119,815 results on '"Schwab, A"'
Search Results
2. Simulation of the Background from $^{13}$C$(\alpha, n)^{16}$O Reaction in the JUNO Scintillator
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JUNO Collaboration, Adam, Thomas, Adamowicz, Kai, Ahmad, Shakeel, Ahmed, Rizwan, Aiello, Sebastiano, An, Fengpeng, Andreopoulos, Costas, Andronico, Giuseppe, Anfimov, Nikolay, Antonelli, Vito, Antoshkina, Tatiana, de André, João Pedro Athayde Marcondes, Auguste, Didier, Bai, Weidong, Balashov, Nikita, Barresi, Andrea, Basilico, Davide, Baussan, Eric, Beretta, Marco, Bergnoli, Antonio, Bessonov, Nikita, Bick, Daniel, Bieger, Lukas, Biktemerova, Svetlana, Birkenfeld, Thilo, Blyth, Simon, Bolshakova, Anastasia, Bongrand, Mathieu, Borghesi, Matteo, Breton, Dominique, Brigatti, Augusto, Brugnera, Riccardo, Bruno, Riccardo, Büchner, Marcel, Budano, Antonio, Busto, Jose, Cabrera, Anatael, Caccianiga, Barbara, Cai, Hao, Cai, Xiao, Cai, Yanke, Cai, Zhiyan, Callier, Stéphane, Calvez, Steven, Cammi, Antonio, Cao, Chuanya, Cao, Guofu, Cao, Jun, Cao, Yaoqi, Caruso, Rossella, Cerna, Cédric, Cerrone, Vanessa, Chang, Jinfan, Chang, Yun, Chatrabhuti, Auttakit, Chen, Chao, Chen, Guoming, Chen, Jiahui, Chen, Jian, Chen, Jing, Chen, Junyou, Chen, Pingping, Chen, Shaomin, Chen, Shiqiang, Chen, Xin, Chen, Yiming, Chen, Yixue, Chen, Yu, Chen, Ze, Chen, Zhangming, Chen, Zhiyuan, Cheng, Jie, Cheng, Yaping, Cheng, Yu Chin, Chepurnov, Alexander, Chetverikov, Alexey, Chiesa, Davide, Chimenti, Pietro, Chou, Po-Lin, Chu, Ziliang, Chukanov, Artem, Claverie, Gérard, Clementi, Catia, Clerbaux, Barbara, Coletta, Claudio, Di Lorenzo, Selma Conforti, Csakli, Simon, Cui, Chenyang, Dalager, Olivia, De La Taille, Christophe, Deng, Zhi, Deng, Ziyan, Ding, Xiaoyu, Ding, Xuefeng, Ding, Yayun, Dirgantara, Bayu, Dittrich, Carsten, Dmitrievsky, Sergey, Doerflinger, David, Dolzhikov, Dmitry, Dong, Haojie, Dong, Jianmeng, Doroshkevich, Evgeny, Dracos, Marcos, Druillole, Frédéric, Du, Ran, Du, Shuxian, Duan, Yujie, Dugas, Katherine, Dusini, Stefano, Duyang, Hongyue, Eck, Jessica, Enqvist, Timo, Fabbri, Andrea, Fahrendholz, Ulrike, Fan, Lei, Fang, Jian, Fang, Wenxing, Fedoseev, Dmitry, Feng, Li-Cheng, Feng, Qichun, Ferraro, Federico, Fetzer, Daniela, Fotzé, Marcellin, Fournier, Amélie, Freegard, Aaron, Gao, Feng, Garfagnini, Alberto, Gavrikov, Arsenii, Giammarchi, Marco, Giudice, Nunzio, Gonchar, Maxim, Gong, Guanghua, Gong, Hui, Gornushkin, Yuri, Grassi, Marco, Gromov, Maxim, Gromov, Vasily, Gu, Minghao, Gu, Xiaofei, Gu, Yu, Guan, Mengyun, Guan, Yuduo, Guardone, Nunzio, Guizzetti, Rosa Maria, Guo, Cong, Guo, Wanlei, Hagner, Caren, Han, Hechong, Han, Ran, Han, Yang, He, Jinhong, He, Miao, He, Wei, He, Xinhai, He, Ziou, Heinz, Tobias, Hellmuth, Patrick, Heng, Yuekun, Hor, YuenKeung, Hou, Shaojing, Hsiung, Yee, Hu, Bei-Zhen, Hu, Hang, Hu, Jun, Hu, Tao, Hu, Yuxiang, Huang, Guihong, Huang, Jinhao, Huang, Junting, Huang, Kaixuan, Huang, Shengheng, Huang, Tao, Huang, Xin, Huang, Xingtao, Huang, Yongbo, Hui, Jiaqi, Huo, Lei, Huss, Cédric, Hussain, Safeer, Imbert, Leonard, Ioannisian, Ara, Jacobi, Adrienne, Jafar, Arshak, Jelmini, Beatrice, Ji, Xiangpan, Ji, Xiaolu, Jia, Huihui, Jia, Junji, Jiang, Cailian, Jiang, Wei, Jiang, Xiaoshan, Jiang, Xiaozhao, Jiang, Yijian, Jiang, Yixuan, Jing, Xiaoping, Jollet, Cécile, Kang, Li, Karaparabil, Rebin, Kazarian, Narine, Khan, Ali, Khatun, Amina, Khosonthongkee, Khanchai, Korablev, Denis, Kouzakov, Konstantin, Krasnoperov, Alexey, Kuleshov, Sergey, Kumaran, Sindhujha, Kutovskiy, Nikolay, Labit, Loïc, Lachenmaier, Tobias, Lai, Haojing, Landini, Cecilia, Leblanc, Sébastien, Lecocq, Matthieu, Lefevre, Frederic, Lei, Ruiting, Leitner, Rupert, Leung, Jason, Li, Demin, Li, Fei, Li, Fule, Li, Gaosong, Li, Hongjian, Li, Huang, Li, Jiajun, Li, Min, Li, Nan, Li, Qingjiang, Li, Ruhui, Li, Rui, Li, Shanfeng, Li, Tao, Li, Teng, Li, Weidong, Li, Xiaonan, Li, Yi, Li, Yichen, Li, Yifan, Li, Yufeng, Li, Zhaohan, Li, Zhibing, Li, Zi-Ming, Li, Zonghai, Liang, An-An, Liao, Jiajun, Liao, Minghua, Liao, Yilin, Limphirat, Ayut, Lin, Bo-Chun, Lin, Guey-Lin, Lin, Shengxin, Lin, Tao, Lin, Xianhao, Lin, Xingyi, Ling, Jiajie, Ling, Xin, Lippi, Ivano, Liu, Caimei, Liu, Fang, Liu, Fengcheng, Liu, Haidong, Liu, Haotian, Liu, Hongbang, Liu, Hongjuan, Liu, Hongtao, Liu, Hongyang, Liu, Jianglai, Liu, Jiaxi, Liu, Jinchang, Liu, Kainan, Liu, Min, Liu, Qian, Liu, Runxuan, Liu, Shenghui, Liu, Shulin, Liu, Xiaowei, Liu, Xiwen, Liu, Xuewei, Liu, Yankai, Liu, Zhen, Loi, Lorenzo, Lokhov, Alexey, Lombardi, Paolo, Lombardo, Claudio, Loo, Kai, Lu, Haoqi, Lu, Junguang, Lu, Meishu, Lu, Peizhi, Lu, Shuxiang, Lu, Xianguo, Lubsandorzhiev, Bayarto, Lubsandorzhiev, Sultim, Ludhova, Livia, Lukanov, Arslan, Luo, Fengjiao, Luo, Guang, Luo, Jianyi, Luo, Shu, Luo, Wuming, Luo, Xiaojie, Lyashuk, Vladimir, Ma, Bangzheng, Ma, Bing, Ma, Qiumei, Ma, Si, Ma, Wing Yan, Ma, Xiaoyan, Ma, Xubo, Maalmi, Jihane, Mai, Jingyu, Malabarba, Marco, Malyshkin, Yury, Mandujano, Roberto Carlos, Mantovani, Fabio, Mao, Xin, Mari, Stefano M., Martini, Agnese, Mayer, Matthias, Mayilyan, Davit, Meng, Yue, Meregaglia, Anselmo, Miramonti, Lino, Molla, Marta Colomer, Montuschi, Michele, Reveco, Cristobal Morales, Morton-Blake, Iwan, Nastasi, Massimiliano, Naumov, Dmitry V., Naumova, Elena, Nemchenok, Igor, Neuerburg, Elisabeth, Thi, Minh Thuan Nguyen, Nikolaev, Alexey, Ning, Feipeng, Ning, Zhe, Niu, Yujie, Nunokawa, Hiroshi, Ochoa-Ricoux, Juan Pedro, Olivares, Sebastian, Olshevskiy, Alexander, Orestano, Domizia, Ortica, Fausto, Othegraven, Rainer, Pan, Yifei, Paoloni, Alessandro, Parker, George, Pei, Yatian, Pelicci, Luca, Peng, Anguo, Peng, Yu, Peng, Zhaoyuan, Percalli, Elisa, Perrin, Willy, Perrot, Frédéric, Petitjean, Pierre-Alexandre, Petrucci, Fabrizio, Pilarczyk, Oliver, Popov, Artyom, Poussot, Pascal, Previtali, Ezio, Qi, Fazhi, Qi, Ming, Qi, Xiaohui, Qian, Sen, Qian, Xiaohui, Qin, Zhonghua, Qiu, Shoukang, Qu, Manhao, Qu, Zhenning, Ranucci, Gioacchino, Raymond, Thomas, Re, Alessandra, Rebii, Abdel, Redchuk, Mariia, Ren, Bin, Ren, Yuhan, Ricci, Barbara, Rientong, Komkrit, Rifai, Mariam, Roche, Mathieu, Rodphai, Narongkiat, Rodrigues, Fernanda de Faria, Romani, Aldo, Roskovec, Bedřich, Rybnikov, Arseniy, Sadovsky, Andrey, Saggese, Paolo, Sandanayake, Deshan, Sangka, Anut, Sava, Giuseppe, Sawangwit, Utane, Schever, Michaela, Schwab, Cédric, Schweizer, Konstantin, Selyunin, Alexandr, Serafini, Andrea, Settimo, Mariangela, Shao, Junyu, Sharov, Vladislav, Shi, Hangyu, Shi, Hexi, Shi, Jingyan, Shi, Yanan, Shutov, Vitaly, Sidorenkov, Andrey, Šimkovic, Fedor, Singhal, Apeksha, Sirignano, Chiara, Siripak, Jaruchit, Sisti, Monica, Smirnov, Oleg, Sokolov, Sergey, Songwadhana, Julanan, Soonthornthum, Boonrucksar, Sotnikov, Albert, Sreethawong, Warintorn, Stahl, Achim, Stanco, Luca, Farilla, Elia Stanescu, Stankevich, Konstantin, Steiger, Hans, Steinmann, Jochen, Sterr, Tobias, Strati, Virginia, Strizh, Mikhail, Studenikin, Alexander, Su, Aoqi, Su, Jun, Sun, Guangbao, Sun, Mingxia, Sun, Shifeng, Sun, Xilei, Sun, Yongzhao, Sun, Zhengyang, Suwonjandee, Narumon, Takenaka, Akira, Tan, Xiaohan, Tang, Jian, Tang, Jingzhe, Tang, Qiang, Tang, Quan, Tang, Xiao, Hariharan, Vidhya Thara, Tian, Yuxin, Tkachev, Igor, Tmej, Tomas, Torri, Marco Danilo Claudio, Triossi, Andrea, Trzaska, Wladyslaw, Tung, Yu-Chen, Tuve, Cristina, Ushakov, Nikita, Venettacci, Carlo, Verde, Giuseppe, Vialkov, Maxim, Viaud, Benoit, Vollbrecht, Cornelius Moritz, Vorobel, Vit, Voronin, Dmitriy, Votano, Lucia, Wang, Caishen, Wang, Chung-Hsiang, Wang, En, Wang, Hanwen, Wang, Jiabin, Wang, Jun, Wang, Li, Wang, Meng, Wang, Mingyuan, Wang, Qianchuan, Wang, Ruiguang, Wang, Sibo, Wang, Tianhong, Wang, Wei, Wang, Wenshuai, Wang, Xi, Wang, Yangfu, Wang, Yaoguang, Wang, Yi, Wang, Yifang, Wang, Yuanqing, Wang, Yuyi, Wang, Zhe, Wang, Zheng, Wang, Zhimin, Watcharangkool, Apimook, Wei, Wei, Wei, Yadong, Wei, Yuehuan, Wei, Zhengbao, Wen, Liangjian, Weng, Jun, Wiebusch, Christopher, Wirth, Rosmarie, Wu, Bi, Wu, Chengxin, Wu, Diru, Wu, Qun, Wu, Yinhui, Wu, Yiyang, Wu, Zhaoxiang, Wu, Zhi, Wurm, Michael, Wurtz, Jacques, Xia, Dongmei, Xian, Shishen, Xiang, Ziqian, Xiao, Fei, Xiao, Pengfei, Xiao, Xiang, Xie, Wei-Jun, Xie, Xiaochuan, Xie, Yijun, Xie, Yuguang, Xin, Zhao, Xing, Zhizhong, Xu, Benda, Xu, Cheng, Xu, Donglian, Xu, Fanrong, Xu, Jiayang, Xu, Jilei, Xu, Jinghuan, Xu, Meihang, Xu, Shiwen, Xu, Xunjie, Xu, Yin, Xu, Yu, Xue, Jingqin, Yan, Baojun, Yan, Qiyu, Yan, Taylor, Yan, Xiongbo, Yan, Yupeng, Yang, Changgen, Yang, Chengfeng, Yang, Fengfan, Yang, Jie, Yang, Lei, Yang, Pengfei, Yang, Xiaoyu, Yang, Yifan, Yang, Yixiang, Yang, Zekun, Yao, Haifeng, Ye, Jiaxuan, Ye, Mei, Ye, Ziping, Yermia, Frédéric, Yin, Jilong, Yin, Weiqing, Yin, Xiaohao, You, Zhengyun, Yu, Boxiang, Yu, Chiye, Yu, Chunxu, Yu, Hongzhao, Yu, Peidong, Yu, Xianghui, Yu, Zeyuan, Yu, Zezhong, Yuan, Cenxi, Yuan, Chengzhuo, Yuan, Zhaoyang, Yuan, Zhenxiong, Zafar, Noman, Zamogilnyi, Kirill, Zamora, Jilberto, Zavadskyi, Vitalii, Zeng, Fanrui, Zeng, Shan, Zeng, Tingxuan, Zhan, Liang, Zhan, Yonghua, Zhang, Aiqiang, Zhang, Bin, Zhang, Binting, Zhang, Feiyang, Zhang, Han, Zhang, Hangchang, Zhang, Haosen, Zhang, Honghao, Zhang, Jialiang, Zhang, Jiawen, Zhang, Jie, Zhang, Jingbo, Zhang, Junwei, Zhang, Lei, Zhang, Ping, Zhang, Qingmin, Zhang, Rongping, Zhang, Shiqi, Zhang, Shuihan, Zhang, Siyuan, Zhang, Tao, Zhang, Xiaomei, Zhang, Xin, Zhang, Xu, Zhang, Xuantong, Zhang, Yibing, Zhang, Yinhong, Zhang, Yiyu, Zhang, Yongpeng, Zhang, Yu, Zhang, Yuanyuan, Zhang, Yumei, Zhang, Zhenyu, Zhang, Zhijian, Zhao, Jie, Zhao, Runze, Zhao, Shujun, Zhao, Tianhao, Zheng, Hua, Zheng, Yangheng, Zhou, Li, Zhou, Shun, Zhou, Tong, Zhou, Xiang, Zhou, Xing, Zhu, Jingsen, Zhu, Kangfu, Zhu, Kejun, Zhu, Zhihang, Zhuang, Bo, Zhuang, Honglin, Zong, Liang, and Zou, Jiaheng
