1,148 results on '"Novara G"'
Search Results
2. The EXTraS Project: Exploring the X-ray transient and variable sky
- Author
-
De Luca, A., Salvaterra, R., Belfiore, A., Carpano, S., D'Agostino, D., Haberl, F., Israel, G. L., Law-Green, D., Lisini, G., Marelli, M., Novara, G., Read, A. M., Rodriguez-Castillo, G., Rosen, S. R., Salvetti, D., Tiengo, A., Vianello, G., Watson, M. G., Delvaux, C., Dickens, T., Esposito, P., Greiner, J., Haemmerle, H., Kreikenbohm, A., Kreykenbohm, S., Oertel, M., Pizzocaro, D., Pye, J. P., Sandrelli, S., Stelzer, B., Wilms, J., and Zagaria, F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Temporal variability in flux and spectral shape is ubiquitous in the X-ray sky and carries crucial information about the nature and emission physics of the sources. The EPIC instrument on board the XMM-Newton observatory is the most powerful tool for studying variability even in faint sources. Each day, it collects a large amount of information about hundreds of new serendipitous sources, but the resulting huge (and growing) dataset is largely unexplored in the time domain. The project called Exploring the X-ray transient and variable sky (EXTraS) systematically extracted all temporal domain information in the XMM-Newton archive. This included a search and characterisation of variability, both periodic and aperiodic, in hundreds of thousands of sources spanning more than eight orders of magnitude in timescale and six orders of magnitude in flux, and a search for fast transients that were missed by standard image analysis. All results, products, and software tools have been released to the community in a public archive. A science gateway has also been implemented to allow users to run the EXTraS analysis remotely on recent XMM datasets. We give details on the new algorithms that were designed and implemented to perform all steps of EPIC data analysis, including data preparation, source and background modelling, generation of time series and power spectra, and search for and characterisation of different types of variabilities. We describe our results and products and give information about their basic statistical properties and advice on their usage. We also describe available online resources. The EXTraS database of results and its ancillary products is a rich resource for any kind of investigation in almost all fields of astrophysics. Algorithms and lessons learnt from our project are also a very useful reference for any current and future experiment in the time domain., Comment: 39 pages; accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A search for optical and near-infrared counterparts of the compact binary merger GW190814
- Author
-
Thakur, A. L., Dichiara, S., Troja, E., Chase, E. A., Sanchez-Ramirez, R., Piro, L., Fryer, C. L., Butler, N. R., Watson, A. M., Wollaeger, R. T., Ambrosi, E., González, J. Becerra, Becerra, R. L., Bruni, G., Cenko, S. B., Cusumano, G., D'Aì, Antonino, Durbak, J., Fontes, C. J., Gatkine, P., Hungerford, A. L., Korobkin, O., Kutyrev, A. S., Lee, W. H., Lotti, S., Minervini, G., Novara, G., La Parola, V., Pereyra, M., Ricci, R., Tiengo, A., and Veilleux, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on our observing campaign of the compact binary merger GW190814, detected by the Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo detectors on August 14th, 2019. This signal has the best localisation of any observed gravitational wave (GW) source, with a 90% probability area of 18.5 deg$^2$, and an estimated distance of ~ 240 Mpc. We obtained wide-field observations with the Deca-Degree Optical Transient Imager (DDOTI) covering 88% of the probability area down to a limiting magnitude of $w$ = 19.9 AB. Nearby galaxies within the high probability region were targeted with the Lowell Discovery Telescope (LDT), whereas promising candidate counterparts were characterized through multi-colour photometry with the Reionization and Transients InfraRed (RATIR) and spectroscopy with the Gran Telescopio de Canarias (GTC). We use our optical and near-infrared limits in conjunction with the upper limits obtained by the community to constrain the possible electromagnetic counterparts associated with the merger. A gamma-ray burst seen along its jet's axis is disfavoured by the multi-wavelength dataset, whereas the presence of a burst seen at larger viewing angles is not well constrained. Although our observations are not sensitive to a kilonova similar to AT2017gfo, we can rule out high-mass (> 0.1 M$_{\odot}$) fast-moving (mean velocity >= 0.3c) wind ejecta for a possible kilonova associated with this merger., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables; updated acknowledgement section. Accepted for publication in MNRAS (10 September 2020)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Multi-wavelength search for Black Widows and Redbacks counterparts of candidate $\gamma$-ray millisecond pulsars
- Author
-
Braglia, C., Mignani, R. P., Belfiore, A., Marelli, M., Israel, G. L., Novara, G., De Luca, A., Tiengo, A., and Parkinson, P. M. Saz
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The wealth of detections of millisecond pulsars (MSPs) in $\gamma$-rays by {\em Fermi} has spurred searches for these objects among the several unidentified $\gamma$-ray sources. Interesting targets are a sub-class of binary MSPs, dubbed "Black Widows" (BWs) and "Redbacks" (RBs), which are in orbit with low-mass non-degenerate companions fully or partially ablated by irradiation from the MSP wind. These systems can be easily missed in radio pulsar surveys owing to the eclipse of the radio signal by the intra-binary plasma from the ablated companion star photosphere, making them better targets for multi-wavelength observations. We used optical and X-ray data from public databases to carry out a systematic investigation of all the unidentified $\gamma$-ray sources from the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) Third Source Catalog (3FGL), which have been pre-selected as likely MSP candidates according to a machine-learning technique analysis. We tested our procedure by recovering known binary BW/RB identifications and searched for new ones, finding possible candidates. At the same time, we investigated previously proposed BW/RB identifications and we ruled out one of them based upon the updated $\gamma$-ray source coordinates., Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, 21 pages - This manuscript is based on the MSc Thesis work of C. Braglia, defended on April 2020 at the University of Milan, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Observation of inverse Compton emission from a long $\gamma$-ray burst
- Author
-
Acciari, V. A., Ansoldi, S., Antonelli, L. A., Engels, A. Arbet, Baack, D., Babić, A., Banerjee, B., de Almeida, U. Barres, Barrio, J. A., González, J. Becerra, Bednarek, W., Bellizzi, L., Bernardini, E., Berti, A., Besenrieder, J., Bhattacharyya, W., Bigongiari, C., Biland, A., Blanch, O., Bonnoli, G., Bošnjak, Ž., Busetto, G., Carosi, R., Ceribella, G., Chai, Y., Chilingaryan, A., Cikota, S., Colak, S. M., Colin, U., Colombo, E., Contreras, J. L., Cortina, J., Covino, S., D'Elia, V., Da Vela, P., Dazzi, F., De Angelis, A., De Lotto, B., Delfino, M., Delgado, J., Depaoli, D., Di Pierro, F., Di Venere, L., Espiñeira, E. Do Souto, Prester, D. Dominis, Donini, A., Dorner, D., Doro, M., Elsaesser, D., Ramazani, V. Fallah, Fattorini, A., Ferrara, G., Fidalgo, D., Foffano, L., Fonseca, M. V., Font, L., Fruck, C., Fukami, S., López, R. J. García, Garczarczyk, M., Gasparyan, S., Gaug, M., Giglietto, N., Giordano, F., Godinović, N., Green, D., Guberman, D., Hadasch, D., Hahn, A., Herrera, J., Hoang, J., Hrupec, D., Hütten, M., Inada, T., Inoue, S., Ishio, K., Iwamura, Y., Jouvin, L., Kerszberg, D., Kubo, H., Kushida, J., Lamastra, A., Lelas, D., Leone, F., Lindfors, E., Lombardi, S., Longo, F., López, M., López-Coto, R., López-Oramas, A., Loporchio, S., Fraga, B. Machado de Oliveira, Maggio, C., Majumdar, P., Makariev, M., Mallamaci, M., Maneva, G., Manganaro, M., Mannheim, K., Maraschi, L., Mariotti, M., Martínez, M., Mazin, D., Mićanović, S., Miceli, D., Minev, M., Miranda, J. M., Mirzoyan, R., Molina, E., Moralejo, A., Morcuende, D., Moreno, V., Moretti, E., Munar-Adrover, P., Neustroev, V., Nigro, C., Nilsson, K., Ninci, D., Nishijima, K., Noda, K., Nogués, L., Nozaki, S., Paiano, S., Palatiello, M., Paneque, D., Paoletti, R., Paredes, J. M., Peñil, P., Peresano, M., Persic, M., Moroni, P. G. Prada, Prandini, E., Puljak, I., Rhode, W., Ribó, M., Rico, J., Righi, C., Rugliancich, A., Saha, L., Sahakyan, N., Saito, T., Sakurai, S., Satalecka, K., Schmidt, K., Schweizer, T., Sitarek, J., Šnidarić, I., Sobczynska, D., Somero, A., Stamerra, A., Strom, D., Strzys, M., Suda, Y., Surić, T., Takahashi, M., Tavecchio, F., Temnikov, P., Terzić, T., Teshima, M., Torres-Albà, N., Tosti, L., Vagelli, V., van