987 results on '"Trigo, M."'
Search Results
2. Sub-second infrared variability from the archetypal accreting neutron star 4U~1728-34
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Vincentelli, F. M., Casella, P., Borghese, A., Cavecchi, Y., Mastroserio, G., Stella, L., Altamirano, D., Padilla, M. Armas, Baglio, M. C., Belloni, T. M., Casares, J., Cúneo, V. A., Degenaar, N., Trigo, M. Díaz, Fender, R., Maccarone, T., Malzac, J., Sánchez, D. Mata, Middleton, M., Migliari, S., Muñoz-Darias, T., O'Brien, K., Panizo-Espinar, G., Sánchez-Sierras, J., Russell, D. M., and Uttley, P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the first simultaneous high-time resolution X-ray and infrared (IR) observations of a neutron star low mass X-ray binary in its hard state. We performed $\approx 2\,$h of simultaneous observations of 4U 1728-34 using HAWK-I@VLT, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR. The source displayed significant X-ray and IR variability down to sub-second timescales. By measuring the cross-correlation function between the infrared and X-ray lightcurves, we discovered a significant correlation with an infrared lead of $\approx 30-40\,$ms with respect to the X-rays. We analysed the X-ray energy dependence of the lag, finding a marginal increase towards higher energies. Given the sign of the lag, we interpret this as possible evidence of Comptonization from external seed photons. We discuss the origin of the IR seed photons in terms of cyclo-synchrotron radiation from an extended hot flow. Finally, we also observed the IR counterpart of a type-I X-ray burst, with a delay of $\approx7.2\,$s. Although some additional effects may be at play, by assuming that this lag is due to light travel time between the central object and the companion star, we find that 4U 1728-34 must have an orbital period longer than $3\,$h and an inclination higher than 8$^\circ$., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 11 pages 7 figures
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- 2023
3. The first mm detection of a neutron star high-mass X-ray binary
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Eijnden, J. van den, Sidoli, L., Trigo, M. Diaz, Degenaar, N., Mellah, I. El, Fürst, F., Grinberg, V., Kretschmar, P., Martínez-Núñez, S., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Postnov, K., and Russell, T. D.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Neutron stars accreting from OB supergiants are often divided between persistently and transiently accreting systems, called Supergiant X-ray Binaries (SgXBs) and Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXTs). This dichotomy in accretion behaviour is typically attributed to systematic differences in the massive stellar wind, binary orbit, or magnetic field configuration, but direct observational evidence for these hypotheses remains sparse. To investigate their stellar winds, we present the results of pilot 100-GHz observations of one SFXT and one SgXB with the Northern Extended Millimetre Array. The SFXT, IGR J18410-0535, is detected as a point source at $63.4 \pm 9.6$ $\mu$Jy, while the SgXB, IGR J18410-0535 remains undetected. Radio observations of IGR J18410-0535 imply a flat or inverted low-frequency spectrum, arguing for wind emission and against non-thermal flaring. Due to the uncertain SFXT distance, however, the observations do not necessarily imply a difference between the wind properties of the SFXT and SgXB. We compare the mm constraints with other HMXBs and isolated OB supergiants, before considering how future mm campaigns can constrain HMXB wind properties by including X-ray measurements. Specifically, we discuss caveats and future steps to successfully measure wind mass loss rates and velocities in HMXBs with coordinated mm, radio, and X-ray campaigns., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 7 pages, 1 figure
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- 2023
4. European pollen reanalysis, 1980–2022, for alder, birch, and olive