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Large-scale organic liquid scintillator detectors are highly efficient in the detection of MeV-scale electron antineutrinos. These signal events can be detected through inverse beta decay on protons, which produce a positron accompanied by a neutron. A noteworthy background for antineutrinos coming from nuclear power reactors and from the depths of the Earth (geoneutrinos) is generated by ($\alpha, n$) reactions. In organic liquid scintillator detectors, $\alpha$ particles emitted from intrinsic contaminants such as $^{238}$U, $^{232}$Th, and $^{210}$Pb/$^{210}$Po, can be captured on $^{13}$C nuclei, followed by the emission of a MeV-scale neutron. Three distinct interaction mechanisms can produce prompt energy depositions preceding the delayed neutron capture, leading to a pair of events correlated in space and time within the detector. Thus, ($\alpha, n$) reactions represent an indistinguishable background in liquid scintillator-based antineutrino detectors, where their expected rate and energy spectrum are typically evaluated via Monte Carlo simulations. This work presents results from the open-source SaG4n software, used to calculate the expected energy depositions from the neutron and any associated de-excitation products. Also simulated is a detailed detector response to these interactions, using a dedicated Geant4-based simulation software from the JUNO experiment. An expected measurable $^{13}$C$(\alpha, n)^{16}$O event rate and reconstructed prompt energy spectrum with associated uncertainties, are presented in the context of JUNO, however, the methods and results are applicable and relevant to other organic liquid scintillator neutrino detectors., Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables
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- 2025
3. TOI-6324b: An Earth-Mass Ultra-Short-Period Planet Transiting a Nearby M Dwarf
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Lee, Rena A., Dai, Fei, Howard, Andrew W., Halverson, Samuel, Barrientos, Jonathan Gomez, Greklek-McKeon, Michael, Knutson, Heather A., Fulton, Benjamin J., Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Lubin, Jack, Isaacson, Howard, Brinkman, Casey L., Saunders, Nicholas, Hey, Daniel, Huber, Daniel, Weiss, Lauren M., Rogers, Leslie A., Valencia, Diana, Plotnykov, Mykhaylo, Paragas, Kimberly, Hu, Renyu, Han, Te, Petigura, Erik A., Rubenzahl, Ryan, Ciardi, David R., Householder, Aaron, Gilbert, Gregory J., Ong, J. M. Joel, Zhang, Jingwen, Luhn, Jacob, Handley, Luke, Beard, Corey, Giacalone, Steven, Holcomb, Rae, Van Zandt, Judah, Baker, Ashley D., Brodheim, Max, Brown, Matt, Charbonneau, David, Collins, Karen A., Crossfield, Ian J. M., Deich, William, Dumusque, Xavier, Gibson, Steven R., Gilbert, Emily, Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Jenkins, Jon M., Kaye, Stephen, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Levine, W. Garrett, Payne, Joel, Polanski, Alex S., O'Meara, John, Ricker, George R., Rider, Kodi, Robertson, Paul, Roy, Arpita, Schlieder, Joshua E., Schwab, Christian, Seager, Sara, Shaum, Abby P., Sirk, Martin M., Striegel, Stephanie, Teske, Johanna, Valliant, John, Vanderspek, Roland, Vasisht, Gautam, Walawender, Josh, Wang, Sharon Xuesong, Winn, Joshua N., Wishnow, Edward, and Yeh, Sherry
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the confirmation of TOI-6324 b, an Earth-sized (1.059 $\pm$ 0.041 R$_\oplus$) ultra-short-period (USP) planet orbiting a nearby ($\sim$20 pc) M dwarf. Using the newly commissioned Keck Planet Finder (KPF) spectrograph, we have measured the mass of TOI-6324 b 1.17 $\pm$ 0.22 M$_\oplus$. Because of its extremely short orbit of just $\sim$6.7 hours, TOI-6324 b is intensely irradiated by its M dwarf host, and is expected to be stripped of any thick, H/He envelope. We were able to constrain its interior composition and found an iron core mass fraction (CMF = 27$\pm$37%) consistent with that of Earth ($\sim$33%) and other confirmed USPs. TOI-6324 b is the closest to Earth-sized USP confirmed to date. TOI-6324 b is a promising target for JWST phase curve and secondary eclipse observations (Emission Spectroscopy Metric = 25) which may reveal its surface mineralogy, day-night temperature contrast, and possible tidal deformation. From 7 sectors of TESS data, we report a tentative detection of the optical phase curve variation with an amplitude of 42$\pm$28 ppm., Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables
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- 2025
4. FacaDiffy: Inpainting Unseen Facade Parts Using Diffusion Models
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Froech, Thomas, Wysocki, Olaf, Xia, Yan, Xie, Junyu, Schwab, Benedikt, Cremers, Daniel, and Kolbe, Thomas H.
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
High-detail semantic 3D building models are frequently utilized in robotics, geoinformatics, and computer vision. One key aspect of creating such models is employing 2D conflict maps that detect openings' locations in building facades. Yet, in reality, these maps are often incomplete due to obstacles encountered during laser scanning. To address this challenge, we introduce FacaDiffy, a novel method for inpainting unseen facade parts by completing conflict maps with a personalized Stable Diffusion model. Specifically, we first propose a deterministic ray analysis approach to derive 2D conflict maps from existing 3D building models and corresponding laser scanning point clouds. Furthermore, we facilitate the inpainting of unseen facade objects into these 2D conflict maps by leveraging the potential of personalizing a Stable Diffusion model. To complement the scarcity of real-world training data, we also develop a scalable pipeline to produce synthetic conflict maps using random city model generators and annotated facade images. Extensive experiments demonstrate that FacaDiffy achieves state-of-the-art performance in conflict map completion compared to various inpainting baselines and increases the detection rate by $22\%$ when applying the completed conflict maps for high-definition 3D semantic building reconstruction. The code is be publicly available in the corresponding GitHub repository: https://github.com/ThomasFroech/InpaintingofUnseenFacadeObjects, Comment: Accepted for GeoSpatial Week 2025, ISPRS Annals
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- 2025
5. Multi-Class Segmentation of Aortic Branches and Zones in Computed Tomography Angiography: The AortaSeg24 Challenge
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Imran, Muhammad, Krebs, Jonathan R., Sivaraman, Vishal Balaji, Zhang, Teng, Kumar, Amarjeet, Ueland, Walker R., Fassler, Michael J., Huang, Jinlong, Sun, Xiao, Wang, Lisheng, Shi, Pengcheng, Rokuss, Maximilian, Baumgartner, Michael, Kirchhof, Yannick, Maier-Hein, Klaus H., Isensee, Fabian, Liu, Shuolin, Han, Bing, Nguyen, Bong Thanh, Shin, Dong-jin, Ji-Woo, Park, Choi, Mathew, Uhm, Kwang-Hyun, Ko, Sung-Jea, Lee, Chanwoong, Chun, Jaehee, Kim, Jin Sung, Zhang, Minghui, Zhang, Hanxiao, You, Xin, Gu, Yun, Pan, Zhaohong, Liu, Xuan, Liang, Xiaokun, Tiefenthaler, Markus, Almar-Munoz, Enrique, Schwab, Matthias, Kotyushev, Mikhail, Epifanov, Rostislav, Wodzinski, Marek, Muller, Henning, Qayyum, Abdul, Mazher, Moona, Niederer, Steven A., Wang, Zhiwei, Yang, Kaixiang, Ren, Jintao, Korreman, Stine Sofia, Gao, Yuchong, Zeng, Hongye, Zheng, Haoyu, Zheng, Rui, Yue, Jinghua, Zhou, Fugen, Liu, Bo, Cosman, Alexander, Liang, Muxuan, Zhao, Chang, Upchurch Jr., Gilbert R., Ma, Jun, Zhou, Yuyin, Cooper, Michol A., and Shao, Wei
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Multi-class segmentation of the aorta in computed tomography angiography (CTA) scans is essential for diagnosing and planning complex endovascular treatments for patients with aortic dissections. However, existing methods reduce aortic segmentation to a binary problem, limiting their ability to measure diameters across different branches and zones. Furthermore, no open-source dataset is currently available to support the development of multi-class aortic segmentation methods. To address this gap, we organized the AortaSeg24 MICCAI Challenge, introducing the first dataset of 100 CTA volumes annotated for 23 clinically relevant aortic branches and zones. This dataset was designed to facilitate both model development and validation. The challenge attracted 121 teams worldwide, with participants leveraging state-of-the-art frameworks such as nnU-Net and exploring novel techniques, including cascaded models, data augmentation strategies, and custom loss functions. We evaluated the submitted algorithms using the Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) and Normalized Surface Distance (NSD), highlighting the approaches adopted by the top five performing teams. This paper presents the challenge design, dataset details, evaluation metrics, and an in-depth analysis of the top-performing algorithms. The annotated dataset, evaluation code, and implementations of the leading methods are publicly available to support further research. All resources can be accessed at https://aortaseg24.grand-challenge.org.
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- 2025
6. Deep Learning Pipeline for Fully Automated Myocardial Infarct Segmentation from Clinical Cardiac MR Scans
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Schwab, Matthias, Pamminger, Mathias, Kremser, Christian, and Mayr, Agnes
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Purpose: To develop and evaluate a deep learning-based method that allows to perform myocardial infarct segmentation in a fully-automated way. Materials and Methods: For this retrospective study, a cascaded framework of two and three-dimensional convolutional neural networks (CNNs), specialized on identifying ischemic myocardial scars on late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) images, was trained on an in-house training dataset consisting of 144 examinations. On a separate test dataset from the same institution, including images from 152 examinations obtained between 2021 and 2023, a quantitative comparison between artificial intelligence (AI)-based segmentations and manual segmentations was performed. Further, qualitative assessment of segmentation accuracy was evaluated for both human and AI-generated contours by two CMR experts in a blinded experiment. Results: Excellent agreement could be found between manually and automatically calculated infarct volumes ($\rho_c$ = 0.9). The qualitative evaluation showed that compared to human-based measurements, the experts rated the AI-based segmentations to better represent the actual extent of infarction significantly (p < 0.001) more often (33.4% AI, 25.1% human, 41.5% equal). On the contrary, for segmentation of microvascular obstruction (MVO), manual measurements were still preferred (11.3% AI, 55.6% human, 33.1% equal). Conclusion: This fully-automated segmentation pipeline enables CMR infarct size to be calculated in a very short time and without requiring any pre-processing of the input images while matching the segmentation quality of trained human observers. In a blinded experiment, experts preferred automated infarct segmentations more often than manual segmentations, paving the way for a potential clinical application.