Scherpenberg, J., Vanzo, G., Acosta, M. Vazquez, Vigorito, C. F., Vitale, V., Vovk, I., Will, M., Zarić, D., Nava, L., Veres, P., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Cleveland, W. H., Hamburg, R., Hui, C. M., Mailyan, B., Preece, R. D., Roberts, O., von Kienlin, A., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., Kocevski, D., Arimoto, M., Tak, D., Asano, K., Axelsson, M., Barbiellini, G., Bissaldi, E., Dirirsa, F. Fana, Gill, R., Granot, J., McEnery, J., Razzaque, S., Piron, F., Racusin, J. L., Thompson, D. J., Campana, S., Bernardini, M. G., Kuin, N. P. M., Siegel, M. H., Cenko, S. Bradley, O'Brien, P., Capalbi, M., D'Aì, A., De Pasquale, M., Gropp, J., Klingler, N., Osborne, J. P., Perri, M., Starling, R., Tagliaferri, G., Tohuvavohu, A., Ursi, A., Tavani, M., Cardillo, M., Casentini, C., Piano, G., Evangelista, Y., Verrecchia, F., Pittori, C., Lucarelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Parmiggiani, N., Anderson, G. E., Anderson, J. P., Bernardi, G., Bolmer, J., Caballero-García, M. D., Carrasco, I. M., Castellón, A., Segura, N. Castro, Castro-Tirado, A. J., Cherukuri, S. V., Cockeram, A. M., D'Avanzo, P., Di Dato, A., Diretse, R., Fender, R. P., Fernández-García, E., Fynbo, J. P. U., Fruchter, A. S., Greiner, J., Gromadzki, M., Heintz, K. E., Heywood, I., van der Horst, A. J., Hu, Y. -D., Inserra, C., Izzo, L., Jaiswal, V., Jakobsson, P., Japelj, J., Kankare, E., Kann, D. A., Kouveliotou, C., Klose, S., Levan, A. J., Li, X. Y., Lotti, S., Maguire, K., Malesani, D. B., Manulis, I., Marongiu, M., Martin, S., Melandri, A., Michałowski, M., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Misra, K., Moin, A., Mooley, K. P., Nasri, S., Nicholl, M., Noschese, A., Novara, G., Pandey, S. B., Peretti, E., del Pulgar, C. J. Pérez, Pérez-Torres, M. A., Perley, D. A., Piro, L., Ragosta, F., Resmi, L., Ricci, R., Rossi, A., Sánchez-Ramírez, R., Selsing, J., Schulze, S., Smartt, S. J., Smith, I. A., Sokolov, V. V., Stevens, J., Tanvir, N. R., Thóne, C. C., Tiengo, A., Tremou, E., Troja, E., Postigo, A. de Ugarte, Vergani, S. D., Wieringa, M., Woudt, P. A., Xu, D., Yaron, O., and Young, D. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) originate from ultra-relativistic jets launched from the collapsing cores of dying massive stars. They are characterised by an initial phase of bright and highly variable radiation in the keV-MeV band that is likely produced within the jet and lasts from milliseconds to minutes, known as the prompt emission. Subsequently, the interaction of the jet with the external medium generates external shock waves, responsible for the afterglow emission, which lasts from days to months, and occurs over a broad energy range, from the radio to the GeV bands. The afterglow emission is generally well explained as synchrotron radiation by electrons accelerated at the external shock. Recently, an intense, long-lasting emission between 0.2 and 1 TeV was observed from the GRB 190114C. Here we present the results of our multi-frequency observational campaign of GRB~190114C, and study the evolution in time of the GRB emission across 17 orders of magnitude in energy, from $5\times10^{-6}$ up to $10^{12}$\,eV. We find that the broadband spectral energy distribution is double-peaked, with the TeV emission constituting a distinct spectral component that has power comparable to the synchrotron component. This component is associated with the afterglow, and is satisfactorily explained by inverse Compton upscattering of synchrotron photons by high-energy electrons. We find that the conditions required to account for the observed TeV component are not atypical, supporting the possibility that inverse Compton emission is commonly produced in GRBs.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A Supernova Candidate at z=0.092 in XMM-Newton Archival Data
- Author
-
Novara, G., Esposito, P., Tiengo, A., Vianello, G., Salvaterra, R., Belfiore, A., De Luca, A., D'Avanzo, P., Greiner, J., Scodeggio, M., Rosen, S., Delvaux, C., Pian, E., Campana, S., Lisini, G., Mereghetti, S., and Israel, G. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
During a search for X-ray transients in the XMM-Newton archive within the EXTraS project, we discovered a new X-ray source that is detected only during a ~5 min interval of a ~21 h-long observation performed on 2011 June 21 (EXMM 023135.0-603743, probability of a random Poissonian fluctuation: ~$1.4\times10^{-27}$). With dedicated follow-up observations, we found that its position is consistent with a star-forming galaxy (SFR = 1-2 $M_\odot$ yr$^{-1}$) at redshift $z=0.092\pm0.003$ ($d=435\pm15$ Mpc). At this redshift, the energy released during the transient event was $2.8\times10^{46}$ erg in the 0.3-10 keV energy band (in the source rest frame). The luminosity of the transient, together with its spectral and timing properties, make EXMM 023135.0-603743 a gripping analog to the X-ray transient associated to SN 2008D, which was discovered during a Swift/XRT observation of the nearby ($d=27$ Mpc) supernova-rich galaxy NGC 2770. We interpret the XMM-Newton event as a supernova shock break-out or an early cocoon, and show that our serendipitous discovery is compatible with the rate of core-collapse supernovae derived from optical observations and much higher than that of tidal disruption events., Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures; Revised version accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. EXTraS discovery of an X-ray superflare from an L dwarf
- Author
-
De Luca, A., Stelzer, B., Burgasser, A. J., Pizzocaro, D., Ranalli, P., Raetz, S., Marelli, M., Novara, G., Vignali, C., Belfiore, A., Esposito, P., Franzetti, P., Fumana, M., Gilli, R., Salvaterra, R., and Tiengo, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the first detection of an X-ray flare from an ultracool dwarf of spectral class L. The event was identified in the EXTraS database of XMM-Newton variable sources, and its optical counterpart, J0331-27, was found through a cross-match with the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 release. Next to an earlier four-photon detection of Kelu-1, J0331-27 is only the second L dwarf detected in X-rays, and much more distant than other ultracool dwarfs with X-ray detections (photometric distance of 240 pc). From an optical spectrum with the VIMOS instrument at the VLT, we determine the spectral type of J0331-27 to be L1. The X-ray flare has an energy of E_X,F ~ 2x10^33 erg, placing it in the regime of superflares. No quiescent emission is detected, and from 2.5 Msec of XMM data we derive an upper limit of L_X,qui < 10^27 erg/s. The flare peak luminosity L_X,peak = 6.3x10^29 erg/s, flare duration tau_decay ~ 2400 s, and plasma temperature (~16 MK) are similar to values observed in X-ray flares of M dwarfs. This shows that strong magnetic reconnection events and the ensuing plasma heating are still present even in objects with photospheres as cool as ~2100 K. However, the absence of any other flares above the detection threshold of E_X,F ~2.5x10^32 erg in a total of ~2.5 Ms of X-ray data yields a flare energy number distribution inconsistent with the canonical power law dN/dE ~ E^-2, suggesting that magnetic energy release in J0331-27 -- and possibly in all L dwarfs -- takes place predominantly in the form of giant flares., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Published as a Letter to A&A
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The afterglow and kilonova of the short GRB 160821B
- Author
-
Troja, E., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Gonzalez, J. Becerra, Hu, Y., Ryan, G. S., Cenko, S. B., Ricci, R., Novara, G., Sanchez-Ramirez, R., Acosta-Pulido, J. A., Garcia, M. D. Caballero, Guziy, S., Jeong, S., Lien, A. Y., Marquez, I., Pandey, S. B., Park, I. H., Tello, J. C., Sakamoto, T., Sokolov, I. V., Sokolov, V. V., Tiengo, A., Valeev, A. F., Zhang, B. B., and Veilleux, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
