, Gusinskaia, Nina, Ho, Simon C. -C., Hsiao, Tiger Y. -Y., Hu, Chin-Ping, De Huang, Yau, Garcia, Jose Miguel Jauregui, Kim, Seong Jin, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, Ling, Decmend Fang-Jie, On, Alvina Y. L., Peterson, Jeffrey B., Raquel, Bjorn Jasper R., Su, Shih-Chieh, Uno, Yuri, Wu, Cossas K. -W., Yamasaki, Shotaro, and Zhu, Hong-Ming
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) are bright millisecond-duration radio transients that appear about 1,000 times per day, all-sky, for a fluence threshold 5 Jy ms at 600 MHz. The FRB radio-emission physics and the compact objects involved in these events are subjects of intense active debate. To better constrain source models, the Bustling Universe Radio Survey Telescope in Taiwan (BURSTT) is optimized to discover and localize a large sample of rare, high-fluence, nearby FRBs. This is the population most amenable to multi-messenger, multi-wavelength follow-up, allowing deeper understanding of source mechanisms. BURSTT will provide horizon-to-horizon sky coverage with a half power field-of-view (FoV) of $\sim$10$^{4}$ deg$^{2}$, a 400 MHz effective bandwidth between 300-800 MHz, and sub-arcsecond localization, made possible using outrigger stations hundreds to thousands of km from the main array. Initially, BURSTT will employ 256 antennas. After tests of various antenna designs and optimization of system performance we plan to expand to 2048 antennas. We estimate that BURSTT-256 will detect and localize $\sim$100 bright ($\geq$100 Jy ms) FRBs per year. Another advantage of BURSTT's large FoV and continuous operation will be greatly enhanced monitoring of FRBs for repetition. The current lack of sensitive all-sky observations likely means that many repeating FRBs are currently cataloged as single-event FRBs., Comment: Published version
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- 2022
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9. A High-Time Resolution Search for Compact Objects using Fast Radio Burst Gravitational Lens Interferometry with CHIME/FRB
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Kader, Zarif, Leung, Calvin, Dobbs, Matt, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Michilli, Daniele, Mena-Parra, Juan, Mckinven, Ryan, Ng, Cherry, Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Good, Deborah, Kaspi, Victoria, Lanman, Adam E., Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Meyers, Bradley W., Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, and Wulf, Dallas
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The gravitational field of compact objects, such as primordial black holes, can create multiple images of background sources. For transients such as fast radio bursts (FRBs), these multiple images can be resolved in the time domain. Under certain circumstances, these images not only have similar burst morphologies but are also phase-coherent at the electric field level. With a novel dechannelization algorithm and a matched filtering technique, we search for repeated copies of the same electric field waveform in observations of FRBs detected by the FRB backend of the Canadian Hydrogen Mapping Intensity Experiment (CHIME). An interference fringe from a coherent gravitational lensing signal will appear in the time-lag domain as a statistically-significant peak in the time-lag autocorrelation function. We calibrate our statistical significance using telescope data containing no FRB signal. Our dataset consists of $\sim$100-ms long recordings of voltage data from 172 FRB events, dechannelized to 1.25-ns time resolution. This coherent search algorithm allows us to search for gravitational lensing signatures from compact objects in the mass range of $10^{-4}-10^{4} ~\mathrm{M_{\odot}}$. After ruling out an anomalous candidate due to diffractive scintillation, we find no significant detections of gravitational lensing in the 172 FRB events that have been analyzed. In a companion work [Leung, Kader+2022], we interpret the constraints on dark matter from this search., Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures
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- 2022
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10. Constraining Primordial Black Holes using Fast Radio Burst Gravitational-Lens Interferometry with CHIME/FRB
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Leung, Calvin, Kader, Zarif, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Dobbs, Matt, Michilli, Daniele, Mena-Parra, Juan, Mckinven, Ryan, Ng, Cherry, Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Good, Deborah, Kaspi, Victoria, Lanman, Adam E., Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Meyers, Bradley W., Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., and Vanderlinde, Keith
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) represent an exciting frontier in the study of gravitational lensing, due to their brightness, extragalactic nature, and the compact, coherent characteristics of their emission. In a companion work [Kader, Leung+2022], we use a novel interferometric method to search for gravitationally lensed FRBs in the time domain using bursts detected by CHIME/FRB. There, we dechannelize and autocorrelate electric field data at a time resolution of 1.25 ns. This enables a search for FRBs whose emission is coherently deflected by gravitational lensing around a foreground compact object such as a primordial black hole (PBH). Here, we use our non-detection of lensed FRBs to place novel constraints on the PBH abundance outside the Local Group. We use a novel two-screen model to take into account decoherence from scattering screens in our constraints. Our constraints are subject to a single astrophysical model parameter -- the effective distance between an FRB source and the scattering screen, for which we adopt a fiducial distance of 1 parsec. We find that coherent FRB lensing is a sensitive probe of sub-solar mass compact objects. Having observed no lenses in $172$ bursts from $114$ independent sightlines through the cosmic web, we constrain the fraction of dark matter made of compact objects, such as PBHs, to be $f \lesssim 0.8$, if their masses are $\sim 10^{-3} M_{\odot}$., Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures
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- 2022
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11. Comparison of ERIC carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae test, BD Phoenix CPO detect panel, and NG-test CARBA 5 for the detection of main carbapenemase types of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales
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Lin, Yu-Tzu, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Tseng, Kun-Hao, Lee, Tai-Fen, Huang, Yu-Tsung, and Hsueh, Po-Ren
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- 2024
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12. Sub-second periodicity in a fast radio burst