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- 2025
7. Searching for GEMS: Discovery and Characterization of Two Brown Dwarfs Around M Dwarfs
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Larsen, Alexander, Swaby, Tera N., Kobulnicky, Henry A., Canas, Caleb I., Kanodia, Shubham, Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Monson, Andrew, Gupta, Arvind, Cochran, William, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Bender, Chad, Diddams, Scott A., Halverson, Samuel, Lin, Andrea S. J., Moe, Maxwell, Ninan, Joe, Robertson, Paul, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, and Stefansson, Gudmunder
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Brown dwarfs bridge the gap between stars and planets, providing valuable insight into both planetary and stellar formation mechanisms. Yet the census of transiting brown dwarf companions, in particular around M dwarf stars, remains incomplete. We report the discovery of two transiting brown dwarfs around low-mass hosts using a combination of space- and ground-based photometry along with near-infrared radial velocities. We characterize TOI-5389Ab ($68.0^{+2.2}_{-2.2} \ \mj$) and TOI-5610b ($40.4^{+1.0}_{-1.0} \ \mj$), two moderately massive brown dwarfs orbiting early M dwarf hosts ($\teff = 3569 \pm 59 \ K$ and $3618 \pm 59 \ K$, respectively). For TOI-5389Ab, the best fitting parameters are period $P=10.40046 \pm 0.00002$ days, radius $R_{\rm BD}=0.824^{+0.033}_{-0.031}$~\rj, and low eccentricity $e=0.0962^{+0.0027}_{-0.0046}$. In particular, this constitutes one of the most extreme substellar-stellar companion-to-host mass ratios of $q=0.150$. For TOI-5610b, the best fitting parameters are period $P=7.95346 \pm 0.00002$ days, radius $R_{\rm BD}=0.887^{+0.031}_{-0.031}$ \rj, and moderate eccentricity $e=0.354^{+0.011}_{-0.012}$. Both targets are expected to have shallow but potentially observable secondary transits: $\lesssim 500$ ppm in Johnson K band for both. A statistical analysis of M-dwarf/BD systems reveals for the first time that those at short orbital periods ($P < 13$ days) exhibit a dearth of $13 \mj < M_{\rm BD} < 40 \mj$ companions ($q$ $<$ 0.1) compared to those at slightly wider separations.
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- 2025
8. Multi-megabase scale genome interpretation with genetic language models
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Träuble, Frederik, Stuart, Lachlan, Georgiou, Andreas, Notin, Pascal, Mehrjou, Arash, Schwessinger, Ron, Chevalley, Mathieu, Branson, Kim, Schölkopf, Bernhard, van Duijn, Cornelia, Marks, Debora, and Schwab, Patrick
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Quantitative Biology - Genomics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Understanding how molecular changes caused by genetic variation drive disease risk is crucial for deciphering disease mechanisms. However, interpreting genome sequences is challenging because of the vast size of the human genome, and because its consequences manifest across a wide range of cells, tissues and scales -- spanning from molecular to whole organism level. Here, we present Phenformer, a multi-scale genetic language model that learns to generate mechanistic hypotheses as to how differences in genome sequence lead to disease-relevant changes in expression across cell types and tissues directly from DNA sequences of up to 88 million base pairs. Using whole genome sequencing data from more than 150 000 individuals, we show that Phenformer generates mechanistic hypotheses about disease-relevant cell and tissue types that match literature better than existing state-of-the-art methods, while using only sequence data. Furthermore, disease risk predictors enriched by Phenformer show improved prediction performance and generalisation to diverse populations. Accurate multi-megabase scale interpretation of whole genomes without additional experimental data enables both a deeper understanding of molecular mechanisms involved in disease and improved disease risk prediction at the level of individuals.
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- 2025
9. Dalea aurea, D. candida, D. multiflora , and D. purpurea seedling herbage, root nitrogen, and dry matter yield as influenced by soil type, phosphorus amendment, and cowpea Rhizobium inoculant
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Girgin, Gülten, Muir, James P, Jessup, Russell W, and Schwab, A Paul
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- 2020
10. Examining the Measurement Invariance and Validity of the e SSIS SEL Brief + Mental Health Scales-- Student Version in Austria and Germany
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Christopher J. Anthony, Sepideh Hassani, Susanne Schwab, Abigail P. Howe, Michayla Yost, Stephen N. Elliott, Marwin Löper, Gamze Görel, and Frank Hellmich
- Abstract
The SSIS SEL Brief + Mental Health Scales (SSIS SELb+MHS) are multi-informant assessments developed in the United States to assess the social and emotional learning (SEL) competencies and emotional behavior concerns (EBCs) of school-age youth. Although there are translations of the SEL items of the SSIS SELb+MHS available in other languages, a German translation has never been completed and validated, despite the growing need for SEL and mental health assessment in German-speaking countries. To address this need, this study's primary purpose was the examination of a German translation of the assessment with a specific focus on measurement invariance and concurrent validity invariance testing with 821 3rd through 6th-grade students in Austria and Germany. Results indicated that the SELb+MHS items clustered into 2 SEL factors and 2 EBC factors. With regard to measurement invariance, the SELb+MHS functioned similarly across both Austria and Germany and full scalar invariance was achieved. Additionally, the overall pattern of concurrent validity relationships was as expected and similar across countries. Implications and future directions are discussed.
- Published
- 2024
11. A single-cell compendium of human cerebrospinal fluid identifies disease-associated immune cell populations.
- Author
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Cantoni, Claudia, Smirnov, Roman, Firulyova, Maria, Andhey, Prabhakar, Bradstreet, Tara, Esaulova, Ekaterina, Terekhova, Marina, Schwarzkopf, Elizabeth, Abdalla, Nada, Kleverov, Maksim, Sabatino, Joseph, Liu, Kang, Schwab, Nicholas, Meyer Zu Hörste, Gerd, Cross, Anne, Artyomov, Maxim, Edelson, Brian, and Wu, Gregory
- Subjects
Adaptive immunity ,Immunology ,Innate immunity ,Neurological disorders ,Neuroscience ,Humans ,Single-Cell Analysis ,Male ,Female ,COVID-19 ,Multiple Sclerosis ,Middle Aged ,Alzheimer Disease ,Adult ,Dendritic Cells ,Parkinson Disease ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Transcriptome ,Aged ,Microglia - Abstract
Single-cell transcriptomics applied to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for elucidating the pathophysiology of neurologic diseases has produced only a preliminary characterization of CSF immune cells. CSF derives from and borders central nervous system (CNS) tissue, allowing for comprehensive accounting of cell types along with their relative abundance and immunologic profiles relevant to CNS diseases. Using integration techniques applied to publicly available datasets in combination with our own studies, we generated a compendium with 139 subjects encompassing 135 CSF and 58 blood samples. Healthy subjects and individuals across a wide range of diseases, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, COVID-19, and autoimmune encephalitis, were included. We found differences in lymphocyte and myeloid subset frequencies across different diseases as well as in their distribution between blood and CSF. We identified what we believe to be a new subset of AREG+ dendritic cells exclusive to the CSF that was more abundant in subjects with MS compared with healthy controls. Finally, transcriptional cell states in CSF microglia-like cells and lymphoid subsets were elucidated. Altogether, we have created a reference compendium for single-cell transcriptional profiling encompassing CSF immune cells useful to the scientific community for future studies on neurologic diseases.
- Published
- 2025
12. Jitter Across 15 Years: Leveraging Precise Photometry from Kepler and TESS to Extract Exoplanets from Radial Velocity Time Series
- Author
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Beard, Corey, Robertson, Paul, Lubin, Jack, Han, Te, Holcomb, Rae, Premnath, Pranav, Butler, R. Paul, Dalba, Paul A., Holden, Brad, Blake, Cullen H., Diddams, Scott A., Gupta, Arvind F., Halverson, Samuel, Krolikowski, Daniel M., Li, Dan, Lin, Andrea S. J., Logsdon, Sarah E., Lubar, Emily, Mahadevan, Suvrath, McElwain, Michael W., Ninan, Joe P., Paredes, Leonardo A., Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Stefansson, Gudmundur, Terrien, Ryan C., and Wright, Jason T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Stellar activity contamination of radial velocity (RV) data is one of the top challenges plaguing the field of extreme precision RV (EPRV) science. Previous work has shown that photometry can be very effective at removing such signals from RV data, especially stellar activity caused by rotating star spots and plage.The exact utility of photometry for removing RV activity contamination, and the best way to apply it, is not well known. We present a combination photometric and RV study of eight Kepler/K2 FGK stars with known stellar variability. We use NEID RVs acquired simultaneously with TESS photometry, and we perform injection recovery tests to quantify the efficacy of recent TESS photometry versus archival Kepler/K2 photometry for removing stellar variability from RVs. We additionally experiment with different TESS sectors when training our models in order to quantify the real benefit of simultaneously acquired RVs and photometry. We conclude that Kepler photometry typically performs better than TESS at removing noise from RV data when it is available, likely due to longer baseline and precision. In contrast, for targets with available K2 photometry, especially those most active, and with high precision ($\sigma_{NEID}$ $<$ 1 m s$^{-1}$) NEID RVs, TESS may be the more informative dataset. However, contrary to expectations, we have found that training on simultaneous photometry does not always achieve the best results.
- Published
- 2024
13. Resolving the Young 2 Cygni Run-away Star into a Binary using iLocater
- Author
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Crepp, Justin R., Crass, Jonathan, Bechter, Andrew J., Sands, Brian L., Ketterer, Ryan, King, David, Kopon, Derek, Hamper, Randall, Engstrom, Matthew, Smous, James E., Bechter, Eric B., Harris, Robert, Johnson, Marshall C., Baggett, Nicholas, Dulz, Shannon, Vansickle, Michael, Conrad, Al, Ertel, Steve, Gaudi, B. Scott, Hinz, Philip, Kuchner, Marc, Montoya, Manny, Onuma, Eleanya, Ott, Melanie, Pogge, Richard, Rahmer, Gustavo, Reynolds, Robert, Schwab, Christian, Stapelfeldt, Karl, Thomes, Joseph, Vaz, Amali, Wang, Ji, and Woodward, Charles E.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Precision radial velocity (RV) spectrographs that use adaptive optics (AO) show promise to advance telescope observing capabilities beyond those of seeing-limited designs. We are building a spectrograph for the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) named iLocater that uses AO to inject starlight directly into single mode fibers (SMF). iLocater's first acquisition camera system (the `SX' camera), which receives light from one of the 8.4m diameter primary mirrors of the LBT, was initially installed in summer 2019 and has since been used for several commissioning runs. We present results from first-light observations that include on-sky measurements as part of commissioning activities. Imaging measurements of the bright B3IV star 2 Cygni ($V=4.98$) resulted in the direct detection of a candidate companion star at an angular separation of only $\theta = 70$ mas. Follow-up AO measurements using Keck/NIRC2 recover the candidate companion in multiple filters. An $R\approx1500$ miniature spectrograph recently installed at the LBT named ``Lili'' provides spatially resolved spectra of each binary component, indicating similar spectral types and strengthening the case for companionship. Studying the multiplicity of young runaway star systems like 2 Cygni ($36.6 \pm 0.5$ Myr) can help to understand formation mechanisms for stars that exhibit anomalous velocities through the galaxy. This on-sky demonstration illustrates the spatial resolution of the iLocater SX acquisition camera working in tandem with the LBT AO system; it further derisks a number of technical hurdles involved in combining AO with Doppler spectroscopy., Comment: Accepted to AJ
- Published
- 2024
14. Searching for GEMS: Two Super-Jupiters around M-dwarfs -- Signatures of Instability or Accretion?
- Author
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Hotnisky, Andrew, Kanodia, Shubham, Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Canas, Caleb I., Gupta, Arvind F., Han, Te, Kobulnicky, Henry A., Larsen, Alexander, Robertson, Paul, Rodruck, Michael, Stefansson, Gudmundur, Cochran, William D., Delamer, Megan, Diddams, Scott A., Fernandes, Rachel B., Halverson, Samuel, Hebb, Leslie, Lin, Andrea S. J., Monson, Andrew, Ninan, Joe P., Roy, Arpita, and Schwab, Christian
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of TOI-6303b and TOI-6330b, two massive transiting super-Jupiters orbiting a M0 and a M2 star respectively, as part of the Searching for GEMS survey. These were detected by TESS and then confirmed via ground-based photometry and radial velocity observations with the Habitable-zone Planet Finder (HPF). TOI-6303b has a mass of 7.84 +/- 0.31 MJ, a radius of 1.03 +/- 0.06 RJ , and an orbital period of 9.485 days. TOI-6330b has a mass of 10.00 +/- 0.31 MJ , a radius of 0.97 +/- 0.03 RJ , and an orbital period of 6.850 days. We put these planets in context of super-Jupiters around M-dwarfs discovered from radial-velocity surveys, as well as recent discoveries from astrometry. These planets have masses that can be attributed to two dominant planet formation mechanisms - gravitational instability and core-accretion. Their masses necessitate massive protoplanetary disks that should either be gravitationally unstable, i.e. forming through gravitational instability, or be amongst some of the most massive protoplanetary disks to form objects through core-accretion. We also discuss the eccentricity distribution of these objects, as a potential indicator of their formation and evolutionary mechanisms., Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2408.14694
- Published
- 2024
15. Skyrmion Bag Robustness in Plasmonic Bilayer and Trilayer Moir\'e Superlattices
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Schwab, Julian, Mangold, Florian, Frank, Bettina, Davis, Timothy J., and Giessen, Harald
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Physics - Optics - Abstract
Twistronics is studied intensively in twisted 2D heterostructures and its extension to trilayer moir\'e structures has proven beneficial for the tunability of unconventional correlated states and superconductivity in twisted trilayer graphene. Just recently, the concept of twistronics has been applied to plasmonic lattices with nontrivial topology, demonstrating that bilayer moir\'e skyrmion lattices harbor multi-skyrmion textures called skyrmion bags. Here, we explore the properties of plasmonic trilayer moir\'e superlattices that are created by the interference of three twisted skyrmion lattices. More specifically, we explore the properties of periodic superlattices and their topological invariants. We also demonstrate that twisted trilayer skyrmion lattices harbor the same skyrmion bags as twisted bilayer skyrmion lattices. We quantify the robustness of these skyrmion bags by the stability of their topological numbers against certain disturbance fields that leads to experimental designs for topological textures with maximum robustness.