GRB 160821B is a short duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) detected and localized by the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory in the outskirts of a spiral galaxy at z=0.1613, at a projected physical offset of 16 kpc from the galaxy's center. We present X-ray, optical/nIR and radio observations of its counterpart and model them with two distinct components of emission: a standard afterglow, arising from the interaction of the relativistic jet with the surrounding medium, and a kilonova, powered by the radioactive decay of the sub-relativistic ejecta. Broadband modeling of the afterglow data reveals a weak reverse shock propagating backward into the jet, and a likely jet-break at 3.5 d. This is consistent with a structured jet seen slightly off-axis while expanding into a low-density medium. Analysis of the kilonova properties suggests a rapid evolution toward red colors, similar to AT2017gfo, and a low nIR luminosity, possibly due to the presence of a long-lived neutron star. The global properties of the environment, the inferred low mass (M_ej < 0.006 Msun) and velocities (v > 0.05 c) of lanthanide-rich ejecta are consistent with a binary neutron star merger progenitor., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS, in press. Moderate revision, added Figure 5 and X-ray data to Table 1
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A long-lived neutron star merger remnant in GW170817: constraints and clues from X-ray observations
- Author
-
Piro, L., Troja, E., Zhang, B., Ryan, G., van Eerten, H., Ricci, R., Wieringa, M. H., Tiengo, A., Butler, N. R., Cenko, S. B., Fox, O. D., Kandrika, H. G., Novara, G., Rossi, A., and Sakamoto, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Multi-messenger observations of GW170817 have not conclusively established whether the merger remnant is a black hole (BH) or a neutron star (NS). We show that a long-lived magnetized NS with a poloidal field $B\approx 10^{12}$G is fully consistent with the electromagnetic dataset, when spin down losses are dominated by gravitational wave (GW) emission. The required ellipticity $\epsilon\gtrsim 10^{-5}$ can result from a toroidal magnetic field component much stronger than the poloidal component, a configuration expected from a NS newly formed from a merger. Abrupt magnetic dissipation of the toroidal component can lead to the appearance of X-ray flares, analogous to the one observed in gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows. In the X-ray afterglow of GW170817 we identify a low-significance ($\gtrsim 3\sigma$) temporal feature at 155 d, consistent with a sudden reactivation of the central NS. Energy injection from the NS spin down into the relativistic shock is negligible, and the underlying continuum is fully accounted for by a structured jet seen off-axis. Whereas radio and optical observations probe the interaction of this jet with the surrounding medium, observations at X-ray wavelengths, performed with adequate sampling, open a privileged window on to the merger remnant., Comment: 10 pages, 7 figs, MNRAS Accepted 2018 November 5
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. A new Ultraluminous X-ray source in the galaxy NGC 5907
- Author
-
Pintore, F., Belfiore, A., Novara, G., Salvaterra, R., Marelli, M., De Luca, A., Rigoselli, M., Israel, G., Rodriguez, G., Mereghetti, S., Wolter, A., Walton, D. J., Fuerst, F., Ambrosi, E., Zampieri, L., Tiengo, A., and Salvaggio, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the serendipitous discovery of a new transient in NGC 5907, at a peak luminosity of 6.4x10^{39} erg/s. The source was undetected in previous 2012 Chandra observations with a 3 sigma upper limit on the luminosity of 1.5x10^{38} erg/s, implying a flux increase of a factor of >35. We analyzed three recent 60ks/50ks Chandra and 50ks XMM-Newton observations, as well as all the available Swift observations performed between August 2017/March 2018. Until the first half of October 2017, Swift observations do not show any emission from the source. The transient entered the ULX regime in less than two weeks and its outburst was still on-going at the end of February 2018. The 0.3-10 keV spectrum is consistent with a single multicolour blackbody disc (kT~1.5 keV). The source might be a ~30 solar mass black hole accreting at the Eddington limit. However, although we did not find evidence of pulsations, we cannot rule-out the possibility that this ULX hosts an accreting neutron star., Comment: Accepted on MNRAS, 5 pages, 2 figure, 1 table
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The impact of multiple lesions in prostate MRI – insights from the YAU prostate cancer group
- Author
-
Zattoni, F., primary, Novara, G., additional, Marra, G., additional, Kasivisvanathan, V., additional, Carletti, F., additional, Ploussard, G., additional, Olivier, J., additional, K Chiu, P., additional, Valerio, M., additional, Marquis, A., additional, Gontero, P., additional, Guo, H., additional, Zhuang, J., additional, Barletta, F., additional, Leni, R., additional, Cirulli, G., additional, Kretschmer, A., additional, Apfelbeck, M., additional, Kesch, C., additional, Van Den Bergh, R., additional, Briganti, A., additional, Dal Moro, F., additional, and Gandaglia, G., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Clinical Application of Bladder MRI and Vesical Imaging-Reporting And Data System
- Author
-
Panebianco, V., primary, Briganti, A., additional, Boellaard, T.N., additional, Catto, J., additional, Compera, E., additional, Efstathiou, J., additional, Van Der Heijden, A.G., additional, Giannarini, G., additional, Girometti, R., additional, Mertens, L., additional, Takeuchi, M., additional, Muglia, V.F., additional, Narumi, Y., additional, Novara, G., additional, Pecoraro, M., additional, Roupret, M., additional, Sanguedolce, F., additional, Santini, D., additional, Shariat, S.F., additional, Simone, G., additional, Vargas, H.A., additional, Woo, S., additional, Barentsz, J.O., additional, and Witjes, J.A., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Optimizing detection and prediction of prostate cancer after positive MRI and negative biopsies
- Author
-
Zattoni, F., primary, Gandaglia, G., additional, C N Van Den Bergh, R., additional, Marra, G., additional, Valerio, M., additional, Olivier, J., additional, Puche Sanzi, I., additional, Rajwa, P., additional, Maggi, M., additional, Campi, R., additional, Amparore, D., additional, De Cillis, S., additional, Guo, H., additional, Veccia, A., additional, Ditonno, F., additional, Pereira, L.J., additional, Barletta, F., additional, Leni, R., additional, Rivas, J.G., additional, Remmers, S., additional, Roobol M., J., additional, Antonelli, A., additional, Dal Moro, F., additional, and Novara, G., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Robot-assisted uretero-calyceal-anastomosis using native ureter as an alternative technique for treatment of complex ureteral strictures in transplanted kidney
- Author
-
Facco, M., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Gardi, M., additional, Betto, G., additional, Taverna, A., additional, Novara, G., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A prospective randomized multicenter study on the impact of 18F-Choline PET/CT versus conventional imaging for staging intermediate - to high-risk prostate cancer
- Author
-
Evangelista, L., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Borsasti, E., additional, Trifro, G., additional, Farsad, M., additional, Trenti, E., additional, Chierichetti, F., additional, Bartolomei, M., additional, Cracco, E., additional, Bombardieri, E., additional, Dal Moro, F., additional, Del Bianco, P., additional, Magni, G., additional, De Salvo, G.L., additional, and Novara, G., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. EXTraS discovery of two pulsators in the direction of the LMC: a Be/X-ray binary pulsar in the LMC and a candidate double-degenerate polar in the foreground
- Author
-