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Collaboration, The CHIME/FRB, Andersen, Bridget C., Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Breitman, Daniela, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chatterjee, Shami, Chawla, Pragya, Cliche, Jean-François, Cubranic, Davor, Curtin, Alice P., Deng, Meiling, Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Good, Deborah C., Hill, Alex S., Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, J. F., Kader, Zarif, Kania, Joseph, Kaspi, Victoria M., Leung, Calvin, Li, D. Z., Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mckinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Merryfield, Marcus, Meyers, B. W., Michilli, D., Naidu, Arun, Newburgh, Laura, Ng, C., Ordog, Anna, Patel, Chitrang, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott, Renard, Andre, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shaw, J. Richard, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth R., Singh, Saurabh, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Tan, Chia Min, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, Wiebe, D. V., Wulf, Dallas, and Zwaniga, Andrew
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration flashes of radio waves that are visible at distances of billions of light-years. The nature of their progenitors and their emission mechanism remain open astrophysical questions. Here we report the detection of the multi-component FRB 20191221A and the identification of a periodic separation of 216.8(1) ms between its components with a significance of 6.5 sigmas. The long (~3 s) duration and nine or more components forming the pulse profile make this source an outlier in the FRB population. Such short periodicity provides strong evidence for a neutron-star origin of the event. Moreover, our detection favours emission arising from the neutron-star magnetosphere, as opposed to emission regions located further away from the star, as predicted by some models., Comment: Updated to conform to the accepted version
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- 2021
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13. Localizing FRBs through VLBI with the Algonquin Radio Observatory 10-m Telescope
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Cassanelli, Tomas, Leung, Calvin, Rahman, Mubdi, Vanderlinde, Keith, Mena-Parra, Juan, Cary, Savannah, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Luo, Jing, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Bij, Akanksha, Gill, Ajay, Baker, Daniel, Bandura, Kevin, Berger, Sabrina, Boyle, Patrick J., Brar, Charanjot, Chatterjee, Shami, Cubranic, Davor, Dobbs, Matt, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Good, Deborah C., Kaczmarek, Jane F., Kaspi, V. M., Landecker, Thomas L., Lanman, Adam E., Li, Dongzi Z., McKee, James W., Meyers, Bradley W., Michilli, Daniele, Naidu, Arun, Ng, Cherry, Patel, Chitrang, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Pleunis, Ziggy, Quine, Brendan, Renard, Andre, Sanghavi, Pranav, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, and Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The CHIME/FRB experiment has detected thousands of Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) due to its sensitivity and wide field of view; however, its low angular resolution prevents it from localizing events to their host galaxies. Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), triggered by FRB detections from CHIME/FRB will solve the challenge of localization for non-repeating events. Using a refurbished 10-m radio dish at the Algonquin Radio Observatory located in Ontario Canada, we developed a testbed for a VLBI experiment with a theoretical ~<30 masec precision. We provide an overview of the 10-m system and describe its refurbishment, the data acquisition, and a procedure for fringe fitting that simultaneously estimates the geometric delay used for localization and the dispersive delay from the ionosphere. Using single pulses from the Crab pulsar, we validate the system and localization procedure, and analyze the clock stability between sites, which is critical for phase-referencing an FRB event. We find a localization of 50 masec is possible with the performance of the current system. Furthermore, for sources with insufficient signal or restricted wideband to simultaneously measure both geometric and ionospheric delays, we show that the differential ionospheric contribution between the two sites must be measured to a precision of 1e-8 pc/cc to provide a reasonable localization from a detection in the 400--800 MHz band. Finally we show detection of an FRB observed simultaneously in the CHIME and the Algonquin 10-m telescope, the first FRB cross-correlated in this very long baseline. This project serves as a testbed for the forthcoming CHIME/FRB Outriggers project., Comment: Accepted for publication by AJ
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- 2021
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14. Profile changes associated with DM events in PSR J1713+0747
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Lin, Fang Xi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Luo, Jing, Main, Robert, McKee, James, Pen, Ue-Li, Simard, Dana, and van Kerkwijk, Marten H.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Propagation effects in the interstellar medium and intrinsic profile changes can cause variability in the timing of pulsars, which limits the accuracy of fundamental science done via pulsar timing. One of the best timing pulsars, PSR J1713+0747, has gone through two `dip' events in its dispersion measure (DM) time series. If these events reflect real changes in electron column density, they should lead to multiple imaging. We show that the events are are well fitted by an underdense corrugated sheet model, and look for associated variability in the pulse profile using principal component analysis. We find that there are transient pulse profile variations, but they vary in concert with the dispersion measure, unlike what is expected from lensing due to a corrugated sheet. The change is consistent in shape across profiles from both the Greenbank and Arecibo radio observatories, and its amplitude appears to be achromatic across the 820-MHz, 1.4-GHz, and 2.3-GHz bands, again unlike expected from interference between lensed images. This result is puzzling. We note that some of the predicted lensing effects would need higher time and frequency resolution data than used in this analysis. Future events appear likely, and storing baseband data or keeping multiple time-frequency resolutions will allow more in-depth study of propagation effects and hence improvements to pulsar timing accuracy., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, typos corrected, references updated
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- 2021
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15. The First CHIME/FRB Fast Radio Burst Catalog