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Sofiev, Mikhail, Palamarchuk, Julia, Kouznetsov, Rostislav, Abramidze, Tamuna, Adams-Groom, Beverley, Antunes, Célia M., Ariño, Arturo H., Bastl, Maximilian, Belmonte, Jordina, Berger, Uwe E., Bonini, Maira, Bruffaerts, Nicolas, Buters, Jeroen, Cariñanos, Paloma, Celenk, Sevcan, Ceriotti, Valentina, Charalampopoulos, Athanasios, Clewlow, Yolanda, Clot, Bernard, Dahl, Aslog, Damialis, Athanasios, De Linares, Concepción, De Weger, Letty A., Dirr, Lukas, Ekebom, Agneta, Fatahi, Yalda, Fernández González, María, Fernández González, Delia, Fernández-Rodríguez, Santiago, Galán, Carmen, Gedda, Björn, Gehrig, Regula, Geller Bernstein, Carmi, Gonzalez Roldan, Nestor, Grewling, Lukasz, Hajkova, Lenka, Hänninen, Risto, Hentges, François, Jantunen, Juha, Kadantsev, Evgeny, Kasprzyk, Idalia, Kloster, Mathilde, Kluska, Katarzyna, Koenders, Mieke, Lafférsová, Janka, Leru, Poliana Mihaela, Lipiec, Agnieszka, Louna-Korteniemi, Maria, Magyar, Donát, Majkowska-Wojciechowska, Barbara, Mäkelä, Mika, Mitrovic, Mirjana, Myszkowska, Dorota, Oliver, Gilles, Östensson, Pia, Pérez-Badia, Rosa, Piotrowska-Weryszko, Krystyna, Prank, Marje, Przedpelska-Wasowicz, Ewa Maria, Pätsi, Sanna, Rajo, F. Javier Rodríguyez, Ramfjord, Hallvard, Rapiejko, Joanna, Rodinkova, Victoria, Rojo, Jesús, Ruiz-Valenzuela, Luis, Rybnicek, Ondrej, Saarto, Annika, Sauliene, Ingrida, Seliger, Andreja Kofol, Severova, Elena, Shalaboda, Valentina, Sikoparija, Branko, Siljamo, Pilvi, Soares, Joana, Sozinova, Olga, Stangel, Anders, Stjepanović, Barbara, Teinemaa, Erik, Tyuryakov, Svyatoslav, Trigo, M. Mar, Uppstu, Andreas, Vill, Mart, Vira, Julius, Visez, Nicolas, Vitikainen, Tiina, Vokou, Despoina, Weryszko-Chmielewska, Elżbieta, and Karppinen, Ari
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- 2024
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5. Quenched lattice fluctuations in optically driven SrTiO3
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Fechner, M., Först, M., Orenstein, G., Krapivin, V., Disa, A. S., Buzzi, M., von Hoegen, A., de la Pena, G., Nguyen, Q. L., Mankowsky, R., Sander, M., Lemke, H., Deng, Y., Trigo, M., and Cavalleri, A.
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- 2024
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6. Quenched lattice fluctuations in optically driven SrTiO3
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Fechner, M., Först, M., Orenstein, G., Krapivin, V., Disa, A. S., Buzzi, M., von Hoegen, A., de la Pena, G., Nguyen, Q. L, Mankowsky, R., Sander, M., Lemke, H., Deng, Y., Trigo, M., and Cavalleri, A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Many functionally relevant ferroic phenomena in quantum materials can be manipulated by driving the lattice coherently with optical and terahertz pulses. New physical phenomena and non-equilibrium phases that have no equilibrium counterpart have been discovered following these protocols. The underlying structural dynamics has been mostly studied by recording the average atomic position along dynamical structural coordinates with elastic scattering methods. However, crystal lattice fluctuations, which are known to influence phase transitions in equilibrium, are also expected to determine these dynamics but have rarely been explored. Here, we study the driven dynamics of the quantum paraelectric SrTiO3, in which mid-infrared drives have been shown to induce a metastable ferroelectric state. Crucial in these physics is the competition between the polar instability and antiferrodistortive rotations, which in equilibrium frustrate the formation of long-range ferroelectricity. We make use of high intensity mid-infrared optical pulses to resonantly drive a Ti-O stretching mode at 17 THz, and we measure the resulting change in lattice fluctuations using time-resolved x-ray diffuse scattering at a free electron laser. After a prompt increase, we observe a long-lived quench in R-point antiferrodistortive lattice fluctuations. The enhancement and reduction in lattice fluctuations are explained theoretically by considering fourth-order nonlinear phononic interactions and third-order coupling to the driven optical phonon and to lattice strain, respectively. These observations provide a number of new and testable hypotheses for the physics of light-induced ferroelectricity.