Haberl, F., Israel, G. L., Castillo, G. A. Rodriguez, Vasilopoulos, G., Delvaux, C., De Luca, A., Carpano, S., Esposito, P., Novara, G., Salvaterra, R., Tiengo, A., D'Agostino, D., and Udalski, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The EXTraS project to explore the X-ray Transient and variable Sky searches for coherent signals in the X-ray archival data of XMM-Newton. XMM-Newton performed more than 400 pointed observations in the region of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We inspected the results of the EXTraS period search to systematically look for new X-ray pulsators in our neighbour galaxy. We analysed the XMM-Newton observations of two sources from the 3XMM catalogue which show significant signals for coherent pulsations. 3XMM J051259.8-682640 was detected as source with hard X-ray spectrum in two XMM-Newton observations, revealing a periodic modulation of the X-ray flux with 956~s. As optical counterpart we identify an early-type star with Halpha emission. The OGLE I-band light curve exhibits a regular pattern with three brightness dips which mark a period of ~1350 d. The X-ray spectrum of 3XMM J051034.6-670353 is dominated by a super-soft blackbody-like emission component (kT ~ 70 eV) which is modulated by nearly 100% with a period of ~1418 s. From GROND observations we suggest a star with r' = 20.9 mag as possible counterpart of the X-ray source. 3XMM J051259.8-682640 is confirmed as a new Be/X-ray binary pulsar in the Large Magellanic Cloud. We discuss the long-term optical period as likely orbital period which would be the longest known from a high-mass X-ray binary. The spectral and temporal properties of the super-soft source 3XMM J051034.6-670353 are very similar to those of RX J0806.3+1527 and RX J1914.4+2456 suggesting that it belongs to the class of double-degenerate polars and is located in our Galaxy rather than in the LMC., Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics, new version with minor corrections
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. An accreting pulsar with extreme properties drives an ultraluminous x-ray source in NGC 5907
- Author
-
Israel, G. L., Belfiore, A., Stella, L., Esposito, P., Casella, P., De Luca, A., Marelli, M., Papitto, A., Perri, M., Puccetti, S., Castillo, G. A. Rodriguez, Salvetti, D., Tiengo, A., Zampieri, L., D'Agostino, D., Greiner, J., Haberl, F., Novara, G., Salvaterra, R., Turolla, R., Watson, M., Wilms, J., and Wolter, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Ultraluminous x-ray sources (ULXs) in nearby galaxies shine brighter than any X-ray source in our Galaxy. ULXs are usually modeled as stellar-mass black holes (BHs) accreting at very high rates or intermediate-mass BHs. We present observations showing that NGC5907 ULX is instead an x-ray accreting neutron star (NS) with a spin period evolving from 1.43~s in 2003 to 1.13~s in 2014. It has an isotropic peak luminosity of about 1000 times the Eddington limit for a NS at 17.1~Mpc. Standard accretion models fail to explain its luminosity, even assuming beamed emission, but a strong multipolar magnetic field can describe its properties. These findings suggest that other extreme ULXs (x-ray luminosity > 10^{41} erg/s) might harbor NSs., Comment: 37 pages including Supplementary Material; 7 figures
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. EXTraS discovery of an 1.2-s X-ray pulsar in M 31
- Author
-
Esposito, P., Israel, G. L., Belfiore, A., Novara, G., Sidoli, L., Castillo, G. A. Rodríguez, De Luca, A., Tiengo, A., Haberl, F., Salvaterra, R., Read, A. M., Salvetti, D., Sandrelli, S., Marelli, M., Wilms, J., and D'Agostino, D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
During a search for coherent signals in the X-ray archival data of XMM-Newton, we discovered a modulation at 1.2 s in 3XMM J004301.4+413017 (3X J0043), a source lying in the direction of an external arm of M 31. This short period indicates a neutron star (NS). Between 2000 and 2013, the position of 3X J0043 was imaged by public XMM-Newton observations 35 times. The analysis of these data allowed us to detect an orbital modulation at 1.27 d and study the long-term properties of the source. The emission of the pulsar was rather hard (most spectra are described by a power law with $\Gamma < 1$) and, assuming the distance to M 31, the 0.3-10 keV luminosity was variable, from $\sim$$3\times10^{37}$ to $2\times10^{38}$ erg s$^{-1}$. The analysis of optical data shows that, while 3X J0043 is likely associated to a globular cluster in M 31, a counterpart with $V\gtrsim22$ outside the cluster cannot be excluded. Considering our findings, there are two main viable scenarios for 3X J0043: a peculiar low-mass X-ray binary, similar to 4U 1822-37 or 4U 1626-67, or an intermediate-mass X-ray binary resembling Her X-1. Regardless of the exact nature of the system, 3X J0043 is the first accreting NS in M 31 in which the spin period has been detected., Comment: To appear in MNRAS Letters; 2 color figures, 2 tables; 5 pages plus full Table 1 (1 page)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Clinical application of bladder MRI and the Vesical Imaging-Reporting And Data System.
- Author
-
Panebianco, V, Briganti, A., Boellaard, T.N., Catto, J., Comperat, E., Efstathiou, J., Heijden, A.G. van der, Giannarini, G., Girometti, R., Mertens, L., Takeuchi, M., Muglia, V.F., Narumi, Y., Novara, G., Pecoraro, M., Roupret, M., Sanguedolce, F., Santini, D., Shariat, S.F., Simone, G., Vargas, H.A., Woo, S., Barentsz, J., Witjes, J.A., Panebianco, V, Briganti, A., Boellaard, T.N., Catto, J., Comperat, E., Efstathiou, J., Heijden, A.G. van der, Giannarini, G., Girometti, R., Mertens, L., Takeuchi, M., Muglia, V.F., Narumi, Y., Novara, G., Pecoraro, M., Roupret, M., Sanguedolce, F., Santini, D., Shariat, S.F., Simone, G., Vargas, H.A., Woo, S., Barentsz, J., and Witjes, J.A.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, Diagnostic work-up and risk stratification in patients with bladder cancer before and after treatment must be refined to optimize management and improve outcomes. MRI has been suggested as a non-invasive technique for bladder cancer staging and assessment of response to systemic therapy. The Vesical Imaging-Reporting And Data System (VI-RADS) was developed to standardize bladder MRI image acquisition, interpretation and reporting and enables accurate prediction of muscle-wall invasion of bladder cancer. MRI is available in many centres but is not yet recommended as a first-line test for bladder cancer owing to a lack of high-quality evidence. Consensus-based evidence on the use of MRI-VI-RADS for bladder cancer care is needed to serve as a benchmark for formulating guidelines and research agendas until further evidence from randomized trials becomes available., 01 april 2024
- Published
- 2024
20. Follow-up observations of X-ray emitting hot subdwarf star: the He-rich sdO BD +37{\deg} 1977
- Author
-
La Palombara, N., Esposito, P., Mereghetti, S., Novara, G., and Tiengo, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the results of the first XMM-Newton satellite observation of the luminous and helium-rich O-type subdwarf BD +37{\deg} 1977 carried out in April 2014. X-ray emission is detected with a flux of about 4*10^(-14) erg/cm2/s (0.2-1.5 keV), corresponding to a f_X/f_bol ratio about 10^(-7); the source spectrum is very soft, and is well fit by the sum of two plasma components at different temperatures. Both characteristics are in agreement with what is observed in the main-sequence early-type stars, where the observed X-ray emission is due to turbulence and shocks in the stellar wind. A smaller but still significant stellar wind has been observed also in BD +37{\deg} 1977; therefore, we suggest that also in this case the detected X-ray flux has the same origin., Comment: 6 pages. Accepted for publication by Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Artificial intelligence in urology: Impact and limitations of ChatGTP in the management of uro-oncological diseases
- Author
-
La Bombarda, G., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Novara, G., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Betto, G., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Safety and functional impact of reducing parenchymal stitches in robot-assisted partial nephrectomy using hemopatch® as a hemostatic agent
- Author
-
Randazzo, G., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Novara, G., additional, Betto, G., additional, Carletti, F., additional, Reitano, G., additional, Lami, V., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Retzius-sparing robot-assisted simple prostatectomy: Short-term functional outcomes of a novel technique
- Author
-
Novara, G., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Parisotto, A., additional, Brunetti, G., additional, Carletti, F., additional, Serbia, M., additional, Lami, V., additional, Betto, G., additional, Zanovello, N., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. European urology: Serving our readership through systematic peer review, use of reporting standards, and encouragement of postpublication review