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Collaboration, The CHIME/FRB, Amiri, Mandana, Andersen, Bridget C., Bandura, Kevin, Berger, Sabrina, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyce, Michelle M., Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Breitman, Daniela, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Chen, Tianyue, Cliche, J. -F., Cook, Amanda, Cubranic, Davor, Curtin, Alice P., Deng, Meiling, Dobbs, Matt, Fengqiu, Dong, Eadie, Gwendolyn, Fandino, Mateus, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Good, Deborah C., Halpern, Mark, Hill, Alex S., Hinshaw, Gary, Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, Jane F., Kader, Zarif, Kania, Joseph W., Kaspi, Victoria M., Landecker, T. L., Lang, Dustin, Leung, Calvin, Li, Dongzi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mckinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Merryfield, Marcus, Meyers, Bradley W., Michilli, Daniele, Milutinovic, Nikola, Mirhosseini, Arash, Münchmeyer, Moritz, Naidu, Arun, Newburgh, Laura, Ng, Cherry, Patel, Chitrang, Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott M., Renard, Andre, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shaw, J. Richard, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth R., Sikora, Andrew E., Singh, Saurabh, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, Tan, Chia Min, Tendulkar, S. P., Vanderlinde, Keith, Wang, Haochen, Wulf, Dallas, and Zwaniga, A. V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of 536 fast radio bursts (FRBs) detected by the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment Fast Radio Burst (CHIME/FRB) Project between 400 and 800 MHz from 2018 July 25 to 2019 July 1, including 62 bursts from 18 previously reported repeating sources. The catalog represents the first large sample, including bursts from repeaters and non-repeaters, observed in a single survey with uniform selection effects. This facilitates comparative and absolute studies of the FRB population. We show that repeaters and apparent non-repeaters have sky locations and dispersion measures (DMs) that are consistent with being drawn from the same distribution. However, bursts from repeating sources differ from apparent non-repeaters in intrinsic temporal width and spectral bandwidth. Through injection of simulated events into our detection pipeline, we perform an absolute calibration of selection effects to account for systematic biases. We find evidence for a population of FRBs - comprising a large fraction of the overall population - with a scattering time at 600 MHz in excess of 10 ms, of which only a small fraction are observed by CHIME/FRB. We infer a power-law index for the cumulative fluence distribution of $\alpha=-1.40\pm0.11(\textrm{stat.})^{+0.06}_{-0.09}(\textrm{sys.})$, consistent with the $-3/2$ expectation for a non-evolving population in Euclidean space. We find $\alpha$ is steeper for high-DM events and shallower for low-DM events, which is what would be expected when DM is correlated with distance. We infer a sky rate of $[525\pm30(\textrm{stat.})^{+140}_{-130}({\textrm{sys.}})]/\textrm{sky}/\textrm{day}$ above a fluence of 5 Jy ms at 600 MHz, with scattering time at $600$ MHz under 10 ms, and DM above 100 pc cm$^{-3}$., Comment: 67 pages, 27 figures, 5 tables. Published in ApJS and updated with changes reflected in an erratum (affecting the sky rate). Extended figures and data at https://www.chime-frb.ca/catalog
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- 2021
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16. CHIME/FRB Catalog 1 results: statistical cross-correlations with large-scale structure
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Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Smith, Kendrick M., Li, Dongzi, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Josephy, Alexander, Dobbs, Matt, Lang, Dustin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Patel, Chitrang, Bandura, Kevin, Berger, Sabrina, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Breitman, Daniela, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Good, Deborah C., Halpern, Mark, Kaczmarek, Jane, Kaspi, Victoria M., Leung, Calvin, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Mena-Parra, Juan, Meyers, B. W., Michilli, D., Münchmeyer, Moritz, Ng, Cherry, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rahman, Mubdi, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shin, Kaitlyn, Stairs, Ingrid H., Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, and Zwaniga, Andrew
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The CHIME/FRB Project has recently released its first catalog of fast radio bursts (FRBs), containing 492 unique sources. We present results from angular cross-correlations of CHIME/FRB sources with galaxy catalogs. We find a statistically significant ($p$-value $\sim 10^{-4}$, accounting for look-elsewhere factors) cross-correlation between CHIME FRBs and galaxies in the redshift range $0.3 \lesssim z \lesssim 0.5$, in three photometric galaxy surveys: WISE$\times$SCOS, DESI-BGS, and DESI-LRG. The level of cross-correlation is consistent with an order-one fraction of the CHIME FRBs being in the same dark matter halos as survey galaxies in this redshift range. We find statistical evidence for a population of FRBs with large host dispersion measure ($\sim 400$ pc cm$^{-3}$), and show that this can plausibly arise from gas in large halos ($M \sim 10^{14} M_\odot$), for FRBs near the halo center ($r \lesssim 100$ kpc). These results will improve in future CHIME/FRB catalogs, with more FRBs and better angular resolution., Comment: 26 pages, 16 figures, published in ApJ
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- 2021
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17. Fast Radio Burst Morphology in the First CHIME/FRB Catalog
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Pleunis, Ziggy, Good, Deborah C., Kaspi, Victoria M., Mckinven, Ryan, Ransom, Scott M., Scholz, Paul, Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chawla, Pragya, Fengqiu, Dong, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, Jane F., Leung, Calvin, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mena-Parra, Juan, Michilli, Daniele, Ng, Cherry, Patel, Chitrang, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Sanghavi, Pranav, Shin, Kaitlyn, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid H., and Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a synthesis of fast radio burst (FRB) morphology (the change in flux as a function of time and frequency) as detected in the 400-800 MHz octave by the FRB project on the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME/FRB), using events from the first CHIME/FRB catalog. The catalog consists of 61 bursts from 18 repeating sources, plus 474 one-off FRBs, detected between 2018 July 25 and 2019 July 2. We identify four observed archetypes of burst morphology ("simple broadband," "simple narrowband," "temporally complex" and "downward drifting") and describe relevant instrumental biases that are essential for interpreting the observed morphologies. Using the catalog properties of the FRBs, we confirm that bursts from repeating sources, on average, have larger widths and we show, for the first time, that bursts from repeating sources, on average, are narrower in bandwidth. This difference could be due to a beaming or propagation effects, or it could be intrinsic to the populations. We discuss potential implications of these morphological differences for using FRBs as astrophysical tools., Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ
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- 2021
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18. Narrow-band giant pulses from the Crab pulsar
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Thulasiram, Parasar and Lin, Hsiu-Hsien
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We used a new spectral-fitting technique to identify a subpopulation of 6 narrow-band giant pulses from the Crab pulsar out of a total of 1578. These giant pulses were detected in 77 minutes of observations with the 46-m dish at the Algonquin Radio Observatory at 400-800 MHz. The narrow-band giant pulses consist of both main- and inter-pulses, thereby being more likely to be caused by an intrinsic emission mechanism as opposed to a propagation effect. Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) have demonstrated similar narrow-band features while only little has been observed in the giant pulses of pulsars. We report the narrow-band giant pulses with $\Delta \nu / \nu$ on the order of 0.1, which is close to the value of 0.05 reported for the repeater FRB 20190711A. Hence, the connection between FRBs and giant pulses of pulsars is further established., Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures
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- 2021
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19. Kinematics of Crab Giant Pulses
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Bij, Akanksha, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Li, Dongzi, van Kerkwijk, Marten H., Pen, Ue-Li, Lu, Wenbin, Main, Robert, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Quine, Brendan, and Vanderlinde, Keith
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Crab Pulsar's radio emission is unusual, consisting predominantly of giant pulses, with durations of about a micro-second but structure down to the nano-second level, and brightness temperatures of up to $10^{37}\,$K. It is unclear how giant pulses are produced, but they likely originate near the pulsar's light cylinder, where corotating plasma approaches the speed of light. We report observations in the 400-800 MHz frequency band, where the pulses are broadened by scattering in the surrounding Crab nebula. We find that some pulse frequency spectra show strong bands, which vary during the scattering tail, in one case showing a smooth upward drift. While the banding may simply reflect interference between nano-second scale pulse components, the variation is surprising, as in the scattering tail the only difference is that the source is observed via slightly longer paths, bent by about an arcsecond in the nebula. The corresponding small change in viewing angle could nevertheless reproduce the observed drift by a change in Doppler shift, if the plasma that emitted the giant pulses moved highly relativistically, with a Lorentz factor $\gamma\sim10^4$ (and without much spread in $\gamma$). If so, this would support models that appeal to highly relativistic plasma to transform ambient magnetic structures to coherent GHz radio emission, be it for giant pulses or for potentially related sources, such as fast radio bursts., Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures
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- 2021
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20. Identification of Staphylococcus aureus, Enterococcus faecium, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumannii from Raman spectra by Artificial Intelligent Raman Detection and Identification System (AIRDIS) with machine learning
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Lin, Yu-Tzu, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Chen, Chih-Hao, Tseng, Kun-Hao, Hsu, Pang-Chien, Wu, Ya-Lun, Chang, Wei-Cheng, Liao, Nai-Shun, Chou, Yi-Fan, Hsu, Chun-Yi, Liao, Yu-Hui, Ho, Mao-Wang, Chang, Shih-Sheng, Hsueh, Po-Ren, and Cho, Der-Yang
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- 2024
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21. Detection of 15 bursts from FRB 180916.J0158+65 with the uGMRT
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Marthi, Visweshwar Ram, Gautam, Tasha, Li, Dongzi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Main, Robert, Naidu, Arun Kumar, Pen, Ue-Li, and Wharton, Robert
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the findings of a uGMRT observing campaign on FRB 180916.J0158+65, discovered recently to show a 16.35-day periodicity of its active cycle. We observed the source at 550-750 MHz for $\sim 2$ hours each during three successive cycles at the peak of its expected active period. We find 0, 12, and 3 bursts respectively, implying a highly variable bursting rate even within the active phase. We consistently detect faint bursts with spectral energies only an order of magnitude higher than the Galactic burst source SGR~1935+2154. The times of arrival of the detected bursts rule out many possible aliased solutions, strengthening the findings of the 16.35-day periodicity. A short-timescale periodicity search returned no highly significant candidates. Two of the beamformer-detected bursts were bright enough to be clearly detected in the imaging data, achieving sub-arcsecond localization, and proving as a proof-of-concept for FRB imaging with the GMRT. We provide a $3\sigma$ upper limit of the persistent radio flux density at 650 MHz of $66~\mu{\rm Jy}$ which, combined with the EVN and VLA limits at 1.6~GHz, further constrains any potential radio counterpart. These results demonstrate the power of uGMRT for targeted observations to detect and localize known repeating FRBs., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters
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- 2020
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22. Rapid detection of gastrointestinal pathogens using a multiplex polymerase chain reaction gastrointestinal panel and its role in antimicrobial stewardship
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Chen, Chih-Hao, Low, Yan-Yi, Liu, Yu-Hsuan, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Ho, Mao-Wang, and Hsueh, Po-Ren
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- 2023
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23. Prediction of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae from flagged blood cultures by combining rapid Sepsityper MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry with machine learning
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Yu, Jiaxin, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Tseng, Kun-Hao, Lin, Yu-Tzu, Chen, Wei-Cheng, Tien, Ni, Cho, Chia-Fong, Liang, Shinn-Jye, Ho, Lu-Ching, Hsieh, Yow-Wen, Hsu, Kai Cheng, Ho, Mao-Wang, Hsueh, Po-Ren, and Cho, Der-Yang
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- 2023
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24. Machine learning of cell population data, complete blood count, and differential count parameters for early prediction of bacteremia among adult patients with suspected bacterial infections and blood culture sampling in emergency departments
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Chang, Yu-Hsin, Hsiao, Chiung-Tzu, Chang, Yu-Chang, Lai, Hsin-Yu, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Chen, Chien-Chih, Hsu, Lin-Chen, Wu, Shih-Yun, Shih, Hong-Mo, Hsueh, Po-Ren, and Cho, Der-Yang
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- 2023
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25. Geographic patterns of antimicrobial susceptibilities for Bacteroides spp. worldwide: Results from the Antimicrobial Testing Leadership and Surveillance (ATLAS) programme, 2007–2020
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Wu, Pin-Han, Chen, Chih-Hao, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Tseng, Kun-Hao, Ko, Wen-Chien, Ho, Mao-Wang, and Hsueh, Po-Ren
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- 2023
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26. Direct prediction of carbapenem-resistant, carbapenemase-producing, and colistin-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates from routine MALDI-TOF mass spectra using machine learning and outcome evaluation
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Yu, Jiaxin, Lin, Yu-Tzu, Chen, Wei-Cheng, Tseng, Kun-Hao, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Tien, Ni, Cho, Chia-Fong, Huang, Jhao-Yu, Liang, Shinn-Jye, Ho, Lu-Ching, Hsieh, Yow-Wen, Hsu, Kai-Cheng, Ho, Mao-Wang, Hsueh, Po-Ren, and Cho, Der-Yang