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- 2023
7. Accretion physics at high X-ray spectral resolution: New frontiers and game-changing science
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Gandhi, P., Kawamuro, T., Trigo, M. Díaz, Paice, J. A., Boorman, P. G., Cappi, M., Done, C., Fabian, A. C., Fukumura, K., Garcia, J. A., Greenwell, C. L., Guainazzi, M., Makishima, K., Tashiro, M. S., Tomaru, R., Tombesi, F., and Ueda, Y.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Microcalorimeters have demonstrated success in delivering high spectral resolution, and have paved the path to revolutionary new science possibilities in the coming decade of X-ray astronomy. There are several research areas in compact object science that can only be addressed with energy resolution Delta(E)<~5 eV at photon energies of a few keV, corresponding to velocity resolution of <~a few hundred km/s, to be ushered in by microcalorimeters. Here, we review some of these outstanding questions, focusing on how the research landscape is set to be transformed (i) at the interface between accreting supermassive black holes and their host galaxies, (ii) in unravelling the structures of accretion environments, (iii) in resolving long-standing issues on the origins of energy and matter feedback, and (iv) to test mass-scaled unification of accretion and feedback. The need to learn lessons from Hitomi and to make improvements in laboratory atomic data precision as well as plasma modeling are highlighted., Comment: To appear in Nature Astronomy as a review. Author version, before final editorial and style revisions
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- 2022
8. Pollen recognition through an open-source web-based system: automated particle counting for aerobiological analysis
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Chaves, Antonio Jesús, Martín, Cristian, Torres, Luis Llopis, Díaz, Manuel, Ruiz-Mata, Rocío, de Gálvez-Montañez, Enrique, Recio, Marta, Trigo, M. Mar, and Picornell, Antonio
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- 2023
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9. A multi-wavelength study of GRS 1716-249 in outburst : constraints on its system parameters
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Saikia, Payaswini, Russell, David M., Baglio, M. C., Bramich, D. M., Casella, Piergiorgio, Trigo, M. Diaz, Gandhi, Poshak, Jiang, Jiachen, Maccarone, Thomas, Soria, Roberto, Noori, Hind Al, Yazeedi, Aisha Al, Alabarta, Kevin, Belloni, Tomaso, Bel, Marion Cadolle, Ceccobello, Chiara, Corbel, Stephane, Fender, Rob, Gallo, Elena, Homan, Jeroen, Koljonen, Karri, Lewis, Fraser, Markoff, Sera B., Miller-Jones, James C. A., Rodriguez, Jerome, Russell, Thomas D., Shahbaz, Tariq, Sivakoff, Gregory R., Testa, Vincenzo, and Tetarenko, Alexandra J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the evolution of the Galactic black hole transient GRS 1716-249 during its 2016-2017 outburst at optical (Las Cumbres Observatory), mid-infrared (Very Large Telescope), near-infrared (Rapid Eye Mount telescope), and ultraviolet (the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope) wavelengths, along with archival radio and X-ray data. We show that the optical/near-infrared and UV emission of the source mainly originates from a multi-temperature accretion disk, while the mid-infrared and radio emission are dominated by synchrotron emission from a compact jet. The optical/UV flux density is correlated with the X-ray emission when the source is in the hard state, consistent with an X-ray irradiated accretion disk with an additional contribution from the viscous disk during the outburst fade. We also report the long-term optical light curve of the source and find that the quiescent i-band magnitude is 21.39$\pm$0.15 mag. Furthermore, we discuss how previous estimates of the system parameters of the source are based on various incorrect assumptions, and so are likely to be inaccurate. By comparing our GRS 1716-249 dataset to those of other outbursting black hole X-ray binaries, we find that while GRS 1716-249 shows similar X-ray behaviour, it is noticeably optically fainter, if the literature distance of 2.4 kpc is adopted. Using several lines of reasoning, we argue that the source distance is further than previously assumed in the literature, likely within 4-17 kpc, with a most likely range of $\sim$4-8 kpc., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2022
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10. A persistent ultraviolet outflow from an accreting neutron star binary transient