- Author
-
Catto, JWF, Cooperberg, MR, Cornu, JN, Gratzke, C, Novara, G, Shariat, SF, and Vickers, A
- Subjects
Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical Sciences - Published
- 2015
25. Highly absorbed X-ray binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud
- Author
-
Novara, G., La Palombara, N., Mereghetti, S., Haberl, F., Coe, M., Filipovic, M., Udalski, A., Paizis, A., Pietsch, W., Sturm, R., Gilfanov, M., Tiengo, A., Payne, J., Smits, D., and De Horta, A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Many of the high mass X-ray binaries (HMXRBs) discovered in recent years in our Galaxy are characterized by a high absorption, most likely intrinsic to the system, which hampers their detection at the softest X-ray energies. We have undertaken a search for highly-absorbed X-ray sources in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) with a systematic analysis of 62 XMM-Newton SMC observations. We obtained a sample of 30 sources showing evidence for an equivalent hydrogen column density larger than 3x10^23 cm^-2. Five of these sources are clearly identified as HMXRBs: four were already known (including three X-ray pulsars) and one, XMM J005605.8-720012, reported here for the first time. For the latter, we present optical spectroscopy confirming the association with a Be star in the SMC. The other sources in our sample have optical counterparts fainter than magnitude ~16 in the V band, and many of them have possible NIR counterparts consistent with highly reddened early type stars in the SMC. While their number is broadly consistent with the expected population of background highly-absorbed active galactic nuclei, a few of them could be HMXRBs in which an early type companion is severely reddened by local material., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Multi-wavelength observations of 1RXH J173523.7-354013: revealing an unusual bursting neutron star
- Author
-
Degenaar, N., Jonker, P. G., Torres, M. A. P., Kaur, R., Rea, N., Israel, G. L., Patruno, A., Trap, G., Cackett, E. M., D'Avanzo, P., Curto, G. Lo, Novara, G., Krimm, H., Holland, S. T., De Luca, A., Esposito, P., and Wijnands, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
On 2008 May 14, the Burst Alert Telescope aboard the Swift mission triggered on a type-I X-ray burst from the previously unclassified ROSAT object 1RXH J173523.7-354013, establishing the source as a neutron star X-ray binary. We report on X-ray, optical and near-infrared observations of this system. The X-ray burst had a duration of ~2 h and belongs to the class of rare, intermediately long type-I X-ray bursts. From the bolometric peak flux of ~3.5E-8 erg/cm^2/s, we infer a source distance of D<9.5 kpc. Photometry of the field reveals an optical counterpart that declined from R=15.9 during the X-ray burst to R=18.9 thereafter. Analysis of post-burst Swift/XRT observations, as well as archival XMM-Newton and ROSAT data suggests that the system is persistent at a 0.5-10 keV luminosity of ~2E35 (D/9.5 kpc)^2 erg/s. Optical and infrared photometry together with the detection of a narrow Halpha emission line (FWHM=292+/-9 km/s, EW=-9.0+/-0.4 Angstrom) in the optical spectrum confirms that 1RXH J173523.7-354013 is a neutron star low-mass X-ray binary. The Halpha emission demonstrates that the donor star is hydrogen-rich, which effectively rules out that this system is an ultra-compact X-ray binary., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 13 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. XMM-Newton and Swift observations prove GRB 090709A to be a distant, standard, long GRB
- Author
-
De Luca, A., Esposito, P., Israel, G. L., Götz, D., Novara, G., Tiengo, A., and Mereghetti, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
GRB 090709A is a long gamma-ray burst (GRB) discovered by Swift, featuring a bright X-ray afterglow as well as a faint infrared transient with very red and peculiar colors. The burst attracted a large interest because of a possible quasi-periodicity at P=8.1 s in the prompt emission, suggesting that it could have a different origin with respect to standard, long GRBs. In order to understand the nature of this burst, we obtained a target of opportunity observation with XMM-Newton. X-ray spectroscopy, based on XMM-Newton and Swift data, allowed us to model the significant excess in photoelectric absorption with respect to the Galactic value as due to a large column density (about 6.5E+22 cm^-2) in the GRB host, located at z=4.2. Such a picture is also consistent with the infrared transient's properties. Re-analysis of the prompt emission, based on INTEGRAL and on Swift data, excludes any significant modulation at P=8.1 s. Thus, we conclude that GRB 090709A is a distant, standard, long GRB., Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables; MNRAS, in press. (V3: minor changes to match the final version.)
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A Deep XMM-Newton Serendipitous Survey of a middle-latitude area. II. New deeper X-ray and optical observations
- Author
-
Novara, G., La Palombara, N., Mignani, R. P., Hatziminaoglou, E., Schirmer, M., De Luca, A., and Caraveo, P. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The radio-quiet neutron star 1E1207.4-5209 has been the target of several XMM-Newton observations, with a total exposure of ~350 ks. The source is located at intermediate galactic latitude (b~10 degrees), i.e. in a sky region with an extremely interesting mix of both galactic and extra-galactic X-ray sources. The aim of our work is to investigate the properties of both the intermediate-latitude galactic and extra-galactic X-ray source populations in the 1E1207.4-5209 field. We performed a coherent analysis of the whole XMM-Newton observation data set to build a catalogue of serendipitous X-ray sources detected with high confidence and to derive information on the source flux, spectra, and time variability. In addition, we performed a complete multi-band (UBVRI) optical coverage of the field with the Wide Field Imager (WFI) of the ESO/MPG 2.2m telescope (La Silla) to search for candidate optical counterparts to the X-ray sources, down to a V-band limiting magnitude of ~24.5. We detected a total of 144 serendipitous X-ray sources. Thanks to the refined X-ray positions and to the WFI observations, we found candidate optical counterparts for most of the X-ray sources in our compilation. For most of the brightest ones we proposed a likely classification based on both the X-ray spectra and the optical colours. Our results indicate that at intermediate galactic latitude the X-ray source population is dominated by the extra-galactic component, but with a significant contribution from the galactic component in the soft energy band, below 2 keV., Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Robotic YV plasty for recurrent bladder neck contracture
- Author
-
Carletti, F., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Mitzman, F., additional, Basso, G., additional, Mangiacavallo, F., additional, Lami, V., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Iafrate, M., additional, Novara, G., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Facing shortened mesentery during intracorporeal neobladder reconstruction after robot-assisted radical cystectomy: The ileal-flap technique
- Author
-
Gardi, M., primary, Betto, G., additional, Zattoni, F., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Iafrate, M., additional, Carletti, F., additional, Carrozza, S., additional, Novara, G., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Robot-assisted repair of plurirecurrent vesico-vaginal fistula
- Author
-
Zattoni, F., primary, Carletti, F., additional, Mitzman, F., additional, Gianninó, M., additional, Basso, G., additional, Bruniera, M., additional, Betto, G., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Lami, V., additional, Iafrate, M., additional, Novara, G., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Perioperative and functional results of RARC with totally intracorporeal neobladder: the Ves.Pa. technique
- Author
-
Dal Moro, F., primary, Zattoni, F., additional, Tonet, E., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Giovanni, B., additional, and Novara, G., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Multiwavelength observations of 3C 454.3. I. The AGILE 2007 November campaign on the 'Crazy Diamond'