- Published
- 2024
16. Plasmonic Twistronics: Discovery of Plasmonic Skyrmion Bags
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Schwab, Julian, Neuhaus, Alexander, Dreher, Pascal, Tsesses, Shai, Cohen, Kobi, Mangold, Florian, Mantha, Anant, Frank, Bettina, Bartal, Guy, Heringdorf, Frank-J. Meyer zu, Davis, Timothy J., and Giessen, Harald
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
The study of van der Waals heterostructures with an interlayer twist, known as "twistronics", has been instrumental in advancing contemporary condensed matter research. Most importantly, it has underpinned the emergence of a multitude of strongly-correlated phases, many of which derive from the topology of the physical system. Here, we explore the application of the twistronics paradigm in plasmonic systems with nontrivial topology, by creating a moir\'e skyrmion superlattice using two superimposed plasmonic skyrmion lattices, twisted at a "magic" angle. The complex electric field distribution of the moir\'e skyrmion superlattice is measured using time-resolved vector microscopy, revealing that each super-cell possesses very large topological invariants and harbors a "skyrmion bag", the size of which is controllable by the twist angle and center of rotation. Our work shows how twistronics leads to a diversity of topological features in optical fields, providing a new route to locally manipulate electromagnetic field distributions, which is crucial for future structured light-matter interaction.
- Published
- 2024
17. 'It's a conversation, not a quiz': A Risk Taxonomy and Reflection Tool for LLM Adoption in Public Health
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Zhou, Jiawei, Chen, Amy Z., Shah, Darshi, Reese, Laura Schwab, and De Choudhury, Munmun
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Recent breakthroughs in large language models (LLMs) have generated both interest and concern about their potential adoption as accessible information sources or communication tools across different domains. In public health -- where stakes are high and impacts extend across populations -- adopting LLMs poses unique challenges that require thorough evaluation. However, structured approaches for assessing potential risks in public health remain under-explored. To address this gap, we conducted focus groups with health professionals and health issue experiencers to unpack their concerns, situated across three distinct and critical public health issues that demand high-quality information: vaccines, opioid use disorder, and intimate partner violence. We synthesize participants' perspectives into a risk taxonomy, distinguishing and contextualizing the potential harms LLMs may introduce when positioned alongside traditional health communication. This taxonomy highlights four dimensions of risk in individual behaviors, human-centered care, information ecosystem, and technology accountability. For each dimension, we discuss specific risks and example reflection questions to help practitioners adopt a risk-reflexive approach. This work offers a shared vocabulary and reflection tool for experts in both computing and public health to collaboratively anticipate, evaluate, and mitigate risks in deciding when to employ LLM capabilities (or not) and how to mitigate harm when they are used.
- Published
- 2024
18. Origins of Super Jupiters: TOI-2145b Has a Moderately Eccentric and Nearly Aligned Orbit
- Author
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Dong, Jiayin, Chontos, Ashley, Zhou, George, Stefansson, Gudmundur, Wang, Songhu, Huang, Chelsea X., Gupta, Arvind F., Halverson, Samuel, Kanodia, Shubham, Luhn, Jacob K., Mahadevan, Suvrath, Monson, Andrew, Alvarado-Montes, Jaime A., Ninan, Joe P., Robertson, Paul, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, and Wright, Jason T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Super Jupiters are giant planets with several Jupiter masses. It remains an open question whether these planets originate with such high masses or grow through collisions. Previous work demonstrates that warm super Jupiters tend to have more eccentric orbits compared to regular-mass warm Jupiters. This correlation between mass and eccentricity may indicate that planet-planet interactions significantly influence the warm giant planet demographics. Here we conducted a detailed characterization of a warm super Jupiter, TOI-2145b. This analysis utilized previous observations from TESS and Keck/HIRES, enhanced by new Rossiter-McLaughlin effect data from the NEID spectrometer on the 3.5 m WIYN Telescope. TOI-2145b is a $5.68^{+0.37}_{-0.34} M_{\rm Jup}$ planet on a moderate eccentricity ($e = 0.214^{+0.014}_{-0.014}$), 10.26-day orbit, orbiting an evolved A-star. We constrain the projected stellar obliquity to be $\lambda = 6.8^{+2.9}_{-3.8}$$^\circ$ from two NEID observations. Our $N$-body simulations suggest that the formation of super Jupiter TOI-2145b could involve either of two scenarios: a high initial mass or growth via collisions. On a population level, however, the collision scenario can better describe the mass-eccentricity distribution of observed warm Jupiters., Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, AJ accepted
- Published
- 2024
19. A Novel Acoustic Wearable for Assessment of Tendon Health and Loading Condition
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Yazdkhasti, Amirhossein, De Klerk, Hendrik, Lucaciu, Andreea Renata, Moeinzad, Rana, Ghaednia, Hamid, and Schwab, Joseph H.
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs - Abstract
The current methods of assessing tendon health such as clinical examination, imaging techniques, and implanted pressure sensors, are often based on a subjective assessment or are not accurate enough, are extremely expensive, or are limited to relatively large damage such as partial or gross tear of the tendon and cannot accurately assess and monitor smaller damages such as micro tears or strains. This study proposes an acoustic-based wearable capable of estimating tendon load and predicting damage severity in both deep and superficial tendons. Our device consists of an array of acoustic transducers positioned around the targeted body area in the form of a cuff. One of the transducers generates an acoustic wave, which is capable of penetrating deep into the body. As these waves propagate through different tissues, they are influenced by the mechanical and geometrical properties of each tissue. The rest of the transducers are used to measure the propagated waves. The results suggest that the proposed wearable offers a promising alternative to existing superficial tendon monitoring wearable devices by improving the domain of reach. The proposed wearable shows robust performance in estimating the force applied to the tendon. It also can effectively be used to compare the health condition of two tendons and predict the type of damage., Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 2024
20. Efficient Differentiable Discovery of Causal Order
- Author
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Chevalley, Mathieu, Mehrjou, Arash, and Schwab, Patrick
- Subjects
Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
In the algorithm Intersort, Chevalley et al. (2024) proposed a score-based method to discover the causal order of variables in a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG) model, leveraging interventional data to outperform existing methods. However, as a score-based method over the permutahedron, Intersort is computationally expensive and non-differentiable, limiting its ability to be utilised in problems involving large-scale datasets, such as those in genomics and climate models, or to be integrated into end-to-end gradient-based learning frameworks. We address this limitation by reformulating Intersort using differentiable sorting and ranking techniques. Our approach enables scalable and differentiable optimization of causal orderings, allowing the continuous score function to be incorporated as a regularizer in downstream tasks. Empirical results demonstrate that causal discovery algorithms benefit significantly from regularizing on the causal order, underscoring the effectiveness of our method. Our work opens the door to efficiently incorporating regularization for causal order into the training of differentiable models and thereby addresses a long-standing limitation of purely associational supervised learning.
- Published
- 2024
21. Gaia-4b and 5b: Radial Velocity Confirmation of Gaia Astrometric Orbital Solutions Reveal a Massive Planet and a Brown Dwarf Orbiting Low-mass Stars
- Author
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Stefansson, Gudmundur, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Winn, Joshua, Marcussen, Marcus, Kanodia, Shubham, Albrecht, Simon, Fitzmaurice, Evan, Mikulskitye, One, Cañas, Caleb, Espinoza-Retamal, Juan Ignacio, Zwart, Yiri, Krolikowski, Daniel, Hotnisky, Andrew, Robertson, Paul, Alvarado-Montes, Jaime A., Bender, Chad, Blake, Cullen, Callingham, Joe, Cochran, William, Delamer, Megan, Diddams, Scott, Dong, Jiayin, Fernandes, Rachel, Giovanazzi, Mark, Halverson, Samuel, Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Logsdon, Sarah E, McElwain, Michael, Ninan, Joe, Rajagopal, Jayadev, Reji, Varghese, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, and Wright, Jason
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Gaia astrometry of nearby stars is precise enough to detect the tiny displacements induced by substellar companions, but radial velocity data are needed for definitive confirmation. Here we present radial velocity follow-up observations of 28 M and K stars with candidate astrometric substellar companions, which led to the confirmation of two systems, Gaia-4b and Gaia-5b, and the refutation of 21 systems as stellar binaries. Gaia-4b is a massive planet ($M = 11.8 \pm 0.7 \:\mathrm{M_J}$) in a $P = 571.3 \pm 1.4\:\mathrm{day}$ orbit with a projected semi-major axis $a_0=0.312 \pm 0.040\:\mathrm{mas}$ orbiting a $0.644 \pm 0.02 \:\mathrm{M_\odot}$ star. Gaia-5b is a brown dwarf ($M = 20.9 \pm 0.5\:\mathrm{M_J}$) in a $P = 358.58 \pm 0.19\:\mathrm{days}$ eccentric $e=0.6412 \pm 0.0027$ orbit with a projected angular semi-major axis of $a_0 = 0.947 \pm 0.038\:\mathrm{mas}$ around a $0.34 \pm 0.03 \mathrm{M_\odot}$ star. Gaia-4b is one of the first exoplanets discovered via the astrometric technique, and is one of the most massive planets known to orbit a low-mass star., Comment: Submitted to AAS journals. 26 pages, 12 figures, 4 tables
- Published
- 2024
22. Should Cross-Lingual AMR Parsing go Meta? An Empirical Assessment of Meta-Learning and Joint Learning AMR Parsing
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Kang, Jeongwoo, Coavoux, Maximin, Lopez, Cédric, and Schwab, Didier
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
Cross-lingual AMR parsing is the task of predicting AMR graphs in a target language when training data is available only in a source language. Due to the small size of AMR training data and evaluation data, cross-lingual AMR parsing has only been explored in a small set of languages such as English, Spanish, German, Chinese, and Italian. Taking inspiration from Langedijk et al. (2022), who apply meta-learning to tackle cross-lingual syntactic parsing, we investigate the use of meta-learning for cross-lingual AMR parsing. We evaluate our models in $k$-shot scenarios (including 0-shot) and assess their effectiveness in Croatian, Farsi, Korean, Chinese, and French. Notably, Korean and Croatian test sets are developed as part of our work, based on the existing The Little Prince English AMR corpus, and made publicly available. We empirically study our method by comparing it to classical joint learning. Our findings suggest that while the meta-learning model performs slightly better in 0-shot evaluation for certain languages, the performance gain is minimal or absent when $k$ is higher than 0., Comment: to appear in Findings of EMNLP 2024
- Published
- 2024
23. Fully Automated CTC Detection, Segmentation and Classification for Multi-Channel IF Imaging
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Schwab, Evan, Annaldas, Bharat, Ramesh, Nisha, Lundberg, Anna, Shelke, Vishal, Xu, Xinran, Gilbertson, Cole, Byun, Jiyun, and Lam, Ernest T.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Liquid biopsies (eg., blood draws) offer a less invasive and non-localized alternative to tissue biopsies for monitoring the progression of metastatic breast cancer (mBCa). Immunofluoresence (IF) microscopy is a tool to image and analyze millions of blood cells in a patient sample. By detecting and genetically sequencing circulating tumor cells (CTCs) in the blood, personalized treatment plans are achievable for various cancer subtypes. However, CTCs are rare (about 1 in 2M), making manual CTC detection very difficult. In addition, clinicians rely on quantitative cellular biomarkers to manually classify CTCs. This requires prior tasks of cell detection, segmentation and feature extraction. To assist clinicians, we have developed a fully automated machine learning-based production-level pipeline to efficiently detect, segment and classify CTCs in multi-channel IF images. We achieve over 99% sensitivity and 97% specificity on 9,533 cells from 15 mBCa patients. Our pipeline has been successfully deployed on real mBCa patients, reducing a patient average of 14M detected cells to only 335 CTC candidates for manual review., Comment: Published in MICCAI 2024 MOVI Workshop Conference Proceedings
- Published
- 2024
24. A novel ultrasonic device for monitoring implant condition
- Author
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Yazdkhasti, Amirhossein, Lloyd, Sophie, Schwab, Joseph H., Yu, Miao, and Ghaednia, Hamid
- Subjects
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs - Abstract
Every year more than 2.3 million joint replacement is performed worldwide. Around 10% of these replacements fail those results in revisions at a cost of $8 billion per year. In particular patients younger than 55 years of age face higher risks of failure due to greater demand on their joints. The long-term failure of joint replacement such as implant loosening significantly decreases the life expectancy of replacement. One of the main challenges in understanding and treatment of implant loosening is lack of a low-cost screening device that can detect or predict loosening at very early stages. In this work we are proposing a novel method of screening implant condition via ultrasonic signals. In this method we are applying ultrasonic signals to the joint via several piezoresistive discs while reading signals with several other piezoresistive sensors. We are introducing a new approachin interpreting ultrasonic signals and we prove in a finite element environment that our method can be used to assess replacement condition. We show how our new concept can detect and distinguish between different implant fixation failure types sizes and even locate the position of the failure. We believe this work can be a foundation for development of a new generation of ultrasonic diagnosis wearable devices., Comment: 12 Pages, 8 figures, 1 table
- Published
- 2024
25. Why Teachers Integrate YPAR in Their Teaching: Cultivating Youth Wellbeing, Student Voice, and Social Justice
- Author
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Mary Frances Buckley-Marudas, Rosalinda Godínez, Karmel Abutaleb, Gray Cooper, Margaret Rahill, Drew Retherford, Sarah Schwab, Taylor Zepp, and Adam Voight
- Abstract
In this article, the authors share what they learned from considering a collection of narrative reflections written by six high school educators, all co-authors, who have integrated youth participatory action research (YPAR) into their instructional practice. Taken together, the written reflections shed light on teachers' reasons not only for pursuing YPAR but also for persisting with YPAR in their particular school context. The authors found that all teachers shared a commitment to social justice, yet their individual purposes for engaging with YPAR varied. Drawing on the teachers' written reflections, the authors delve into teachers' motivations for integrating YPAR into their teaching practice in order to conceptualize teachers' reasons for facilitating YPAR in school.