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- 2023
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27. Sub-second periodicity in a fast radio burst
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Andersen, Bridget C., Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Breitman, Daniela, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chatterjee, Shami, Chawla, Pragya, Cliche, Jean-François, Cubranic, Davor, Curtin, Alice P., Deng, Meiling, Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Good, Deborah C., Hill, Alex S., Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, J. F., Kader, Zarif, Kania, Joseph, Kaspi, Victoria M., Leung, Calvin, Li, D. Z., Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mckinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Merryfield, Marcus, Meyers, B. W., Michilli, D., Naidu, Arun, Newburgh, Laura, Ng, C., Ordog, Anna, Patel, Chitrang, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott, Renard, Andre, Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shaw, J. Richard, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth R., Singh, Saurabh, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Tan, Chia Min, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, Wiebe, D. V., Wulf, Dallas, and Zwaniga, Andrew
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- 2022
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28. Detection of respiratory pathogens by application of multiplex PCR panel during early period of COVID-19 pandemic in a tertiary hospital in Central Taiwan
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Chiu, Yu-Ting, Tien, Ni, Lin, Hsiao-Chuan, Wei, Hsiu-Mei, Lai, Huan-Cheng, Chen, Jiun-An, Low, Yan-Yi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Hsu, Yu-Lung, and Hwang, Kao-Pin
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- 2022
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29. Improved Pulsar Timing via Principle Component Mode Tracking
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi, Pen, Ue-Li, and Peterson, Jeffrey B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a principal component analysis method which tracks and compensates for short-timescale variability in pulsar profiles, with a goal of improving pulsar timing precision. We couple this with a fast likelihood technique for determining pulse time of arrival, marginalizing over the principal component amplitudes. This allows accurate estimation of timing errors in the presence of pulsar variability. We apply the algorithm to the slow pulsar PSR J2139+0040 using an archived set of untargeted raster-scan observations at arbitrary epochs across four years, obtaining an improved timing solution. The method permits accurate pulsar timing in data sets with short contiguous on-source observations, opening opportunities for commensality between pulsar timing and mapping surveys., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2017
30. Constraints on the FRB rate at 700-900 MHz
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Connor, Liam, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi, Oppermann, Niels, Pen, Ue-Li, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Roman, Alexander, and Sievers, Jonathan
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Estimating the all-sky rate of fast radio bursts (FRBs) has been difficult due to small-number statistics and the fact that they are seen by disparate surveys in different regions of the sky. In this paper we provide limits for the FRB rate at 800 MHz based on the only burst detected at frequencies below 1.4 GHz, FRB 110523. We discuss the difficulties in rate estimation, particularly in providing an all-sky rate above a single fluence threshold. We find an implied rate between 700-900 MHz that is consistent with the rate at 1.4 GHz, scaling to $6.4^{+29.5}_{-5.0} \times 10^3$\,sky$^{-1}$\,day$^{-1}$ for an HTRU-like survey. This is promising for upcoming experiments below a GHz like CHIME and UTMOST, for which we forecast detection rates. Given 110523's discovery at 32$\sigma$ with nothing weaker detected, down to the threshold of 8$\sigma$, we find consistency with a Euclidean flux distribution but disfavour steep distributions, ruling out $\gamma > 2.2$.
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- 2016
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31. Dense magnetized plasma associated with a fast radio burst
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Masui, Kiyoshi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Sievers, Jonathan, Anderson, Christopher J., Chang, Tzu-Ching, Chen, Xuelei, Ganguly, Apratim, Jarvis, Miranda, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, Li, Yi-Chao, Liao, Yu-Wei, McLaughlin, Maura, Pen, Ue-Li, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Roman, Alexander, Timbie, Peter T., Voytek, Tabitha, and Yadav, Jaswant K.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Fast Radio Bursts are bright, unresolved, non-repeating, broadband, millisecond flashes, found primarily at high Galactic latitudes, with dispersion measures much larger than expected for a Galactic source. The inferred all-sky burst rate is comparable to the core-collapse supernova rate out to redshift 0.5. If the observed dispersion measures are assumed to be dominated by the intergalactic medium, the sources are at cosmological distances with redshifts of 0.2 to 1. These parameters are consistent with a wide range of source models. One fast radio burst showed circular polarization [21(7)%] of the radio emission, but no linear polarization was detected, and hence no Faraday rotation measure could be determined. Here we report the examination of archival data revealing Faraday rotation in a newly detected burst - FRB 110523. It has radio flux at least 0.6 Jy and dispersion measure 623.30(5) pc cm$^{-3}$. Using Galactic contribution 45 pc cm$^{-3}$ and a model of intergalactic electron density, we place the source at a maximum redshift of 0.5. The burst has rotation measure -186.1(1.4) rad m$^{-2}$, much higher than expected for this line of sight through the Milky Way and the intergalactic medium, indicating magnetization in the vicinity of the source itself or within a host galaxy. The pulse was scattered by two distinct plasma screens during propagation, which requires either a dense nebula associated with the source or a location within the central region of its host galaxy. Keeping in mind that there may be more than one type of fast radio burst source, the detection in this instance of source-local magnetization and scattering favours models involving young stellar populations such as magnetars over models involving the mergers of older neutron stars, which are more likely to be located in low density regions of the host galaxy., Comment: 9 pages total, 6 figures, 1 table. Published in Nature
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- 2015
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32. CP Violation in $B^0_s \to K^-\pi^+$, $B^0 \to K^+\pi^-$ Decays and Tests for SU(3) Flavor Symmetry Predictions
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He, Xiao-Gang, Li, Siao-Fong, and Lin, Hsiu-Hsien
- Subjects