- Author
-
Vercellone, S., Chen, A. W., Vittorini, V., Giuliani, A., D'Ammando, F., Tavani, M., Donnarumma, I., Pucella, G., Raiteri, C. M., Villata, M., Chen, W. P., Tosti, G., Impiombato, D., Romano, P., Belfiore, A., De Luca, A., Novara, G., Senziani, F., Bazzano, A., Fiocchi, M. T., Ubertini, P., Ferrari, A., Argan, A., Barbiellini, G., Boffelli, F., Bulgarelli, A., Caraveo, P., Cattaneo, P. W., Cocco, V., Costa, E., Del Monte, E., De Paris, G., Di Cocco, G., Evangelista, Y., Feroci, M., Fiorini, M., Fornari, F., Froysland, T., Fuschino, F., Galli, M., Gianotti, F., Labanti, C., Lapshov, I., Lazzarotto, F., Lipari, P., Longo, F., Marisaldi, M., Mereghetti, S., Morselli, A., Pellizzoni, A., Pacciani, L., Perotti, F., Picozza, P., Prest, M., Rapisarda, M., Rappoldi, A., Soffitta, P., Trifoglio, M., Trois, A., Vallazza, E., Zambra, A., Zanello, D., Pittori, C., Verrecchia, F., Santolamazza, P., Preger, B., Gasparrini, D., Cutini, S., Giommi, P., Colafrancesco, S., and Salotti, L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
[Abridged] We report on a multiwavelength observation of the blazar 3C 454.3 (which we dubbed "crazy diamond") carried out on November 2007 by means of the astrophysical satellites AGILE, INTEGRAL, Swift, the WEBT Consortium, and the optical-NIR telescope REM. 3C 454.3 is detected at a $\sim 19-\sigma$ level during the 3-week observing period, with an average flux above 100 MeV of $F_{\rm E>100MeV} = (170 \pm 13) \times 10^{-8}$ \phcmsec. The gamma-ray spectrum can be fit with a single power-law with photon index $\Gamma_{\rm GRID} = 1.73 \pm 0.16$ between 100 MeV and 1 GeV. We detect significant day-by-day variability of the gamma-ray emission during our observations, and we can exclude that the fluxes are constant at the 99.6% ($\sim 2.9 \sigma$) level. The source was detected typically around 40 degrees off-axis, and it was substantially off--axis in the field of view of the AGILE hard X-ray imager. However, a 5-day long ToO observation by INTEGRAL detected 3C 454.3 at an average flux of about $F_{\rm 20-200 keV} = 1.49 \times 10^{-3}$ \phcmsec with an average photon index of $\Gamma_{\rm IBIS} = 1.75 \pm 0.24$ between 20--200 keV. Swift also detected 3C 454.3 with a flux in the 0.3--10 keV energy band in the range $(1.23-1.40) \times 10^{-2}$ \phcmsec{} and a photon index in the range $\Gamma_{\rm XRT} = 1.56-1.73$. In the optical band, both WEBT and REM show an extremely variable behavior in the $R$ band. A correlation analysis based on the entire data set is consistent with no time-lags between the gamma-ray and the optical flux variations. Our simultaneous multifrequency observations strongly indicate that the dominant emission mechanism between 30 MeV and 30 GeV is dominated by inverse Compton scattering of relativistic electrons in the jet on the external photons from the broad line region., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Abridged Abstract. 37 pages, 14 Figures, 3 Tables
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Using GRO J1655-40 to test Swift/BAT as a monitor for bright hard X-ray sources
- Author
-
Senziani, F., Novara, G., De Luca, A., Caraveo, P. A., Belloni, T., and Bignami, G. F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
While waiting for new gamma-ray burst detections, the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) on board Swift covers each day ~50% of the sky in the hard X-ray band (``Survey data''). The large field of view (FOV), high sensitivity and good angular resolution make BAT a potentially powerful all-sky hard X-ray monitor, provided that mask--related systematics can be properly accounted for. We have developed and tested a complete procedure entirely based on public Swift/BAT software tools to analyse BAT Survey data, aimed at assessing the flux and spectral variability of bright sources in the 15-150 keV energy range. Detailed tests of the capabilities of our procedure were performed focusing, in particular, on the reliability of spectral measurements over the entire BAT FOV. First, we analyzed a large set of Crab observations, spread over ~7 months. Next, we studied the case of GRO J1655-40, a strongly variable source, which experienced a 9-month long outburst, beginning on February 2005. Such an outburst was systematically monitored with the well-calibrated PCA and HEXTE instruments on board the RXTE mission. Thanks to the good BAT temporal coverage of the source, we have been able to cross-check BAT light-curves with simultaneous HEXTE ones. The Crab tests have shown that our procedure recovers both the flux and the source spectral shape over the whole FOV of the BAT instrument. Moreover, by cross-checking GRO J1655-40 light-curves obtained by BAT and HEXTE, we found the spectral and flux evolution of the outburst to be in very good agreement. Using our procedure, BAT reproduces HEXTE fluxes within a 10-15% uncertainty with a 3sigma sensitivity of ~20 mCrab for an on-axis source, thus establishing its capability to monitor the evolution of relatively bright hard X-rays sources., Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Swift observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi: I. Early X-ray emission from the shocked ejecta and red giant wind
- Author
-
Bode, M. F., O'Brien, T. J., Osborne, J. P., Page, K. L., Senziani, F., Skinner, G. K., Starrfield, S., Ness, J-U., Drake, J. J., Schwarz, G., Beardmore, A. P., Darnley, M. J., Eyres, S. P. S., Evans, A., Gehrels, N., Goad, M. R., Jean, P., Krautter, J., and Novara, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
RS Ophiuchi began its latest outburst on 2006 February 12. Previous outbursts have indicated that high velocity ejecta interact with a pre-existing red giant wind, setting up shock systems analogous to those seen in Supernova Remnants. However, in the previous outburst in 1985, X-ray observations did not commence until 55 days after the initial explosion. Here we report on Swift observations covering the first month of the 2006 outburst with the Burst Alert (BAT) and X-ray Telescope (XRT) instruments. RS Oph was clearly detected in the BAT 14-25 keV band from t=0 to $t\sim6$ days. XRT observationsfrom 0.3-10 keV, started at 3.17 days after outburst. The rapidly evolving XRT spectra clearly show the presence of both line and continuum emission which can be fitted by thermal emission from hot gas whose characteristic temperature, overlying absorbing column, $[N_H]_W$, and resulting unabsorbed total flux decline monotonically after the first few days. Derived shock velocities are in good agreement with those found from observations at other wavelengths. Similarly, $[N_H]_W$ is in accord with that expected from the red giant wind ahead of the forward shock. We confirm the basic models of the 1985 outburst and conclude that standard Phase I remnant evolution terminated by $t\sim10$ days and the remnant then rapidly evolved to display behaviour characteristic of Phase III. Around t=26 days however, a new, luminous and highly variable soft X-ray source began to appear whose origin will be explored in a subsequent paper., Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures (2 updated), accepted by ApJ
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. A deep XMM-Newton serendipitous survey of a middle-latitude area
- Author
-
Novara, G., La Palombara, N., Carangelo, N., De Luca, A., Caraveo, P. A., Mignani, R. P., and Bignami, G. F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The radio quiet neutron star 1E1207.4-5209 has been the target of a 260 ks XMM-Newton observation, which yielded, as a by product, an harvest of about 200 serendipitous X-ray sources above a limiting flux of 2E-15 erg/cm2/s, in the 0.3-8 keV energy range. In view of the intermediate latitude of our field (b~10 deg), it comes as no surprise that the logN-logS distribution of our serendipitous sources is different from those measured either in the Galactic Plane or at high galactic latitudes. Here we shall concentrate on the analysis of the brightest sources in our sample, which unveiled a previously unknown Seyfert-2 galaxy., Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Awareness, Treatment and Control of Hyperlipidaemia, Hypertension and Diabetes Mellitus in a Selected Population of Southern Italy
- Author
-
Gnasso, A., Calindro, M. C., Carallo, C., De Novara, G., Ferraro, M., Gorgone, G., Irace, C., Romeo, P., Siclari, D., Spagnuolo, V., Talarico, R., Mattioli, P. L., and Pujia, A.