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Segura, N. Castro, Knigge, C., Long, K. S., Altamirano, D., Padilla, M. Armas, Bailyn, C., Buckley, D. A. H., Buisson, D. J. K., Casares, J., Charles, P., Combi, J. A., Cúneo, V. A., Degenaar, N. D., del Palacio, S., Trigo, M. Díaz, Fender, R., Gandhi, P., Georganti, M., Gutiérrez, C., Santisteban, J. V. Hernandez, Jiménez-Ibarra, F., Matthews, J., Méndez, M., Middleton, M., Muñoz-Darias, T., Arabacı, M. Özbey, Pahari, M., Rhodes, L., Russell, T. D., Scaringi, S., Eijnden, J. van den, Vasilopoulos, G., Vincentelli, F. M., and Wiseman, P.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
All disc-accreting astrophysical objects produce powerful outflows. In binaries containing neutron stars (NS) or black holes, accretion often takes place during violent outbursts. The main disc wind signatures during these eruptions are blue-shifted X-ray absorption lines, which are preferentially seen in disc-dominated "soft states". By contrast,optical wind-formed lines have recently been detected in "hard states", when a hot corona dominates the luminosity. The relationship between these signatures is unknown, and no erupting system has revealed wind-formed lines between the X-ray and optical bands yet, despite the many strong resonance transitions in this ultraviolet (UV) region. Here, we show that the transient NS binary Swift J1858.6-0814 exhibits wind-formed, blue-shifted absorption associated with C IV, N V and He II in time-resolved UV spectroscopy during a luminous hard state. This represents the first evidence for a warm, moderately ionized outflow component in this state. Simultaneously observed optical lines also display transient blue-shifted absorption. Decomposing the UV data into constant and variable components, the blue-shifted absorption is associated with the former. This implies that the outflow is not connect to the luminous flares in the data. The joint presence of UV and optical wind features reveals a multi-phase and/or stratified outflow from the outer disc. This type of persistent mass loss across all accretion states has been predicted by radiation-hydrodynamic simulations and helps to explain the shorter-than-expected outbursts duration., Comment: Published in Nature. Submitted: 9 July 2021
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- 2022
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11. Ultrafast Suppression of the Ferroelectric Instability in KTaO$_3$
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Krapivin, Viktor, Gu, Mingqiang, Hickox-Young, D., Teitelbaum, S. W., Huang, Y., de la Peña, G., Zhu, D., Sirica, N., Lee, M. -C., Prasankumar, R. P., Maznev, A., Nelson, K. A., Chollet, M., Rondinelli, James M., Reis, D. A., and Trigo, M.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We use an x-ray free-electron laser to study the ultrafast lattice dynamics following above band-gap photoexcitation of the incipient ferroelectric potassium-tantalate, \kto. % We use ultrafast near-UV (central wavelength 266\,nm and 50 fs pulse duration) laser light to photoexcite charge carriers across the gap and probe the ultrafast lattice dynamics by recording the x-ray diffuse intensity throughout multiple Brillouin zones using pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) (central wavelength 1.3\,\AA\, and $< 10$~fs pulse duration). We observe changes in the diffuse intensity that we conclude are associated with a hardening of the soft transverse optical and transverse acoustic phonon branches along $\Gamma$ to $X$ and $\Gamma$ to $M$. Using ground- and excited-state interatomic force constants from density functional theory (DFT) and assuming the phonon populations can be described by a time-dependent temperature, we fit the quasi-equilibrium thermal diffuse intensity to the experimental time-dependent intensity. We obtain the instantaneous lattice temperature and density of photoexcited charge carriers as a function of time delay. The DFT calculations demonstrate that photoexcitation transfers charge from oxygen $2p$ derived $\pi$-bonding orbitals to Ta $5d$ derived antibonding orbitals, further suppressing the ferroelectric instability and increasing the stability of the cubic, paraelectric structure., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures
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- 2022
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12. Flowering seasonality and airborne pollen recent trends in Sierra de las Nieves, the southernmost National Park in continental Spain
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de Gálvez-Montañez, Enrique, Trigo, M. Mar, Recio, Marta, and Picornell, Antonio
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- 2024
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13. Photo-induced plasmon-phonon coupling in PbTe