High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The LHCb collaboration has recently measured the first direct CP violation in $B^0_s$ decays with a rate asymmetry $A_{CP}(B^0_s\to K^- \pi^+)$ given by $0.27 \pm 0.04(stat)\pm 0.01(syst)$. At the same time they also made the most precise measurement for $A_{CP}(B^0 \to K^+ \pi^-) = -0.080\pm 0.007(stat)\pm 0.003(syst)$. These data confirm the predicted relation, $A_{CP}(B^0 \to K^+ \pi^-)/A_{CP}(B^0_s \to K^- \pi^+) = - Br(B^0_s\to K^- \pi^+)\tau_{B^0}/Br(B^0 \to K^+ \pi^-)\tau_{B^0_s}$, in the standard model with SU(3) flavor symmetry. We discuss possible modifications due to SU(3) breaking effects to this relation. There are several other similar relations in B decays. Using current available data we study whether relevant relations hold in $B^0$ and $B^0_s$ to $PP$ and $PV$ decays. Here $P$ and $V$ indicate pesudoscalar and vector mesons in the flavor octet representations., Comment: RevTex, 16 pages with no figures. A new reference added and some minor modifications
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- 2013
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33. Further Studies of Higgs Properties at An ILC $\gamma\gamma$ Collider
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He, Xiao-Gang, Li, Siao-Fong, and Lin, Hsiu-Hsien
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Recently the ATLAS and CMS experiments at the LHC have found a Higgs like boson $h$ with a mass around 125 GeV from several decay modes. The decay mode $h \to \gamma\gamma$ is one of the most important modes in studying whether $h$ is actually the standard model (SM) Higgs boson. Current data indicate that $h\to \gamma\gamma$ has a branching ratio larger than the SM prediction for $h$ being identified as the SM Higgs boson. To decide whether the $h$ discovered at the LHC is the SM Higgs boson, more data are needed. We study how $\gamma\gamma$ collider can help to provide some of the most important information about the Higgs boson properties. We show that a $\gamma\gamma$ collider can easily verify whether the enhanced $h \to \gamma\gamma$ observed at the LHC hold. Different models can be tested by studying Higgs boson decay to $\gamma Z$. Studying angular distribution of the $\gamma \gamma$ through on-shell production of $h$ and its subsequent decays into a $\gamma \gamma$ pair can decide whether the Higgs like boson $h$ at the LHC is a spin-0 or a spin-2 boson., Comment: RevTex 9 pages with 4 figures
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- 2013
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34. The $\beta$ angle as the CP violating phase in the CKM matrix
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Li, Guan-Nan, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Xu, Dong, and He, Xiao-Gang
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The CKM matrix describing quark mixing with three generations can be parameterized by three Euler mixing angles and one CP violating phase. In most of the parameterizations, the CP violating phase chosen is not a directly measurable quantity and is parametrization dependent. In this work, we propose to use the most accurately measured CP violating angle $\beta$ in the unitarity triangleas the phase in the CKM matrix, and construct an explicit $\beta$ parameterization. We also derive an approximate Wolfenstein-like expression for this parameterization., Comment: RevTex 7 pages with one figure. Version to be published in Phys. Lett. B. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1204.1230
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- 2013
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35. The $\alpha$, $\beta$ and $\gamma$ parameterizations of CP violating CKM phase
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Li, Guan-Nan, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Xu, Dong, and He, Xiao-Gang
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The CKM matrix describing quark mixing with three generations can be parameterized by three mixing angles and one CP violating phase. In most of the parameterizations, the CP violating phase chosen is not a directly measurable quantity and is parametrization dependent. In this work, we propose to use experimentally measurable CP violating quantities, $\alpha$, $\beta$ or $\gamma$ in the unitarity triangle as the phase in the CKM matrix, and construct explicit $\alpha$, $\beta$ and $\gamma$ parameterizations. Approximate Wolfenstein-like expressions are also suggested., Comment: 14 page, 1 figure
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- 2012
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36. Comment on Reparametrization Invariance of Quark-Lepton Complementarity
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Li, Guan-Nan, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, and He, Xiao-Gang
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We study the complementarity between quark and lepton mixing angles (QLC), the sum of an angle in quark mixing and the corresponding angle in lepton mixing is $\pi/4$. Experimentally in the standard PDG parametrization, two such relations exist approximately. These QLC relations are accidental which only manifest themselves in the PDG parametrization. We propose reparametrization invariant expressions for the complementarity relations in terms of the magnitude of the elements in the quark and lepton mixing matrices. In the exact QLC limit, it is found that $|V_{us}/V_{ud}| + |V_{e2}/V_{e1}| + |V_{us}/V_{ud}| |V_{e2}/V_{e1}| =1$ and $|V_{cb}/V_{tb}| + |V_{\mu 3}/V_{\tau 3}| +|V_{cb}/V_{tb}|| {V_{\mu 3}}/V_{\tau 3}| =1$. Expressions with deviations from exact complementarity are obtained. Implications of these relations are also discussed., Comment: 5 pages and 1 figure. Implications for recent Daya-Bay neutrino data on theta_{13} discussed
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- 2011
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37. Arcsecond Localization of FRB20201124A with the uGMRT
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Pen, Ue-Li, Tendulkar, Shriharsh, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Li, Dongzi, Gautam, Tasha, Bethapudi, Suryarao, Spitler, Laura, Marthi, Visweshar, Hilmarsson, Henning, Main, Robert, and Wharton, Robert S
- Published
- 2021
38. Arcsecond Localization of FRB20201124A with the uGMRT
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Wharton, Robert S, Main, Robert, Hilmarsson, Henning, Marthi, Visweshar, Spitler, Laura, Bethapudi, Suryarao, Gautam, Tasha, Li, Dongzi, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Tendulkar, Shriharsh, and Pen, Ue-Li
- Published
- 2021
39. A fast radio burst localized at detection to a galactic disk using very long baseline interferometry
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Cassanelli, Tomas, Leung, Calvin, Sanghavi, Pranav, Mena-Parra, Juan, Cary, Savannah, Mckinven, Ryan, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Michilli, Daniele, Bandura, Kevin, Chatterjee, Shami, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Kaczmarek, Jane, Patel, Chitrang, Rahman, Mubdi, Shin, Kaitlyn, Vanderlinde, Keith, Berger, Sabrina, Brar, Charanjot, Boyle, P. J., Breitman, Daniela, Chawla, Pragya, Curtin, Alice P., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Ibik, Adaeze, Kaspi, Victoria M., Kholoud, Khairy, Landecker, T. L., Lanman, Adam E., Lazda, Mattias, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Luo, Jing, Meyers, Bradley W., Milutinovic, Nikola, Ng, Cherry, Noble, Gavin, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Quine, Brendan, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Renard, Andre, Sand, Ketan R., Schoen, Eve, Scholz, Paul, Smith, Kendrick M., Stairs, Ingrid, and Tendulkar, Shriharsh P.