- Published
- 2024
26. L’émergence de la norme internationale sur le « crime d’honneur »
- Author
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Schwab, Aurore
- Subjects
analyse ,Aurore ,crime ,d’honneur ,discours ,internationale ,L’émergence ,l’histoire ,norme ,onusien ,perspective ,religions ,Schwab ,Social and cultural history ,Violence and abuse in society ,International institutions ,Religion: general ,Civics and citizenship - Abstract
Ce livre ouvre un nouveau champ d’études : les dynamiques normatives globales relatives aux religions. Le cas de la norme internationale des droits de l’homme sur la pratique du crime d’honneur retient l’attention car elle a un potentiel de dissémination mondiale et participe à la controverse sur la religiosité de la pratique du crime d’honneur au Pakistan. En empruntant la perspective de l’histoire des religions et la méthode d’analyse du discours, l’auteure atteint trois objectifs : la reconstruction des événements qui produisent la norme internationale, la mise en exergue des mécanismes sous-jacents aux discours onusiens et l’examen de la religiosité des pratiques normatives onusiennes et pakistanaises.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Biological validation of peak-width of skeletonized mean diffusivity as a VCID biomarker: The MarkVCID Consortium.
- Author
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Luckey, Alison, Ghosh, Saptaparni, Wang, Chen-Pin, Beiser, Alexa, Bernal, Rebecca, Li, Zhiguang, Mbangdadji, Djass, Fadaee, Elyas, Snoussi, Haykel, Dediós, Angel, Trevino, Hector, Goss, Monica, Hillmer, Laura, Bauer, Christopher, Staffaroni, Adam, Stables, Lara, Albert, Marilyn, Himali, Jayandra, Mosley, Thomas, Forsberg, Lars, Guðnason, Vilmundur, Singh, Baljeet, Singh, Herpreet, Schwab, Kristin, Kramer, Joel, Rosenberg, Gary, Helmer, Karl, Greenberg, Steven, Habes, Mohamad, Wang, Danny, Gold, Brian, Lu, Hanzhang, Caprihan, Arvind, Fornage, Myriam, Launer, Lenore, Arfanakis, Konstantinos, Seshadri, Sudha, Decarli, Charles, Maillard, Pauline, and Satizabal, Claudia
- Subjects
biomarker ,cognitive impairment ,diffusion tensor imaging ,peak‐width of skeletonized mean diffusivity ,small vessel disease ,vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia ,Humans ,Female ,Male ,Aged ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Biomarkers ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases ,Dementia ,Vascular ,Middle Aged ,Brain ,Neuroimaging ,Aged ,80 and over - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peak-width of skeletonized mean diffusivity (PSMD), a neuroimaging marker of cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), has shown excellent instrumental properties. Here, we extend our work to perform a biological validation of PSMD. METHODS: We included 396 participants from the Biomarkers for Vascular Contributions to Cognitive Impairment and Dementia (MarkVCID-1) Consortium and three replication samples (Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology = 6172, Rush University Medical Center = 287, University of California Davis Alzheimers Disease Research Center = 567). PSMD was derived from diffusion tensor imaging using an automated algorithm. We related PSMD to a composite measure of general cognitive function using linear regression models adjusting for confounders. RESULTS: Higher PSMD was associated with lower general cognition in MarkVCID-1 independent of age, sex, education, and intracranial volume (Beta [95% confidence interval], -0.8 [-1.2, -0.4], P
- Published
- 2024
28. Dynamic choice HIV prevention with cabotegravir long-acting injectable in rural Uganda and Kenya: a randomised trial extension
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Kamya, Moses R, Balzer, Laura B, Ayieko, James, Kabami, Jane, Kakande, Elijah, Chamie, Gabriel, Sutter, Nicole, Sunday, Helen, Litunya, Janice, Schwab, Joshua, Schrom, John, Bacon, Melanie, Koss, Catherine A, Rinehart, Alex R, Petersen, Maya, Havlir, Diane V, and Consortium, SEARCH
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Health Disparities ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Clinical Research ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Uganda ,HIV Infections ,Adult ,Female ,Male ,Pyridones ,Kenya ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Rural Population ,Young Adult ,Adolescent ,Post-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Middle Aged ,Injections ,Diketopiperazines ,SEARCH Consortium ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
BackgroundHIV infections are ongoing globally despite efficacious biomedical prevention options. We sought to determine whether an HIV prevention package providing choice of daily pills or long-acting injectable cabotegravir and opportunities to change prevention options could increase biomedical prevention coverage and reduce new HIV infections.MethodsThis study was an extension of three randomised trials that used SEARCH dynamic choice HIV prevention to recruit adults (aged ≥15 years) at risk for HIV from antenatal, outpatient, and community settings in rural Uganda and Kenya. In this 48-week open-label extension, participants maintained their original (1:1) randomisation group; the option to choose cabotegravir long-acting injectable was added for intervention participants. Inclusion criteria for the extension were previous enrolment in a SEARCH dynamic choice HIV prevention trial, negative HIV rapid test, and residence in study region. The intervention provided person-centred choice of oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) or post-exposure HIV prophylaxis (PEP) or cabotegravir long-acting injectable, with the option to switch according to participant preference. The control provided standard-of-care access to oral PrEP and PEP, but not cabotegravir long-acting injectable. Biomedical prevention coverage (proportion of follow-up covered by oral PrEP, PEP, or cabotegravir long-acting injectable; primary outcome) and HIV incidence (secondary outcome) were compared between groups using targeted minimum loss-based estimation. The trial (NCT05549726) is closed to recruitment.FindingsOf 1534 participants initially randomly assigned (from April 15, 2021 to Sept 29, 2022), 984 (487 in the intervention group and 497 in the standard-of-care group) reconsented to the extension (from Jan 2 to March 3, 2023). The mean proportion of follow-up covered by biomedical HIV prevention was 69·7% (95% CI 64·9-74·5) in the intervention group versus 13·3% (10·2-16·3) in the standard-of-care group, corresponding to an absolute difference of 56·4 percentage points (95% CI 50·8-62·1; p
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- 2024
29. Unsupervised Clustering of Adult Spinal Deformity Patterns Predicts Surgical and Patient-Reported Outcomes.
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Lafage, Renaud, Song, Junho, Elysee, Jonathan, Fourman, Mitchell, Smith, Justin, Ames, Christopher, Bess, Shay, Daniels, Alan, Gupta, Munish, Hostin, Richard, Kim, Han, Klineberg, Eric, Mundis, Gregory, Diebo, Bassel, Shaffrey, Christopher, Schwab, Frank, Lafage, Virginie, and Burton, Douglas
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adult spinal deformity ,artificial intelligence ,clustering ,machine learning ,minimum clinically important difference ,patient-reported outcomes ,sagittal alignment ,sagittal balance ,scoliosis ,surgical outcomes - Abstract
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether different radiographic clusters of adult spinal deformity identified using artificial intelligence-based clustering are associated with distinct surgical outcomes. METHODS: Patients were classified based on the results of a previously conducted analysis that examined clusters of deformity, including Moderate Sagittal (Mod Sag), Severe Sagittal (Sev Sag), Coronal, and Hyper-Thoracic Kyphosis (Hyper-TK). The surgical data, HRQOL, and complication outcomes of these clusters were then compared. RESULTS: The final analysis included 1062 patients. Similar to published results on a different patient sample, Mod Sag and Sev Sag patients were older, more likely to have a history of previous spine surgery, and more disabled. By 2-year, all clusters improved in HRQOL and reached a similar rate of minimal clinically important difference (MCID).The Sev Sag cluster had the highest rate major complications (53% vs 34-40%), and complications leading to reoperation (29% vs 17-23%), implant failures (20% vs 8-11%), and operative complications (27% vs 10-17%). Coronal patients had the highest rate of pulmonary complications (9% vs 3-6%) but the lowest rate of X-ray imbalance (10% vs 19-21%). No significant differences were found in neurological complications, infection rate, gastrointestinal, or cardiac events (all P > .1). Kaplan-Meier survival curves demonstrated a lower time to first complications for the Sev Sag cluster. CONCLUSIONS: All clusters of adult spinal deformity benefit similarly from surgery as they all achieved similar rates of MCID. Although the rates of complications varied among the clusters, the types of complications were not significantly different.
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- 2024
30. Continental-scale associations of Arabidopsis thaliana phyllosphere members with host genotype and drought.
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Karasov, Talia, Neumann, Manuela, Leventhal, Laura, Symeonidi, Efthymia, Shirsekar, Gautam, Hawks, Aubrey, Monroe, Grey, Exposito-Alonso, Moisés, Bergelson, Joy, Weigel, Detlef, and Schwab, Rebecca
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Arabidopsis ,Droughts ,Microbiota ,Plant Leaves ,Genotype ,RNA ,Ribosomal ,16S ,Bacteria ,Europe ,Phylogeny ,DNA ,Bacterial ,Genetic Variation - Abstract
Plants are colonized by distinct pathogenic and commensal microbiomes across different regions of the globe, but the factors driving their geographic variation are largely unknown. Here, using 16S ribosomal DNA and shotgun sequencing, we characterized the associations of the Arabidopsis thaliana leaf microbiome with host genetics and climate variables from 267 populations in the species native range across Europe. Comparing the distribution of the 575 major bacterial amplicon variants (phylotypes), we discovered that microbiome composition in A. thaliana segregates along a latitudinal gradient. The latitudinal clines in microbiome composition are predicted by metrics of drought, but also by the spatial genetics of the host. To validate the relative effects of drought and host genotype we conducted a common garden field study, finding 10% of the core bacteria to be affected directly by drought and 20% to be affected by host genetic associations with drought. These data provide a valuable resource for the plant microbiome field, with the identified associations suggesting that drought can directly and indirectly shape genetic variation in A. thaliana via the leaf microbiome.
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- 2024
31. First Order System Least Squares Neural Networks
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Opschoor, Joost A. A., Petersen, Philipp C., and Schwab, Christoph
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,65M60, 65N30, 65N50, 49M41, 35J46, 35L40 - Abstract
We introduce a conceptual framework for numerically solving linear elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic PDEs on bounded, polytopal domains in euclidean spaces by deep neural networks. The PDEs are recast as minimization of a least-squares (LSQ for short) residual of an equivalent, well-posed first-order system, over parametric families of deep neural networks. The associated LSQ residual is a) equal or proportional to a weak residual of the PDE, b) additive in terms of contributions from localized subnetworks, indicating locally ``out-of-equilibrium'' of neural networks with respect to the PDE residual, c) serves as numerical loss function for neural network training, and d) constitutes, even with incomplete training, a computable, (quasi-)optimal numerical error estimator in the context of adaptive LSQ finite element methods. In addition, an adaptive neural network growth strategy is proposed which, assuming exact numerical minimization of the LSQ loss functional, yields sequences of neural networks with realizations that converge rate-optimally to the exact solution of the first order system LSQ formulation.