- Published
- 1997
38. Is There an Impact of Transperineal Versus Transrectal Magnetic Resonance Imaging-targeted Biopsy on the Risk of Upgrading in Final Pathology in Prostate Cancer Patients Undergoing Radical Prostatectomy? An European Association of Urology-Young Academic Urologists Prostate Cancer Working Group Multi- institutional Study
- Author
-
Zattoni, F, Marra, G, Martini, A, Kasivisvanathan, V, Grummet, J, Harkin, T, Ploussard, G, Olivier, J, Chiu, PK, Valerio, M, Marquis, A, Gontero, P, Guo, H, Zhuang, J, Frydenberg, M, Moon, D, Morlacco, A, Kretschmer, A, Barletta, F, Heidegger, I, Tilki, D, van den Bergh, R, Dal Moro, F, Briganti, A, Montorsi, F, Novara, G, Gandaglia, G, Zattoni, F, Marra, G, Martini, A, Kasivisvanathan, V, Grummet, J, Harkin, T, Ploussard, G, Olivier, J, Chiu, PK, Valerio, M, Marquis, A, Gontero, P, Guo, H, Zhuang, J, Frydenberg, M, Moon, D, Morlacco, A, Kretschmer, A, Barletta, F, Heidegger, I, Tilki, D, van den Bergh, R, Dal Moro, F, Briganti, A, Montorsi, F, Novara, G, and Gandaglia, G
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: The concordance rates of transperineal (TP) versus transrectal (TR) prostate biopsies with radical prostatectomy (RP) specimen have been assessed poorly in men diagnosed with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-targeted biopsy (TBx). OBJECTIVE: To evaluate International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) concordance rates between the final pathology at RP and MRI-TBx or MRI-TBx + random biopsy (RB) according to the biopsy approach. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A multi-institutional database included patients diagnosed with TP or TR treated with RP. INTERVENTION: TP-TBx or TR-TBx of the prostate. OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS: The ISUP grade at biopsy was compared with the final pathology. A multivariable logistic regression analysis (MVA) was performed to assess the association between the biopsy approach (TP-TBx vs TR-TBx) and ISUP upgrading, downgrading, concordance, and clinically relevant increase (CRI). RESULTS AND LIMITATIONS: Overall, 752 (59%) versus 530 (41%) patients underwent TR versus TP. At the MVA, TP-TBx was an independent predictor of upgrading (odds ratio [OR] 0.6, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.4-0.9, p < 0.01) and improved concordance relative to the final pathology (OR 1.7, 95% CI 1.2-2.5, p < 0.01) after adjusting for age, cT stage, Prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System, number of targeted cores, prostate-specific antigen, and prostate volume. Moreover, TP-TBx was associated with a lower risk of CRI than TR-TBx (OR 0.7, p < 0.01). This held true when considering patients who underwent MRI-TBx + RB (OR 0.6, p < 0.01). The inclusion of men who had RP represents a potential selection bias. CONCLUSIONS: The adoption of TP-TBx compared with TR-TBx may reduce the risk of upgrading and improve the concordance of biopsy grade with the final pathology. The TP approach decreases the odds of CRI with improved patient selection for the correct active treatment. PATIENT SUMMARY: In this report, we evaluated whether tra
- Published
- 2023
39. A snapshot of nephron-sparing surgery in Italy: A prospective, multicenter report on clinical and perioperative outcomes (the RECORd 1 project)
- Author
-
Schiavina, R., Mari, A., Antonelli, A., Bertolo, R., Bianchi, G., Borghesi, M., Brunocilla, E., Fiori, C., Longo, N., Martorana, G., Mirone, V., Morgia, G., Novara, G., Porpiglia, F., Rovereto, B., Serni, S., Simeone, C., Sodano, M., Terrone, C., Carini, M., and Minervini, A.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Telehealth in Urology: A Systematic Review of the Literature. How Much Can Telemedicine Be Useful During and After the COVID-19 Pandemic?
- Author
-
Novara, G, Checcucci, E, Crestani, A, Abrate, A, Esperto, F, Pavan, N, De Nunzio, C, Galfano, A, Giannarini, G, Gregori, A, Liguori, G, Bartoletti, R, Porpiglia, F, Scarpa, Rm, Simonato, A, Trombetta, C, Tubaro, A, Ficarra, V, the Research Urology Network, Novara, Giacomo, Checcucci, Enrico, Crestani, Alessandro, Abrate, Alberto, Esperto, Francesco, Pavan, Nicola, De Nunzio, Cosimo, Galfano, Antonio, Giannarini, Gianluca, Gregori, Andrea, Liguori, Giovanni, Bartoletti, Riccardo, Porpiglia, Francesco, Scarpa, Roberto Mario, Simonato, Alchiede, Trombetta, Carlo, Tubaro, Andrea, Ficarra, Vincenzo, Novara G., Checcucci E., Crestani A., Abrate A., Esperto F., Pavan N., De Nunzio C., Galfano A., Giannarini G., Gregori A., Liguori G., Bartoletti R., Porpiglia F., Scarpa R.M., Simonato A., Trombetta C., Tubaro A., and Ficarra V.
- Subjects
Coronavirus ,COVID-19 ,E-health ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 ,Telehealth ,Telemedicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Urinary system ,Coronaviru ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Psychological intervention ,Urinary incontinence ,Context (language use) ,Article ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Health care ,medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business.industry ,COVID-19, Coronavirus, E-health, Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, Telehealth, Telemedicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Coronavirus, COVID-19, E-health, Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, Telehealth, Telemedicine - Abstract
Context Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has caused increased interest in the application of telehealth to provide care without exposing patients and physicians to the risk of contagion. The urological literature on the topic is sparse. Objective To perform a systematic review of the literature and evaluate all the available studies on urological applications of telehealth. Evidence acquisition After registration on PROSPERO, we searched PubMed and Scopus databases to collect any kind of studies evaluating any telehealth interventions in any urological conditions. The National Toxicology Program/Office of Health Assessment and Translation Risk of Bias Rating Tool for Human and Animal Studies was used to estimate the risk of bias. A narrative synthesis was performed. Evidence synthesis We identified 45 studies (11 concerning prostate cancer [PCa], three hematuria management, six urinary stones, 14 urinary incontinence [UI], five urinary tract infections [UTIs], and six other conditions), including 12 randomized controlled trials. The available literature indicates that telemedicine has been implemented successfully in several common clinical scenarios, including the decision-making process following a diagnosis of nonmetastatic PCa, follow-up care of patients with localized PCa after curative treatments, initial diagnosis of hematuria, management diagnosis and follow-up care of uncomplicated urinary stones and uncomplicated UTIs, and initial evaluation, behavioral therapies, and pelvic floor muscle training in UI patients, as well as follow-up care after surgical treatments of stress urinary incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse. The methodological quality of most of the reports was good. Conclusions Telehealth has been implemented successfully in selected patients with PCa, UI, pelvic organ prolapse, uncomplicated urinary stones, and UTIs. Many urological conditions are suitable for telehealth, but more studies are needed on other highly prevalent urological malignant and benign conditions. Likely, the COVID-19 pandemic will give a significant boost to the use of telemedicine. More robust data on long-term efficacy, safety, and health economics are necessary. Patient summary The diffusion of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections has recently increased the interest in telehealth, which is the adoption of telecommunication to deliver any health care activity. The available literature indicates that telemedicine has been adopted successfully in selected patients with several common clinical urological conditions, including prostate cancer, uncomplicated urinary stones, uncomplicated urinary infections, urinary incontinence, or pelvic organ prolapse. Likely, the COVID-19 pandemic will give a significant boost to the use of telemedicine, but more robust data on long-term efficacy, safety, and costs are necessary., Take Home Message The available literature indicates that telemedicine has been adopted successfully in selected patients with several common clinical urological conditions, including prostate cancer, uncomplicated urinary stones, uncomplicated urinary infections, urinary incontinence, or pelvic organ prolapse. Likely, the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic will give a significant boost to the use of telemedicine, but more robust data on long-term efficacy, safety, and costs are necessary.