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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration, luminous radio transients of extragalactic origin. These events have been used to trace the baryonic structure of the Universe using their dispersion measure (DM) assuming that the contribution from host galaxies can be reliably estimated. However, contributions from the immediate environment of an FRB may dominate the observed DM, thus making redshift estimates challenging without a robust host galaxy association. Furthermore, while at least one Galactic burst has been associated with a magnetar, other localized FRBs argue against magnetars as the sole progenitor model. Precise localization within the host galaxy %can enable estimation of the host galaxy DM contribution and can discriminate between progenitor models, a major goal of the field. Until now, localizations on this spatial scale have only been carried out in follow-up observations of repeating sources. Here we demonstrate the localization of FRB 20210603A with very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) on two baselines, using data collected only at the time of detection. We localize the burst to SDSS J004105.82+211331.9, an edge-on galaxy at $z\approx 0.177$, and detect recent star formation in the kiloparsec-scale vicinity of the burst. The edge-on inclination of the host galaxy allows for a unique comparison between the line of sight towards the FRB and lines of sight towards known Galactic pulsars. The DM, Faraday rotation measure (RM), and scattering suggest a progenitor coincident with the host galactic plane, strengthening the link between the environment of FRB 20210603A and the disk of its host galaxy. Single-pulse VLBI localizations of FRBs to within their host galaxies, following the one presented here, will further constrain the origins and host environments of one-off FRBs., 40 pages, 13 figures, submitted
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- 2023
40. Emergence of meropenem and levofloxacin resistance in Burkholderia pseudomallei in Taiwan
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Wu, Pin-Han, primary, Chen, Chih-Hao, additional, Hsih, Wen-Hsin, additional, Chou, Chia-Huei, additional, Chi, Chih-Yu, additional, Ho, Mao-Wang, additional, Lin, Yu-Tzu, additional, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Tseng, Kun-Hao, additional, and Hsueh, Po-Ren, additional
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- 2023
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41. CHIME/FRB Discovery of 25 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources
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Andersen, Bridget C., primary, Bandura, Kevin, additional, Bhardwaj, Mohit, additional, Boyle, P. J., additional, Brar, Charanjot, additional, Cassanelli, Tomas, additional, Chatterjee, S., additional, Chawla, Pragya, additional, Cook, Amanda M., additional, Curtin, Alice P., additional, Dobbs, Matt, additional, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, additional, Faber, Jakob T., additional, Fandino, Mateus, additional, Fonseca, Emmanuel, additional, Gaensler, B. M., additional, Giri, Utkarsh, additional, Herrera-Martin, Antonio, additional, Hill, Alex S., additional, Ibik, Adaeze, additional, Josephy, Alexander, additional, Kaczmarek, Jane F., additional, Kader, Zarif, additional, Kaspi, Victoria, additional, Landecker, T. L., additional, Lanman, Adam E., additional, Lazda, Mattias, additional, Leung, Calvin, additional, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Masui, Kiyoshi W., additional, Mckinven, Ryan, additional, Mena-Parra, Juan, additional, Meyers, Bradley W., additional, Michilli, D., additional, Ng, Cherry, additional, Pandhi, Ayush, additional, Pearlman, Aaron B., additional, Pen, Ue-Li, additional, Petroff, Emily, additional, Pleunis, Ziggy, additional, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, additional, Rahman, Mubdi, additional, Ransom, Scott M., additional, Renard, Andre, additional, Sand, Ketan R., additional, Sanghavi, Pranav, additional, Scholz, Paul, additional, Shah, Vishwangi, additional, Shin, Kaitlyn, additional, Siegel, Seth, additional, Smith, Kendrick, additional, Stairs, Ingrid, additional, Su, Jianing, additional, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., additional, Vanderlinde, Keith, additional, Wang, Haochen, additional, Wulf, Dallas, additional, and Zwaniga, Andrew, additional
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- 2023
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42. Direct prediction of ceftazidime-resistant Stenotrophomonas maltophilia from routine MALDI-TOF mass spectra using machine learning
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Yu, Jiaxin, primary, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Tseng, Kun-Hao, additional, Tien, Ni, additional, Hsueh, Po-Ren, additional, and Cho, Der-Yang, additional
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- 2023
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43. Previous nonhepatectomy abdominal surgery did not increase the difficulty in laparoscopic hepatectomy for hepatocellular carcinoma: A case–control study in 100 consecutive patients
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Lee, Yi-Hsuan, primary, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Kuo, Tsai-Ling, additional, Lee, Ming-Che, additional, and Chen, Yen-Cheng, additional
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- 2023
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44. CHIME/FRB Discovery of 25 Repeating Fast Radio Burst Sources
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FRB Collaboration, Andersen, Bridget C., Bandura, Kevin, Bhardwaj, Mohit, Boyle, P. J., Brar, Charanjot, Cassanelli, Tomas, Chatterjee, S., Chawla, Pragya, Cook, Amanda M., Curtin, Alice P., Dobbs, Matt, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, Faber, Jakob T., Fandino, Mateus, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Gaensler, B. M., Giri, Utkarsh, Herrera-Martin, Antonio, Hill, Alex S., Ibik, Adaeze, Josephy, Alexander, Kaczmarek, Jane F., Kader, Zarif, Kaspi, Victoria, Landecker, T. L., Lanman, Adam E., Lazda, Mattias, Leung, Calvin, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Masui, Kiyoshi W., Mckinven, Ryan, Mena-Parra, Juan, Meyers, Bradley W., Michilli, D., Ng, Cherry, Pandhi, Ayush, Pearlman, Aaron B., Pen, Ue-Li, Petroff, Emily, Pleunis, Ziggy, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, Rahman, Mubdi, Ransom, Scott M., Renard, Andre, Sand, Ketan R., Sanghavi, Pranav, Scholz, Paul, Shah, Vishwangi, Shin, Kaitlyn, Siegel, Seth, Smith, Kendrick, Stairs, Ingrid, Su, Jianing, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., Vanderlinde, Keith, Wang, Haochen, Wulf, Dallas, and Zwaniga, Andrew
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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Space and Planetary Science ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the discovery of 25 new repeating fast radio burst (FRB) sources found among CHIME/FRB events detected between 2019 September 30 and 2021 May 1. The sources were found using a new clustering algorithm that looks for multiple events co-located on the sky having similar dispersion measures (DMs). The new repeaters have DMs ranging from $\sim$220 pc cm$^{-3}$ to $\sim$1700 pc cm$^{-3}$, and include sources having exhibited as few as two bursts to as many as twelve. We report a statistically significant difference in both the DM and extragalactic DM (eDM) distributions between repeating and apparently nonrepeating sources, with repeaters having lower mean DM and eDM, and we discuss the implications. We find no clear bimodality between the repetition rates of repeaters and upper limits on repetition from apparently nonrepeating sources after correcting for sensitivity and exposure effects, although some active repeating sources stand out as anomalous. We measure the repeater fraction over time and find that it tends to an equilibrium of $2.6_{-2.6}^{+2.9}$% over our total time-on-sky thus far. We also report on 14 more sources which are promising repeating FRB candidates and which merit follow-up observations for confirmation., Comment: ApJ in press. Comments are still welcome and follow-up observations are encouraged!