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- 2024
32. The Compositions of Rocky Planets in Close-in Orbits Tend to be Earth-Like
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Brinkman, Casey L., Weiss, Lauren M., Huber, Daniel, Lee, Rena A., Kolecki, Jared, Tenn, Gwyneth, Zhang, Jingwen, Narayanan, Suchitra, Polanski, Alex S., Dai, Fei, Bean, Jacob L., Beard, Corey, Brady, Madison, Brodheim, Max, Brown, Matt, Deich, William, Edelstein, Jerry, Fulton, Benjamin J., Giacalone, Steven, Gibson, Steven R., Gilbert, Gregory J., Halverson, Samuel, Handley, Luke, Hill, Grant M., Holcomb, Rae, Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Howard, Andrew W., Isaacson, Howard, Kaye, Stephen, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Ong, J. M. Joel, Payne, Joel, Petigura, Eric A., Pidhorodetska, Daria, Poppett, Claire, Roy, Arpita, Rubenzahl, Ryan, Saunders, Nicholas, Schwab, Christian, Seifahrt, Andreas, Shaum, Abby P., Sirk, Martin M., Smith, Chris, Smith, Roger, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Stürmer, Julian, Thorne, Jim, Turtelboom, Emma V., Tyler, Dakotah, Valliant, John, Van Zandt, Judah, Walawender, Josh, Yee, Samuel W., Yeh, Sherry, and Zink, Jon
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Hundreds of exoplanets between 1-1.8 times the size of the Earth have been discovered on close in orbits. However, these planets show such a diversity in densities that some appear to be made entirely of iron, while others appear to host gaseous envelopes. To test this diversity in composition, we update the masses of 5 rocky exoplanets (HD 93963 A b, Kepler-10 b, Kepler-100 b, Kepler-407 b, and TOI-1444 b) and present the confirmation of a new planet (TOI-1011) using 187 high precision RVs from Gemini/MAROON-X and Keck/KPF. Our updated planet masses suggest compositions closer to that of the Earth than previous literature values for all planets in our sample. In particular, we report that two previously identified ``super-Mercuries'' (Kepler-100 b and HD 93963 A b) have lower masses that suggest less iron-rich compositions. We then compare the ratio of iron to rock-building species to the abundance ratios of those elements in their host stars. These updated planet compositions do not suggest a steep relationship between planet and host star compositions, contradictory to previous results, and suggest that planets and host stars have similar abundance ratios., Comment: Submitted to AJ 09/30/2024
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- 2024
33. Expression Rates of Neural Operators for Linear Elliptic PDEs in Polytopes
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Marcati, Carlo and Schwab, Christoph
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis ,35J15, 65N15, 68T07 - Abstract
We study the approximation rates of a class of deep neural network approximations of operators, which arise as data-to-solution maps $\mathcal{G}^\dagger$ of linear elliptic partial differential equations (PDEs), and act between pairs $X,Y$ of suitable infinite-dimensional spaces. We prove expression rate bounds for approximate neural operators $\mathcal{G}$ with the structure $\mathcal{G} = \mathcal{R} \circ \mathcal{A} \circ \mathcal{E}$, with linear encoders $\mathcal{E}$ and decoders $\mathcal{R}$. The constructive proofs are via a recurrent NN structure obtained by unrolling exponentially convergent, self-consistent (``Richardson'') iterations. We bound the operator approximation error with respect to the linear Kolmogorov $N$-widths of the data and solution sets and in terms of the size of the approximation network. We prove expression rate bounds for approximate, neural solution operators emulating the coefficient-to-solution maps for elliptic PDEs set in $d$-dimensional polytopes, with $d\in\{2,3\}$, and subject to Dirichlet-, Neumann- or mixed boundary conditions. Exploiting weighted norm characterizations of the solution sets of elliptic PDEs in polytopes, we show algebraic rates of expression for problems with data with finite regularity, and exponential operator expression rates for analytic data.
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- 2024
34. Searching for GEMS: TOI-6383Ab, a giant planet transiting an M3-dwarf star in a binary system
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Bernabò, Lia Marta, Kanodia, Shubham, Canas, Caleb I., Cochran, William D., Csizmadia, Szilárd, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Stefánsson, Gudhmundur, Gupta, Arvind F., Monson, Andrew, Kobulnicky, Henry A., Larsen, Alexander K., Cotter, Ethan G., Birkholz, Alexina, Swaby, Tera N., Zeimann, Gregory, Bender, Chad F., Diddams, Scott A., Libby-Roberts, Jessica E., Lin, Andrea S. J., Ninan, Joe P., Rauer, Heike, Reji, Varghese, Robertson, Paul, Roy, Arpita, and Schwab, Christian
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the discovery of a transiting giant planet around the 3500 K M3-dwarf star TOI-6383A located 172 pc from Earth. It was detected by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) and confirmed by a combination of ground-based follow-up photometry and precise radial velocity measurements. This planet has an orbital period of $\sim$1.791 days, mass of 1.040$\pm$0.094 $M_J$ and a radius of 1d.008$^{+0.036}_{-0.033} ~R_J$, resulting in a mean bulk density of 1.26$^{+0.18}_{-0.17}$ g cm$^{-3}$. TOI-6383A has an M-dwarf companion star, TOI-6383B, which has a stellar effective temperature $T_{eff}$ $\sim$ 3100 K and a projected orbital separation of 3100 AU. TOI-6383A is a low-mass dwarf star hosting a giant planet and is an intriguing object for planetary evolution studies due to its high planet-to-star mass ratio. This discovery is part of the \textit{Searching for Giant Exoplanets around M-dwarf Stars (GEMS)} Survey, intending to provide robust and accurate estimates of the occurrence of GEMS and the statistics on their physical and orbital parameters. This paper presents an interesting addition to the small number of confirmed GEMS, particularly notable since its formation necessitates massive, ust-rich protoplanetary discs and high accretion efficiency ($>$ 10\%)., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures
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- 2024
35. Generalization vs. Specialization under Concept Shift
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Nguyen, Alex, Schwab, David J., and Ngampruetikorn, Vudtiwat
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Statistics - Machine Learning ,Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networks ,Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Machine learning models are often brittle under distribution shift, i.e., when data distributions at test time differ from those during training. Understanding this failure mode is central to identifying and mitigating safety risks of mass adoption of machine learning. Here we analyze ridge regression under concept shift -- a form of distribution shift in which the input-label relationship changes at test time. We derive an exact expression for prediction risk in the high-dimensional limit. Our results reveal nontrivial effects of concept shift on generalization performance, depending on the properties of robust and nonrobust features of the input. We show that test performance can exhibit a nonmonotonic data dependence, even when double descent is absent. Finally, our experiments on MNIST and FashionMNIST suggest that this intriguing behavior is present also in classification problems., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures
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- 2024
36. The NEID Earth Twin Survey. I. Confirmation of a 31-day planet orbiting HD 86728
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Gupta, Arvind F., Luhn, Jacob K., Wright, Jason T., Mahadevan, Suvrath, Robertson, Paul, Krolikowski, Daniel M., Ford, Eric B., Cañas, Caleb I., Halverson, Samuel, Lin, Andrea S. J., Kanodia, Shubham, Fitzmaurice, Evan, Gilbertson, Christian, Bender, Chad F., Blake, Cullen H., Dong, Jiayin, Giovinazzi, Mark R., Logsdon, Sarah E., Monson, Andrew, Ninan, Joe P., Rajagopal, Jayadev, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, and Stefánsson, Guðmundur
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
With close to three years of observations in hand, the NEID Earth Twin Survey (NETS) is starting to unearth new astrophysical signals for a curated sample of bright, radial velocity (RV)-quiet stars. We present the discovery of the first NETS exoplanet, HD 86728 b, a $m_p\sin i = 9.16^{+0.55}_{-0.56}\ \rm{M}_\oplus$ planet on a circular, $P=31.1503^{+0.0062}_{-0.0066}$ d orbit, thereby confirming a candidate signal identified by Hirsch et al. (2021). We confirm the planetary origin of the detected signal, which has a semi-amplitude of just $K=1.91^{+0.11}_{-0.12}$ m s$^{-1}$, via careful analysis of the NEID RVs and spectral activity indicators, and we constrain the mass and orbit via fits to NEID and archival RV measurements. The host star is intrinsically quiet at the $\sim1$ m s$^{-1}$ level, with the majority of this variability likely stemming from short-timescale granulation. HD 86728 b is among the small fraction of exoplanets with similar masses and periods that have no known planetary siblings., Comment: Submitted to AAS Journals. 18 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables, 1 appendix
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- 2024
37. The HD 191939 Exoplanet System is Well-Aligned and Flat
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Lubin, Jack, Petigura, Erik A., Van Zandt, Judah, Beard, Corey, Dai, Fei, Halverson, Samuel, Holcomb, Rae, Howard, Andrew W., Isaacson, Howard, Luhn, Jacob, Robertson, Paul, Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Stefansson, Gudmundur, Winn, Joshua N., Brodheim, Max, Deich, William, Hill, Grant M., Gibson, Steven R., Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Payne, Joel, Roy, Arpita, Smith, Roger, Shaum, Abby P., Schwab, Christian, and Walawender, Josh
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the sky-projected spin-orbit angle $\lambda$ for HD 191939 b, the innermost planet in a 6 planet system, using Keck/KPF to detect the Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) effect. Planet b is a sub-Neptune with radius 3.4 $\pm$ 0.8 R$_{\oplus}$ and mass 10.0 $\pm$ 0.7 M$_{\oplus}$ with an RM amplitude $<$1 ms$^{-1}$. We find the planet is consistent with a well-aligned orbit, measuring $\lambda= \, $ 3.7 $\pm$ 5.0 degrees. Additionally, we place new constraints on the mass and period of the distant super-Jupiter, planet f, finding it to be 2.88 $\pm$ 0.26 $M_J$ on a 2898 $\pm$ 152 day orbit. With these new orbital parameters, we perform a dynamical analysis of the system and constrain the mutual inclination of the non-transiting planet e to be smaller than 12 degrees relative to the plane shared by the inner three transiting planets. Additionally, the further planet f is inclined off this shared plane, the greater the amplitude of precession for the entire inner system, making it increasingly unlikely to measure an aligned orbit for planet b. Through this analysis, we show that this system's wide variety of planets are all well-aligned with the star and nearly co-planar, suggesting that the system formed dynamically cold and flat out of a well-aligned proto-planetary disk, similar to our own solar system., Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journal
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- 2024
38. CTC and CT5TEA: an advanced multi-channel digitizer and trigger ASIC for imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes
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Schwab, Benjamin, Zink, Adrian, Depaoli, Davide, Hinton, Jim, Liu, Gang, Okumura, Akira, Ross, Duncan, Schäfer, Johannes, Schoorlemmer, Harm, Tajima, Hiro, Vandenbroucke, Justin, White, Richard, Watson, Jason John, Zorn, Justus, and Funk, Stefan
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We have developed a new set of Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs) of the TARGET family (CTC and CT5TEA), designed for the readout of signals from photosensors in cameras of Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes (IACTs) for ground-based gamma-ray astronomy. We present the performance and design details. Both ASICs feature 16 channels, with CTC being a Switched-Capacitor Array (SCA) sampler at 0.5 to 1 GSa/s with a 16,384 sample deep storage buffer, including the functionality to digitize full waveforms at arbitrary times. CT5TEA is its companion trigger ASIC (though may be used on its own), which provides trigger information for the analog sum of four (and 16) adjacent channels. Since sampling and triggering takes place in two separate ASICs, the noise due to interference from the SCA is suppressed, and allows a minimal trigger threshold of $\leq$ 2.5 mV (0.74 photo electrons (p.e.)) with a trigger noise of $\leq$ 0.5 mV (0.15 p.e.). For CTC, a maximal input voltage range from $-$0.5 V up to 1.7 V is achieved with an effective bit range of $>$ 11.6 bits and a baseline noise of 0.7 mV. The cross-talk improved to $\leq$ 1% over the whole $-$3 dB bandwidth of 220 MHz and even down to 0.2% for 1.5 V pulses of 10 ns width. Not only is the performance presented, but a temperature-stable calibration routine for pulse mode operation is introduced and validated. The resolution is found to be $\sim$ 2.5% at 33.7 mV (10 p.e.) and $\leq$ 0.3% at 337 mV (100 p.e.) with an integrated non-linearity of $<$ 1.6 mV. Developed for the Small-Sized Telescope (SST) and Schwarzschild-Couder Telescope (SCT) cameras of the Cherenkov Telescope Array Observatory (CTAO), CTC and CT5TEA are deployed for both prototypes and shall be integrated into the final versions., Comment: 18 pages, 26 figures, 1 table
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- 2024
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39. Searching for GEMS: TOI-5688 A b, a low-density giant orbiting a high-metallicity early M-dwarf
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Reji, Varghese, Kanodia, Shubham, Ninan, Joe, Cañas, Caleb I., Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Lin, Andrea S. J., Gupta, Arvind F, Sewaby, Tera N., Larsen, Alexander, Kobulnicky, Henry A., Choi, Philip I., Evans, Nez, Santomenna, Sage, Winnick, Isabelle, Yu, Larry, Alvarado-Montes, Jaime A., Bender, Chad, Bernabò, Lia Marta, Blake, Cullen H., Cochran, William D., Diddams, Scott A., Halverson, Samuel, Han, Te, Hearty, Fred, Logsdon, Sarah E., Mahadevan, Suvrath, Monson, Andrew, McElwain, Michael, Robertson, Paul, Ojha, Devendra, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Stefansson, Gudmundur, and Wright, Jason
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of a low-density planet orbiting the high-metallicity early M-dwarf TOI-5688 A b. This planet was characterized as part of the search for transiting giant planets ($R \gtrsim8$ M${}_\oplus$) through the Searching for GEMS (Giant Exoplanets around M-dwarf Stars) survey. The planet was discovered with the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and characterized with ground-based transits from Red Buttes Observatory (RBO), the Table Mountain Observatory of Pomona College, and radial velocity (RV) measurements with the Habitable-Zone Planet Finder (HPF) on the 10 m Hobby Eberly Telescope (HET) and NEID on the WIYN 3.5 m telescope. From the joint fit of transit and RV data, we measure a planetary mass and radius of $124\pm24$ M$_\oplus$ ($0.39\pm0.07$ M${}_J$) and $10.4\pm0.7$ R$_\oplus$ ($0.92\pm0.06$ R${}_J$) respectively. The spectroscopic and photometric analysis of the host star TOI-5688 A shows that it is a metal-rich ([Fe/H] $ = 0.47\pm0.16$ dex) M2V star, favoring the core-accretion formation pathway as the likely formation scenario for this planet. Additionally, Gaia astrometry suggests the presence of a wide-separation binary companion, TOI-5688 B, which has a projected separation of $\sim5"$ (1110 AU) and is an M4V, making TOI-5688 A b part of the growing number of GEMS in wide-separation binary systems., Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, Accepted in AJ