- Published
- 2020
41. Association of perioperative blood transfusion with oncologic outcomes after radical nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma
- Author
-
Rieken, M., Schubert, T., Xylinas, E., Kluth, L., Rouprêt, M., Trinh, Q.-D., Lee, R.K., Al Hussein Al Awamlh, B., Fajkovic, H., Novara, G., Margulis, V., Lotan, Y., Martinez-Salamanca, J.I., Matsumoto, K., Seitz, C., Remzi, M., Karakiewicz, P.I., Scherr, D.S., Briganti, A., Bachmann, A., and Shariat, S.F.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Renal scintigram assessment of the residual renal function following partial nephrectomy and embolization of postoperative pseudoaneurysm or arteriovenous fistula: a single center series
- Author
-
Novara, G., primary, Lami, V., additional, Collavino, J., additional, Zecchini, G., additional, Evangelista, L., additional, Bartoletti, P., additional, De Conti, G., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, Betto, G., additional, Zanovello, N., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Changes in renal function after nephroureterectomy for upper urinary tract carcinoma: analysis of a large multicenter cohort (radical nephroureterectomy outcomes (RANEO) research consortium)
- Author
-
Tafuri, A., primary, Marchioni, M., additional, Cerrato, C., additional, Mari, A., additional, Tellini, R., additional, Odorizzi, K., additional, Veccia, A., additional, Amparore, D., additional, Shakir, A., additional, Carbonara, U., additional, Trovato, F., additional, Catellani, M., additional, Janello, L.M.I., additional, Bianchi, L., additional, Novara, G., additional, Dal Moro, F., additional, Schiavina, R., additional, De Lorenzis, E., additional, Parma, P., additional, Cimino, S., additional, de Cobelli, O., additional, Maiorino, F., additional, Bove, P., additional, Crocerossa, F., additional, Cantiello, F., additional, D’andrea, D., additional, Di Cosmo, F., additional, Porpiglia, F., additional, Ditonno, P., additional, Montanari, E., additional, Soria, F., additional, Gontero, P., additional, Liguori, G., additional, Trombetta, C., additional, Mantica, G., additional, Borghesi, M., additional, Terrone, C., additional, Del Giudice, F., additional, Sciarra, A., additional, Galosi, A., additional, Moschini, M., additional, Shariat, S.F., additional, Di Nicola, M., additional, Minervini, A., additional, Ferro, M., additional, Cerruto, M.A., additional, Schips, L., additional, Pagliarulo, V., additional, and Antonelli, A., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Simple enucleation versus standard partial nephrectomy for clinical T1 renal masses: Perioperative outcomes based on a matched-pair comparison of 396 patients (RECORd project)
- Author
-
Longo, N., Minervini, A., Antonelli, A., Bianchi, G., Bocciardi, A.M., Cunico, S.C., Fiori, C., Fusco, F., Giancane, S., Mari, A., Martorana, G., Mirone, V., Morgia, G., Novara, G., Porpiglia, F., Raspollini, M.R., Rocco, F., Rovereto, B., Schiavina, R., Serni, S., Simeone, C., Verze, P., Volpe, A., Ficarra, V., and Carini, M.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Diabetes mellitus without metformin intake is associated with worse oncologic outcomes after radical nephroureterectomy for upper tract urothelial carcinoma
- Author
-
Rieken, M., Xylinas, E., Kluth, L., Trinh, Q.-D., Lee, R.K., Fajkovic, H., Novara, G., Margulis, V., Lotan, Y., Martinez-Salamanca, J.I., Matsumoto, K., Seitz, C., Remzi, M., Karakiewicz, P.I., Scherr, D.S., Briganti, A., Kautzky-Willer, A., Bachmann, A., and Shariat, S.F.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Diffuse X-ray emission around an ultraluminous X-ray pulsar
- Author
-
Belfiore, A, Esposito, P, Pintore, F, Novara, G, Salvaterra, R, De Luca, A, Tiengo, A, Caraveo, P, Furst, F, Israel, G, Magistrali, D, Marelli, M, Mereghetti, S, Papitto, A, Rodriguez Castillo, G, Salvaggio, C, Stella, L, Walton, D, Wolter, A, Zampieri, L, Belfiore A., Esposito P., Pintore F., Novara G., Salvaterra R., De Luca A., Tiengo A., Caraveo P., Furst F., Israel G. L., Magistrali D., Marelli M., Mereghetti S., Papitto A., Rodriguez Castillo G. A., Salvaggio C., Stella L., Walton D. J., Wolter A., Zampieri L., Belfiore, A, Esposito, P, Pintore, F, Novara, G, Salvaterra, R, De Luca, A, Tiengo, A, Caraveo, P, Furst, F, Israel, G, Magistrali, D, Marelli, M, Mereghetti, S, Papitto, A, Rodriguez Castillo, G, Salvaggio, C, Stella, L, Walton, D, Wolter, A, Zampieri, L, Belfiore A., Esposito P., Pintore F., Novara G., Salvaterra R., De Luca A., Tiengo A., Caraveo P., Furst F., Israel G. L., Magistrali D., Marelli M., Mereghetti S., Papitto A., Rodriguez Castillo G. A., Salvaggio C., Stella L., Walton D. J., Wolter A., and Zampieri L.
- Abstract
Ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) are extragalactic X-ray emitters located off-centre of their host galaxy and with a luminosity in excess of a few 1039 erg s−1, if emitted isotropically1,2. The discovery of periodic modulation revealed that in some ULXs the accreting compact object is a neutron star3–7, indicating luminosities substantially above their Eddington limit. The most extreme object in this respect is NGC 5907 ULX-1 (ULX1), with a peak luminosity that is 500 times its Eddington limit. During a Chandra observation to probe a low state of ULX1, we detected diffuse X-ray emission at the position of ULX1. Its diameter is 2.7 ± 1.0 arcsec and contains 25 photons, none below 0.8 keV. We interpret this extended structure as an expanding nebula powered by the wind of ULX1. Its diameter of about 200 pc, characteristic energy of ~1.9 keV and luminosity of ~2 × 1038 erg s−1 imply a mechanical power of 1.3 × 1041 erg s−1 and an age of ~7 × 104 yr. This interpretation suggests that a genuinely super-Eddington regime can be sustained for timescales much longer than the spin-up time of the neutron star powering the system. As the mechanical power from a single ULX nebula can rival the injection rate of cosmic rays of an entire galaxy8, ULX nebulae could be important cosmic ray accelerators9.
- Published
- 2020
47. The ULTraS project: Understanding the X-ray variable and transient sky
- Author
-
DE LUCA, Andrea, ISRAEL, Gian Luca, SALVATERRA, Ruben, BELFIORE,A., DE MARTINO, Domitilla, ESPOSITO, PAOLO, KOVACEFIC,M., MARELLI, Martino, MEREGHETTI, Sandro, MIGNANI, Roberto, MOTTA, Sara Elisa, NOVARA,G., PASQUATO, MARIO, Pintore, Fabio, PIZZOCARO,D., RODRIGUEZ CASTILLO, Guillermo Andres, SIDOLI, Lara, STELZER, BEATE, TIENGO,A., WOLTER, Anna Luisa Maria, ZAMPIERI, Luca, and ITA
- Abstract
Time variability is ubiquitous in the X-ray sky and is a unique probe of a wide diversity of astrophysical processes. The aim of the ULTraS (Understanding the Xray variable and transient sky) project is to exploit the scientific results and products from the EU/FP7-funded project EXTraS (a systematic characterisation of time variability in all XMM-Newton sources) and from its more recent developments. In particular, we have addressed a series of science cases, from the search for rare phenomena to the characterization of the properties of source classes, on a large variety of astrophysical objects, ranging from nearby, ultracool stars to exploding supernovae in distant galaxies. Results described here prove the effectiveness and the potential for discovery of our systematic temporal characterization. A full exploitation of the temporal information in the XMM-Newton/EXTraS archive requires a different approach, based on artificial intelligence – this seems definitely the perspective we should adopt to cope with the high data volume expected from future X-ray facilities
- Published
- 2022
48. Role of target biopsy, perilesional biopsy, and random biopsy in the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer by mpMRI-guided transrectal ultrasound fusion biopsy in biopsy naïve patients with positive mpMRI: Less is not more
- Author
-
Novara, G., primary, Zecchini, G., additional, Pellizzari, A., additional, Ferraioli, G., additional, Carlesso, M., additional, La Bombarda, G., additional, Lauro, A., additional, Lacognata, C.S., additional, Gardiman, M.P., additional, Mancini, M., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The optimal dissemination of scientific manuscripts via social media: A prospective randomized trial comparing visual abstracts with key figures using consecutive original manuscripts published in European Urology
- Author
-
Klaassen, Z., primary, Vertosick, E., additional, Vickers, A.J., additional, Assel, M.J., additional, Novara, G., additional, Pierce, C., additional, Wallis, C.J.D., additional, Larcher, A., additional, Cooperberg, M.R., additional, Catto, J.W.F., additional, and Kutikov, A., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Role of target biopsy, perilesional biopsy, and random biopsy in the detection of clinically significant prostate cancer by mpMRI-guided transrectal ultrasound fusion biopsy during active surveillance protocol
- Author
-
Novara, G., primary, Zecchini, G., additional, Spagna, S., additional, Taverna, A., additional, Aiello, G., additional, Lauro, A., additional, Lacognata, C.S., additional, Gardiman, M.P., additional, Calpista, A., additional, Ruggera, L., additional, Morlacco, A., additional, and Dal Moro, F., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.