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- 2023
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45. Evaluation of the Rapid Sepsityper protocol and specific MBT-Sepsityper module for the identification of bacteremia and fungemia using Bruker Biotyper MALDI-TOF MS
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, primary, Tseng, Kun-Hao, additional, Tien, Ni, additional, Lin, Yu-Tzu, additional, Yu, Jiaxin, additional, Hsueh, Po-Ren, additional, and Cho, Der-Yang, additional
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- 2022
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46. BURSTT: Bustling Universe Radio Survey Telescope in Taiwan
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, primary, Lin, Kai-yang, additional, Li, Chao-Te, additional, Tseng, Yao-Huan, additional, Jiang, Homin, additional, Wang, Jen-Hung, additional, Cheng, Jen-Chieh, additional, Pen, Ue-Li, additional, Chen, Ming-Tang, additional, Chen, Pisin, additional, Chen, Yaocheng, additional, Goto, Tomotsugu, additional, Hashimoto, Tetsuya, additional, Hwang, Yuh-Jing, additional, King, Sun-Kun, additional, Kubo, Derek, additional, Kuo, Chung-Yun, additional, Mills, Adam, additional, Nam, Jiwoo, additional, Oshiro, Peter, additional, Shen, Chang-Shao, additional, Tseng, Hsien-Chun, additional, Wang, Shih-Hao, additional, Wu, Vigo Feng-Shun, additional, Bower, Geoffrey, additional, Chang, Shu-Hao, additional, Chen, Pai-An, additional, Chen, Ying-Chih, additional, Chiang, Yi-Kuan, additional, Fedynitch, Anatoli, additional, Gusinskaia, Nina, additional, Ho, Simon C.-C., additional, Hsiao, Tiger Y.-Y., additional, Hu, Chin-Ping, additional, Huang, Yau De, additional, Jáuregui García, José Miguel, additional, Kim, Seong Jin, additional, Kuo, Cheng-Yu, additional, Ling, Decmend Fang-Jie, additional, On, Alvina Y. L., additional, Peterson, Jeffrey B., additional, R. Raquel, Bjorn Jasper, additional, Su, Shih-Chieh, additional, Uno, Yuri, additional, Wu, Cossas K.-W., additional, Yamasaki, Shotaro, additional, and Zhu, Hong-Ming, additional
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- 2022
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47. Constraining primordial black holes using fast radio burst gravitational-lens interferometry with CHIME/FRB
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Leung, Calvin, primary, Kader, Zarif, additional, Masui, Kiyoshi W., additional, Dobbs, Matt, additional, Michilli, Daniele, additional, Mena-Parra, Juan, additional, Mckinven, Ryan, additional, Ng, Cherry, additional, Bandura, Kevin, additional, Bhardwaj, Mohit, additional, Brar, Charanjot, additional, Cassanelli, Tomas, additional, Chawla, Pragya, additional, Dong, Fengqiu Adam, additional, Good, Deborah, additional, Kaspi, Victoria, additional, Lanman, Adam E., additional, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Meyers, Bradley W., additional, Pearlman, Aaron B., additional, Pen, Ue-Li, additional, Petroff, Emily, additional, Pleunis, Ziggy, additional, Rafiei-Ravandi, Masoud, additional, Rahman, Mubdi, additional, Sanghavi, Pranav, additional, Scholz, Paul, additional, Shin, Kaitlyn, additional, Siegel, Seth, additional, Smith, Kendrick M., additional, Stairs, Ingrid, additional, Tendulkar, Shriharsh P., additional, and Vanderlinde, Keith, additional
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- 2022
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48. FilmArray Meningitis/Encephalitis (M/E) false-negative for cryptococcal meningitis
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Wu, Pin-Han, primary, Chen, Chih-Hao, additional, Chou, Chia-Huei, additional, Ho, Mao-Wang, additional, Liu, Yu-Hsuan, additional, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Chen, Kuan-Fei, additional, and Hsueh, Po-Ren, additional
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- 2022
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49. Evaluation of the blood volume effect on the diagnosis of bacteremia in automated blood culture systems
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Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, Liu, Yen-Fang, Tien, Ni, Ho, Cheng-Mao, Hsu, Ling-Nu, and Lu, Jang-Jih
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- 2013
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50. Serum myostatin level is a positive predictor of endothelial function measured by digital thermal monitoring of vascular reactivity in kidney transplantation patients
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Hsu, Bang-Gee, primary, Lee, Ming-Che, primary, Lin, Hsiu-Hsien, additional, Ho, Ching-Chun, additional, Chen, Yen-Cheng, additional, and Ho, Guan-Jin, additional
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- 2022
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