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Jiang, M. P., Trigo, M., Fahy, S., Hauber, A., Murray, É. D., Savić, I, Bray, C., Clark, J. N., Henighan, T., Kozina, M., Chollet, M., Glownia, J. M., Hoffmann, M. C., Zhu, D., Delaire, O., May, A. F., Sales, B. C., Lindenberg, A. M., Zalden, P., Sato, T., Merlin, R., and Reis, D. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We report the observation of photo-induced plasmon-phonon coupled modes in the group IV-VI semiconductor PbTe using Fourier-transform inelastic X-ray scattering at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). We measure the near-zone-center dispersion of the heavily screened longitudinal optical (LO) phonon branch as extracted from differential changes in x-ray diffuse scattering intensity following above band gap photoexcitation., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures
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- 2021
14. The evolving radio jet from the neutron star X-ray binary 4U 1820$-$30
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Russell, T. D., Degenaar, N., Eijnden, J. van den, Del Santo, M., Segreto, A., Altamirano, D., Beri, A., Trigo, M. Diaz, and Miller-Jones, J. C. A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The persistently bright ultra-compact neutron star low-mass X-ray binary 4U 1820$-$30 displays a $\sim$170 d accretion cycle, evolving between phases of high and low X-ray modes, where the 3 -- 10 keV X-ray flux changes by a factor of up to $\approx 8$. The source is generally in a soft X-ray spectral state, but may transition to a harder state in the low X-ray mode. Here, we present new and archival radio observations of 4U 1820$-$30 during its high and low X-ray modes. For radio observations taken within a low mode, we observed a flat radio spectrum consistent with 4U 1820$-$30 launching a compact radio jet. However, during the high X-ray modes the compact jet was quenched and the radio spectrum was steep, consistent with optically-thin synchrotron emission. The jet emission appeared to transition at an X-ray luminosity of $L_{\rm X (3-10 keV)} \sim 3.5 \times 10^{37} (D/\rm{7.6 kpc})^{2}$ erg s$^{-1}$. We also find that the low-state radio spectrum appeared consistent regardless of X-ray hardness, implying a connection between jet quenching and mass accretion rate in 4U 1820$-$30, possibly related to the properties of the inner accretion disk or boundary layer., Comment: 6 pages, 2 Figures. Online supplementary information supplied in the appendix. Accepted for publication by MNRAS Letters
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- 2021
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15. Comparative aerobiological study between two stations located at different points in a coastal city in Southern Spain
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Ruiz-Mata, R., Trigo, M. M., Recio, M., de Gálvez-Montañez, E., and Picornell, A.
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- 2023
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16. Photocurrent-driven transient symmetry breaking in the Weyl semimetal TaAs
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Sirica, N, Orth, PP, Scheurer, MS, Dai, YM, Lee, M-C, Padmanabhan, P, Mix, LT, Teitelbaum, SW, Trigo, M, Zhao, LX, Chen, GF, Xu, B, Yang, R, Shen, B, Hu, C, Lee, C-C, Lin, H, Cochran, TA, Trugman, SA, Zhu, J-X, Hasan, MZ, Ni, N, Qiu, XG, Taylor, AJ, Yarotski, DA, and Prasankumar, RP
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Quantum Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanoscience & Nanotechnology - Abstract
Symmetry plays a central role in conventional and topological phases of matter, making the ability to optically drive symmetry changes a critical step in developing future technologies that rely on such control. Topological materials, like topological semimetals, are particularly sensitive to a breaking or restoring of time-reversal and crystalline symmetries, which affect both bulk and surface electronic states. While previous studies have focused on controlling symmetry via coupling to the crystal lattice, we demonstrate here an all-electronic mechanism based on photocurrent generation. Using second harmonic generation spectroscopy as a sensitive probe of symmetry changes, we observe an ultrafast breaking of time-reversal and spatial symmetries following femtosecond optical excitation in the prototypical type-I Weyl semimetal TaAs. Our results show that optically driven photocurrents can be tailored to explicitly break electronic symmetry in a generic fashion, opening up the possibility of driving phase transitions between symmetry-protected states on ultrafast timescales.