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- 2024
40. Data-Driven Modeling of Telluric Features and Stellar Variability with StellarSpectraObservationFitting.jl
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Gilbertson, Christian, Ford, Eric B., Halverson, Samuel, Fitzmaurice, Evan, Blake, Cullen H., Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Wright, Jason T., Luhn, Jacob K., Ninan, Joe P., Robertson, Paul, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, and Terrien, Ryan C.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
A significant barrier to achieving the radial velocity (RV) measurement accuracy and precision required to characterize terrestrial mass exoplanets is the existence of time-variable features in the measured spectra, from both telluric absorption and stellar variability, which affect measured line shapes and can cause apparent RV shifts. Reaching the desired accuracy using traditional techniques often requires avoiding lines contaminated by stellar variability and/or changing tellurics, and thus discarding a large fraction of the spectrum, lowering precision. New data-driven methods can help achieve extremely precise and accurate RVs by enabling the use of a larger fraction of the available data. While there exist methods for modeling telluric features or the stellar variability individually, there is a need for additional tools that are capable of modeling them simultaneously at the spectral level. Here we present StellarSpectraObservationFitting.jl (SSOF), a Julia package for measuring Doppler shifts and creating data-driven models (with fast, physically-motivated Gaussian Process regularization) for the time-variable spectral features for both the telluric transmission and stellar spectrum, while accounting for the wavelength-dependent instrumental line-spread function. We demonstrate SSOF's state-of-the-art performance on data from the NEID RV spectrograph on the WIYN 3.5m Telescope for multiple stars. We show SSOF's, ability to accurately identify and characterize spectral variability and provide $\sim$2-6x smaller photon-limited errors over the NEID CCF-based pipeline and match the performance of SERVAL, a leading template-based pipeline, using only observed EPRV spectra., Comment: 47 pages, 21 figures, 7 tables. In revision for AAS Journals. Code at https://github.com/christiangil/StellarSpectraObservationFitting.jl
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- 2024
41. Searching for GEMS: Characterizing Six Giant Planets around Cool Dwarfs
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Kanodia, Shubham, Gupta, Arvind F., Canas, Caleb I., Bernabo, Lia Marta, Reji, Varghese, Han, Te, Brady, Madison, Seifahrt, Andreas, Cochran, William D., Morrell, Nidia, Basant, Ritvik, Bean, Jacob, Bender, Chad F., de Beurs, Zoe L., Bieryla, Allyson, Birkholz, Alexina, Brown, Nina, Chapman, Franklin, Ciardi, David R., Clark, Catherine A., Cotter, Ethan G., Diddams, Scott A., Halverson, Samuel, Hawley, Suzanne, Hebb, Leslie, Holcomb, Rae, Howell, Steve B., Kobulnicky, Henry A., Kowalski, Adam F., Larsen, Alexander, Libby-Roberts, Jessica, Lin, Andrea S. J., Lund, Michael B., Luque, Rafael, Monson, Andrew, Ninan, Joe P., Parker, Brock A., Patel, Nishka, Rodruck, Michael, Ross, Gabrielle, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Thoms, Aubrie, and Vanderburg, Andrew
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Transiting giant exoplanets around M-dwarf stars (GEMS) are rare, owing to the low-mass host stars. However, the all-sky coverage of TESS has enabled the detection of an increasingly large number of them to enable statistical surveys like the \textit{Searching for GEMS} survey. As part of this endeavour, we describe the observations of six transiting giant planets, which includes precise mass measurements for two GEMS (K2-419Ab, TOI-6034b) and statistical validation for four systems, which includes validation and mass upper limits for three of them (TOI-5218b, TOI-5616b, TOI-5634Ab), while the fourth one -- TOI-5414b is classified as a `likely planet'. Our observations include radial velocities from the Habitable-zone Planet Finder on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, and MAROON-X on Gemini-North, along with photometry and high-contrast imaging from multiple ground-based facilities. In addition to TESS photometry, K2-419Ab was also observed and statistically validated as part of the K2 mission in Campaigns 5 and 18, which provides precise orbital and planetary constraints despite the faint host star and long orbital period of $\sim 20.4$ days. With an equilibrium temperature of only 380 K, K2-419Ab is one of the coolest known well-characterized transiting planets. TOI-6034 has a late F-type companion about 40\arcsec~away, making it the first GEMS host star to have an earlier main-sequence binary companion. These confirmations add to the existing small sample of confirmed transiting GEMS., Comment: Accepted in AJ
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- 2024
42. Quiet Please: Detrending Radial Velocity Variations from Stellar Activity with a Physically Motivated Spot Model
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Siegel, Jared C., Halverson, Samuel, Luhn, Jacob K., Zhao, Lily L., Moulla, Khaled Al, Robertson, Paul, Bender, Chad F., Terrien, Ryan C., Roy, Arpita, Mahadevan, Suvrath, Hearty, Fred, Ninan, Joe P., Wright, Jason T., Ford, Eric B., Schwab, Christian, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Blake, Cullen H., and McElwain, Michael W.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
For solar-type stars, spots and their associated magnetic regions induce radial velocity perturbations through the Doppler rotation signal and the suppression of convective blueshift -- collectively known as rotation-modulation. We developed the Rotation-Convection (RC) model: a method of detrending and characterizing rotation-modulation, using only cross-correlation functions or 1-dimensional spectra, without the need for continuous high cadence measurements. The RC method uses a simple model for the anomalous radial velocity induced by an active region and has two inputs: stellar flux (or a flux proxy) and the relative radial velocity between strongly and weakly absorbed wavelengths (analogous to the bisector-inverse slope). On NEID solar data (three month baseline), the RC model lowers the amplitude of rotationally-modulated stellar activity to below the meter-per-second level. For the standard star HD 26965, the RC model detrends the activity signal to the meter-per-second level for HARPS, EXPRES, and NEID observations, even though the temporal density and timespan of the observations differs by an order of magnitude between the three datasets. In addition to detrending, the RC model also characterizes the rotation-modulation signal. From comparison with the Solar Dynamics Observatory, we confirmed that the model accurately recovers and separates the rotation and convection radial velocity components. We also mapped the amplitude of the rotation and convection perturbations as a function of height within the stellar atmosphere. Probing stellar atmospheres with our revised spot model will fuel future innovations in stellar activity mitigation, enabling robust exoplanet detection., Comment: Accepted to AJ, 22 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
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43. Utilizing Photometry from Multiple Sources to Mitigate Stellar Variability in Precise Radial Velocities: A Case Study of Kepler-21
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Beard, Corey, Robertson, Paul, Giovinazzi, Mark R., Murphy, Joseph M. Akana, Ford, Eric B., Halverson, Samuel, Han, Te, Holcomb, Rae, Lubin, Jack, Luque, Rafael, Premnath, Pranav, Bender, Chad F., Blake, Cullen H., Gong, Qian, Isaacson, Howard, Kanodia, Shubham, Li, Dan, Lin, Andrea S. J., Logsdon, 5 Sarah E., Lubar, Emily, McElwain, Michael W., Monson, Andrew, Ninan, Joe P., Rajagopal, Jayadev, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Stefansson, Gudmundur, Terrien, Ryan C., and Wright, Jason T.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a new analysis of Kepler-21, the brightest (V = 8.5) Kepler system with a known transiting exoplanet, Kepler-21 b. Kepler-21 b is a radius valley planet ($R = 1.6\pm 0.2 R_{\oplus}$) with an Earth-like composition (8.38$\pm$1.62 g/cc), though its mass and radius fall in the regime of possible "water worlds." We utilize new Keck/HIRES and WIYN/NEID radial velocity (RV) data in conjunction with Kepler and TESS photometry to perform a detailed study of activity mitigation between photometry and RVs. We additionally refine the system parameters, and we utilize Gaia astrometry to place constraints on a long-term RV trend. Our activity analysis affirms the quality of Kepler photometry for removing correlated noise from RVs, despite its temporal distance, though we reveal some cases where TESS may be superior. Using refined orbital parameters and updated composition curves, we rule out a ``water world" scenario for Kepler-21 b, and we identify a long period super-Jupiter planetary candidate, Kepler-21 (c).
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- 2024
44. Frequency-Explicit Shape Holomorphy in Uncertainty Quantification for Acoustic Scattering
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Hiptmair, Ralf, Schwab, Christoph, and Spence, Euan A.
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Mathematics - Numerical Analysis - Abstract
We consider frequency-domain acoustic scattering at a homogeneous star-shaped penetrable obstacle, whose shape is uncertain and modelled via a radial spectral parameterization with random coefficients. Using recent results on the stability of Helmholtz transmission problems with piecewise constant coefficients from [A. Moiola and E. A. Spence, Acoustic transmission problems: wavenumber-explicit bounds and resonance-free regions, Mathematical Models and Methods in Applied Sciences, 29 (2019), pp. 317-354] we obtain frequency-explicit statements on the holomorphic dependence of the scattered field and the far-field pattern on the stochastic shape parameters. This paves the way for applying general results on the efficient construction of high-dimensional surrogate models. We also take into account the effect of domain truncation by means of perfectly matched layers (PML). In addition, spatial regularity estimates which are explicit in terms of the wavenumber $k$ permit us to quantify the impact of finite-element Galerkin discretization using high-order Lagrangian finite-element spaces.
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- 2024
45. A Testbed for Tidal Migration: the 3D Architecture of an Eccentric Hot Jupiter HD 118203 b Accompanied by a Possibly Aligned Outer Giant Planet
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Zhang, Jingwen, Huber, Daniel, Weiss, Lauren M., Xuan, Jerry W., Burt, Jennifer A., Dai, Fei, Saunders, Nicholas, Petigura, Erik A., Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Winn, Joshua N., Wang, Sharon X., Van Zandt, Judah, Brodheim, Max, Claytor, Zachary R., Crossfield, Ian, Deich, William, Fulton, Benjamin J., Gibson, Steven R., Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Howard, Andrew W., Isaacson, Howard, Kaye, Stephen, Lanclos, Kyle, Laher, Russ R., Lubin, Jack, Payne, Joel, Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Shaum, Abby P., Walawender, Josh, Wishnow, Edward, and Yeh, Sherry
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Characterizing outer companions to hot Jupiters plays a crucial role in deciphering their origins. We present the discovery of a long-period giant planet, HD 118203 c ($m_{c}=11.79^{+0.69}_{-0.63}\ \mathrm{M_{J}}$, $a_{c}=6.28^{+0.10}_{-0.11}$ AU) exterior to a close-in eccentric hot Jupiter HD 118203 b ($P_{b}=6.135\ \mathrm{days}$, $m_{b}=2.14\pm{0.12}\ \mathrm{M_{J}}$, $r_{b}=1.14\pm{0.029}\ \mathrm{R_{J}}$, $e_{b}=0.31\pm{0.007}$) based on twenty-year radial velocities. Using Rossiter-McLaughlin (RM) observations from the Keck Planet Finder (KPF), we measured a low sky-projected spin-orbit angle $\lambda_{b}=-11^{\circ}.7^{+7.6}_{-10.0}$ for HD 118203 b and detected stellar oscillations in the host star, confirming its evolved status. Combining the RM observation with the stellar inclination measurement, we constrained the true spin-orbit angle of HD 118203 b as $\Psi_{b}<33^{\circ}.5\ (2\sigma)$, indicating the orbit normal of the hot Jupiter nearly aligned with the stellar spin axis. Furthermore, by combining radial velocities and Hipparcos-Gaia astrometric acceleration, we constrained the line-of-sight mutual inclination between the hot Jupiter and the outer planet to be $9^{\circ}.8^{+16.2}_{-9.3}$ at $2\sigma$ level. HD 118203 is one of first hot Jupiter systems where both the true spin-orbit angle of the hot Jupiter and the mutual inclination between inner and outer planets have been determined. Our results are consistent with a system-wide alignment, with low mutual inclinations between the outer giant planet, the inner hot Jupiter, and the host star. This alignment, along with the moderate eccentricity of HD 118203 c, implies that the system may have undergone coplanar high-eccentricity tidal migration. Under this framework, our dynamical analysis suggests an initial semi-major axis of 0.3 to 3.2 AU for the proto-hot Jupiter., Comment: 30 pages, 12 figures, accepted by AJ
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- 2024
46. Exploring atmospheric neutrino oscillations at ESSnuSB
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ESSnuSB, Aguilar, J., Anastasopoulos, M., Baussan, E., Bhattacharyya, A. K., Bignami, A., Blennow, M., Bogomilov, M., Bolling, B., Bouquerel, E., Bramati, F., Branca, A., Brunetti, G., Bustinduy, I., Carlile, C. J., Cederkall, J., Choi, T. W., Choubey, S., Christiansen, P., Collins, M., Morales, E. Cristaldo, Cupiał, P., Danared, H., de André, J. P. A. M., Dracos, M., Efthymiopoulos, I., Ekelöf, T., Eshraqi, M., Fanourakis, G., Farricker, A., Fasoula, E., Fukuda, T., Gazis, N., Geralis, Th., Ghosh, M., Giarnetti, A., Gokbulut, G., Hagner, C., Halić, L., Hooft, M., Iversen, K. E., Jachowicz, N., Jenssen, M., Johansson, R., Kasimi, E., Topaksu, A. Kayis, Kildetof, B., Kordas, K., Leisos, A., Lindroos, M., Longhin, A., Maiano, C., Marangoni, S., Marrelli, C., Meloni, D., Mezzetto, M., Milas, N., Muñoz, J., Niewczas, K., Oglakci, M., Ohlsson, T., Olvegård, M., Pari, M., Patrzalek, D., Petkov, G., Petridou, Ch., Poussot, P., Psallidas, A., Pupilli, F., Saiang, D., Sampsonidis, D., Schwab, C., Sordo, F., Sosa, A., Stavropoulos, G., Tarkeshian, R., Terranova, F., Tolba, T., Trachanas, E., Tsenov, R., Tsirigotis, A., Tzamarias, S. E., Vankova-Kirilova, G., Vassilopoulos, N., Vihonen, S., Wurtz, J., Zeter, V., and Zormpa, O.