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- 2022
17. A search for signatures of interactions of X-ray binary outflows with their environments with ALMA
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Trigo, M. Díaz, Petry, D., Humphreys, E., Impellizzeri, C. M. V., and Liu, H. B.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We observed the X-ray binaries CirX-1, ScoX-1, GRS 1915+105, GX13+1, and CygX-1 with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Unresolved continuum emission is found at the positions of all the sources at a frequency of 92 GHz, with flux densities ranging between 0.8 and 10 mJy/beam. In all cases the emission can be associated with jets that have been extensively observed at lower frequencies. We searched for line emission from H$\alpha$ recombination, SiO,H2O, and CH3OH at the positions of all the sources and, for CirX-1 and CygX-1, also at regions where shocks associated with an interaction between the jet and the interstellar medium had previously been observed. The search did not yield any significant detection, resulting in 3$\sigma$ upper limits between 0.65 and 3.7 K km s$^{-1}$ for the existence of line emission in these regions. In contrast, we detected spatially unresolved SiO emission in the field of view of GX13+1, and we tentatively associate this emission with a SiO maser in a potential young stellar object or evolved star. We also found spatially extended line emission at two additional sites in the field of view of GX13+1 that we tentatively associate with emission from SO and CH3OH; we speculate that it may be associated with a star-forming region, but again we cannot rule out alternative origins such as emission from evolved stars., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2021
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18. Dips and eclipses in the X-ray binary Swift J1858.6-0814 observed with NICER
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Buisson, D. J. K., Altamirano, D., Padilla, M. Armas, Arzoumanian, Z., Bult, P., Segura, N. Castro, Charles, P. A., Degenaar, N., Trigo, M. Díaz, Eijnden, J. van den, Fogantini, F., Gandhi, P., Gendreau, K., Hare, J., Homan, J., Knigge, C., Malacaria, C., Mendez, M., Darias, T. Muñoz, Ng, M., Arabacı, M. Özbey, Remillard, R., Strohmayer, T. E., Tombesi, F., Tomsick, J. A., Vincentelli, F., and Walton, D. J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the discovery of eclipses in the X-ray light curves of the X-ray binary Swift J1858.6-0814. From these, we find an orbital period of $P=76841.3_{-1.4}^{+1.3}$ s ($\approx21.3$ hours) and an eclipse duration of $t_{\rm ec}=4098_{-18}^{+17}$ s ($\approx1.14$ hours). We also find several absorption dips during the pre-eclipse phase. From the eclipse duration to orbital period ratio, the inclination of the binary orbit is constrained to $i>70^\circ$. The most likely range for the companion mass suggests that the inclination is likely to be closer to this value than $90^\circ$. The eclipses are also consistent with earlier data, in which strong variability ('flares') and the long orbital period prevent clear detection of the period or eclipses. We also find that the bright flares occurred preferentially in the post-eclipse phase of the orbit, likely due to increased thickness at the disc-accretion stream interface preventing flares being visible during the pre-eclipse phase. This supports the notion that variable obscuration is responsible for the unusually strong variability in Swift J1858.6-0814., Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, MNRAS accepted
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- 2021
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19. Direct Observation of Coherent Longitudinal and Shear Acoustic Phonons in TaAs Using Ultrafast X-ray Diffraction
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Lee, Min-Cheol, Sirica, N., Teitelbaum, S. W., Maznev, A., Pezeril, T., Tutchton, R., Krapivin, V., de la Pena, G. A., Huang, Y., Zhao, L. X., Chen, G. F., Xu, B., Yang, R., Shi, J., Zhu, J., Yarotski, D. A., Qiu, X. G., Nelson, K. A., Trigo, M., Reis, D. A., and Prasankumar, R. P.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Using femtosecond time-resolved X-ray diffraction, we investigated optically excited coherent acoustic phonons in the Weyl semimetal TaAs. The low symmetry of the (112) surface probed in our experiment enables the simultaneous excitation of longitudinal and shear acoustic modes, whose dispersion closely matches our simulations. We observed an asymmetry in the spectral lineshape of the longitudinal mode that is notably absent from the shear mode, suggesting a time-dependent frequency chirp that is likely driven by photoinduced carrier diffusion. We argue on the basis of symmetry that these acoustic deformations can transiently alter the electronic structure near the Weyl points and support this with model calculations. Our study underscores the benefit of using off-axis crystal orientations when optically exciting acoustic deformations in topological semimetals, allowing one to transiently change their crystal and electronic structures., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures for manuscript, and 15 pages and 11 figures for supplemental materials