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High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
This study provides an analysis of atmospheric neutrino oscillations at the ESSnuSB far detector facility. The prospects of the two cylindrical Water Cherenkov detectors with a total fiducial mass of 540 kt are investigated over 10 years of data taking in the standard three-flavor oscillation scenario. We present the confidence intervals for the determination of mass ordering, $\theta_{23}$ octant as well as for the precisions on $\sin^2\theta_{23}$ and $|\Delta m_{31}^2|$. It is shown that mass ordering can be resolved by $3\sigma$ CL ($5\sigma$ CL) after 4 years (10 years) regardless of the true neutrino mass ordering. Correspondingly, the wrong $\theta_{23}$ octant could be excluded by $3\sigma$ CL after 4 years (8 years) in the case where the true neutrino mass ordering is normal ordering (inverted ordering). The results presented in this work are complementary to the accelerator neutrino program in the ESSnuSB project., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures and 2 tables, accepted for publication in the Journal of High Energy Physics
- Published
- 2024
47. TESS Giants Transiting Giants. VI. Newly Discovered Hot Jupiters Provide Evidence for Efficient Obliquity Damping after the Main Sequence
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Saunders, Nicholas, Grunblatt, Samuel K., Chontos, Ashley, Dai, Fei, Huber, Daniel, Zhang, Jingwen, Stefansson, Gudmundur, van Saders, Jennifer L., Winn, Joshua N., Hey, Daniel, Howard, Andrew W., Fulton, Benjamin, Isaacson, Howard, Beard, Corey, Giacalone, Steven, van Zandt, Judah, Murphey, Joseph M. Akana, Rice, Malena, Blunt, Sarah, Turtelboom, Emma, Dalba, Paul A., Lubin, Jack, Brinkman, Casey, Louden, Emma M., Page, Emma, Watkins, Cristilyn N., Collins, Karen A., Stockdale, Chris, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Schwarz, Richard P., Massey, Bob, Howell, Steve B., Vanderburg, Andrew, Ricker, George R., Jenkins, Jon M., Seager, Sara, Christiansen, Jessie L., Daylan, Tansu, Falk, Ben, Brodheim, Max, Gibson, Steven R., Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Kaye, Stephen, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Petigura, Erik A., Roy, Arpita, Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Schwab, Christian, Shaum, Abby P., Sirk, Martin M., Smith, Christopher L., Walawender, Josh, and Yeh, Sherry
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The degree of alignment between a star's spin axis and the orbital plane of its planets (the stellar obliquity) is related to interesting and poorly understood processes that occur during planet formation and evolution. Hot Jupiters orbiting hot stars ($\gtrsim$6250 K) display a wide range of obliquities, while similar planets orbiting cool stars are preferentially aligned. Tidal dissipation is expected to be more rapid in stars with thick convective envelopes, potentially explaining this trend. Evolved stars provide an opportunity to test the damping hypothesis, particularly stars that were hot on the main sequence and have since cooled and developed deep convective envelopes. We present the first systematic study of the obliquities of hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants that recently developed convective envelopes using Rossiter-McLaughlin observations. Our sample includes two newly discovered systems in the Giants Transiting Giants Survey (TOI-6029 b, TOI-4379 b). We find that the orbits of hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants that have cooled below $\sim$6250 K are aligned or nearly aligned with the spin-axis of their host stars, indicating rapid tidal realignment after the emergence of a stellar convective envelope. We place an upper limit for the timescale of realignment for hot Jupiters orbiting subgiants at $\sim$500 Myr. Comparison with a simplified tidal evolution model shows that obliquity damping needs to be $\sim$4 orders of magnitude more efficient than orbital period decay to damp the obliquity without destroying the planet, which is consistent with recent predictions for tidal dissipation from inertial waves excited by hot Jupiters on misaligned orbits., Comment: 22 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The OATMEAL Survey. I. Low Stellar Obliquity in the Transiting Brown Dwarf System GPX-1
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Giacalone, Steven, Dai, Fei, Zanazzi, J. J., Howard, Andrew W., Dressing, Courtney D., Winn, Joshua N., Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Carmichael, Theron W., Vowell, Noah, Kesseli, Aurora, Halverson, Samuel, Isaacson, Howard, Brodheim, Max, Deich, William, Fulton, Benjamin J., Gibson, Steven R., Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Kaye, Stephen, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Payne, Joel, Petigura, Erik A., Roy, Arpita, Schwab, Christian, Shaum, Abby P., Sirk, Martin M., Smith, Chris, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Walawender, Josh, Wang, Sharon X., Weiss, Lauren M., and Yeh, Sherry
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We introduce the OATMEAL survey, an effort to measure the obliquities of stars with transiting brown dwarf companions. We observed a transit of the close-in ($P_{\rm orb} = 1.74 \,$ days) brown dwarf GPX-1 b using the Keck Planet Finder (KPF) spectrograph to measure the sky-projected angle between its orbital axis and the spin axis of its early F-type host star ($\lambda$). We measured $\lambda = 6.88 \pm 1.72 ^\circ$ (with additional unquantified systematic uncertainty), suggesting an orbit that is prograde and well aligned with the stellar equator. Hot Jupiters around early F stars are frequently found to have highly misaligned orbits, with polar and retrograde orbits being commonplace. It has been theorized that these misalignments stem from dynamical interactions, such as von Zeipel-Kozai-Lidov cycles, and are retained over long timescales due to weak tidal dissipation in stars with radiative envelopes. By comparing GPX-1 to similar systems under the frameworks of different tidal evolution theories, we argued that the rate of tidal dissipation is too slow to have re-aligned the system. This suggests that GPX-1 may have arrived at its close-in orbit via coplanar high-eccentricity migration or migration through an aligned protoplanetary disk. Our result for GPX-1 is one of few measurements of the obliquity of a star with a transiting brown dwarf. By enlarging the number of such measurements and comparing them with hot Jupiter systems, we will more clearly discern the differences between the mechanisms that dictate the formation and evolution of both classes of objects., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Asteroseismology of the Nearby K-Dwarf $\sigma$ Draconis using the Keck Planet Finder and TESS
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Hon, Marc, Huber, Daniel, Li, Yaguang, Metcalfe, Travis S., Bedding, Timothy R., Ong, Joel, Chontos, Ashley, Rubenzahl, Ryan, Halverson, Samuel, García, Rafael A., Kjeldsen, Hans, Stello, Dennis, Hey, Daniel R., Campante, Tiago, Howard, Andrew W., Gibson, Steven R., Rider, Kodi, Roy, Arpita, Baker, Ashley D., Edelstein, Jerry, Smith, Chris, Fulton, Benjamin J., Walawender, Josh, Brodheim, Max, Brown, Matt, Chan, Dwight, Dai, Fei, Deich, William, Gottschalk, Colby, Grillo, Jason, Hale, Dave, Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Householder, Aaron, Isaacson, Howard, Ishikawa, Yuzo, Jelinsky, Sharon R., Kassis, Marc, Kaye, Stephen, Laher, Russ, Lanclos, Kyle, Lee, Chien-Hsiu, Lilley, Scott, McCarney, Ben, Miller, Timothy N., Payne, Joel, Petigura, Erik A., Poppett, Claire, Raffanti, Michael, Rockosi, Constance, Sanford, Dale, Schwab, Christian, Shaum, Abby P., Sirk, Martin M., Smith, Roger, Thorne, Jim, Valliant, John, Vandenberg, Adam, Wang, Shin Ywan, Wishnow, Edward, Wold, Truman, Yeh, Sherry, Baker, Ashley, Basu, Sarbani, Bedell, Megan, Cegla, Heather M., Crossfield, Ian, Dressing, Courtney, Dumusque, Xavier, Knutson, Heather, Mawet, Dimitri, O'Meara, John, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Teske, Johanna, Vasisht, Gautam, Wang, Sharon Xuesong, Weiss, Lauren M., Winn, Joshua N., and Wright, Jason T.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Asteroseismology of dwarf stars cooler than the Sun is very challenging due to the low amplitudes and rapid timescales of oscillations. Here, we present the asteroseismic detection of solar-like oscillations at 4-minute timescales ($\nu_{\mathrm{max}}\sim4300\mu$Hz) in the nearby K-dwarf $\sigma$ Draconis using extreme precision Doppler velocity observations from the Keck Planet Finder and 20-second cadence photometry from NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite. The star is the coolest dwarf star to date with both velocity and luminosity observations of solar-like oscillations, having amplitudes of $5.9\pm0.8\,$cm$\,\text{s}^{-1}$ and $0.8\pm0.2$ ppm, respectively. These measured values are in excellent agreement with established luminosity-velocity amplitude relations for oscillations and provide further evidence that mode amplitudes for stars with $T_{\mathrm{eff}}<\,5500\,$K diminish in scale following a $(L/M)^{1.5}$ relation. By modeling the star's oscillation frequencies from photometric data, we measure an asteroseismic age of $4.5\pm0.9\,\rm{(ran)} \pm 1.2\,\rm{(sys)}$ Gyr. The observations demonstrate the capability of next-generation spectrographs and precise space-based photometry to extend observational asteroseismology to nearby cool dwarfs, which are benchmarks for stellar astrophysics and prime targets for directly imaging planets using future space-based telescopes., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2024
50. KPF Confirms a Polar Orbit for KELT-18 b
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Rubenzahl, Ryan A., Dai, Fei, Halverson, Samuel, Howard, Andrew W., Householder, Aaron, Fulton, Benjamin, Behmard, Aida, Gibson, Steven R., Roy, Arpita, Shaum, Abby P., Isaacson, Howard, Brodheim, Max, Deich, William, Hill, Grant M., Holden, Bradford, Laher, Russ R., Lanclos, Kyle, Payne, Joel N., Petigura, Erik A., Schwab, Christian, Smith, Chris, Stefánsson, Guðmundur, Walawender, Josh, Wang, Sharon X., Weiss, Lauren M., Winn, Joshua N., and Wishnow, Edward
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first spectroscopic transit results from the newly commissioned Keck Planet Finder on the Keck-I telescope at W. M. Keck Observatory. We observed a transit of KELT-18 b, an inflated ultra-hot Jupiter orbiting a hot star ($T_\text{eff} = 6670$ K) with a binary stellar companion. By modeling the perturbation to the measured cross correlation functions using the Reloaded Rossiter-McLaughlin technique, we derived a sky projected obliquity of $\lambda = -94.8 \pm 0.7$ deg ($\psi = 93.8_{-1.8}^{+1.6}$ deg for isotropic $i_\star$). The data are consistent with an extreme stellar differential rotation ($\alpha = 0.9$), though a more likely explanation is moderate center-to-limb variations of the emergent stellar spectrum. We see additional evidence for the latter from line widths increasing towards the limb. Using loose constraints on the stellar rotation period from observed variability in the available TESS photometry, we were able to constrain the stellar inclination and thus the true 3D stellar obliquity to $\psi = 91.7_{-1.8}^{+2.2}$ deg. KELT-18 b could have obtained its polar orbit through high-eccentricity migration initiated by Kozai-Lidov oscillations induced by the binary stellar companion KELT-18 B, as the two likely have a large mutual inclination as evidenced by Gaia astrometry. KELT-18 b adds another data point to the growing population of close-in polar planets, particularly around hot stars., Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, submitted to AJ (in revision)
- Published
- 2024
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