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- 2020
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20. Visualization of Dynamic Polaronic Strain Fields in Hybrid Lead Halide Perovskites
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Guzelturk, B., Winkler, T., Van de Goor, T., Smith, M. D., Bourelle, S. A., Feldmann, S., Trigo, M., Teitelbaum, S., Steinrück, H-G., de la Pena, G. A., Alonso-Mori, R., Zhu, D., Sato, T., Karunadasa, H. I., Toney, M. F., Deschler, F., and Lindenberg, A. M.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Excitation localization involving dynamic nanoscale distortions is a central aspect of photocatalysis, quantum materials and molecular optoelectronics. Experimental characterization of such distortions requires techniques sensitive to the formation of point-defect-like local structural rearrangements in real time. Here, we visualize excitation-induced strain fields in a prototypical member of the lead halide perovskites via femtosecond resolution diffuse x-ray scattering measurements. This enables momentum-resolved phonon spectroscopy of the locally-distorted structure and reveals radially-expanding nanometer-scale elastic strain fields associated with the formation and relaxation of polarons in photoexcited perovskites. Quantitative estimates of the magnitude and the shape of this polaronic distortion are obtained, providing direct insights into the debated dynamic structural distortions in these materials. Optical pump-probe reflection spectroscopy corroborates these results and shows how these large polaronic distortions transiently modify the carrier effective mass, providing a unified picture of the coupled structural and electronic dynamics that underlie the unique optoelectronic functionality of the hybrid perovskites., Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures
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- 2020
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21. Soft X-ray emission lines in the X-ray binary Swift J1858.6-0814 observed with XMM-Newton-RGS: disc atmosphere or wind?
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Buisson, D. J. K., Altamirano, D., Trigo, M. Díaz, Mendez, M., Padilla, M. Armas, Segura, N. Castro, Degenaar, N. D., Eijnden, J. van den, Fogantini, F. A., Gandhi, P., Knigge, C., Muñoz-Darias, T., Arabacı, M. Özbey, and Vincentelli, F. M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We find soft X-ray emission lines from the X-ray binary Swift J1858.6-0814 in data from XMM-Newton-RGS: N VII, O VII and O VIII, as well as notable residuals short of a detection at Ne IX and other higher ionisation transitions. These could be associated with the disc atmosphere, as in accretion disc corona sources, or with a wind, as has been detected in Swift J1858.6-0814 in emission lines at optical wavelengths. Indeed, the N VII line is redshifted, consistent with being the emitting component of a P-Cygni profile. We find that the emitting plasma has an ionisation parameter $\log(\xi)=1.35\pm0.2$ and a density $n>1.5\times10^{11}$ cm$^{-3}$. From this, we infer that the emitting plasma must be within $10^{13}$ cm of the ionising source, $\sim5\times10^{7}r_{\rm g}$ for a $1.4M_{\odot}$ neutron star, and from the line width that it is at least $10^4r_{\rm g}$ away ($2\times10^{9}(M/1.4M_{\odot})$ cm). We compare this with known classes of emission line regions in other X-ray binaries and active galactic nuclei., Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, MNRAS accepted
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- 2020
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22. Formation of buried domain walls in the ultrafast transition of SmTe$_3$
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Trigo, M., Giraldo-Gallo, P., Clark, J. N., Kozina, M. E., Henighan, T., Jiang, M. P., Chollet, M., Fisher, I. R., Glownia, J. M., Katayama, T., Kirchmann, P. S., Leuenberger, D., Liu, H., Reis, D. A., Shen, Z. X., and Zhu, D.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We study ultrafast x-ray diffraction on the charge density wave (CDW) of SmTe$_3$ using an x-ray free electron laser. The CDW peaks show that photoexcitation with near-infrared pump centered at 800 nm generates domain walls of the order parameter propagating perpendicular to the sample surface. These domain walls break the CDW long range order and suppress the diffraction intensity of the CDW for times much longer than the $\sim 1$~ps recovery of the local electronic gap. We reconstruct the spatial and temporal dependence of the order parameter using a simple Ginzburg-Landau model and find good agreement between the experimental and model fluence dependences. Based on the model we find that at long times, depending on the pump fluence, multiple domain walls remain at distances of few nm from the surface.
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- 2020
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23. Photocurrent-driven transient symmetry breaking in the Weyl semimetal TaAs
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Sirica, N, Orth, P. P., Scheurer, M. S., Dai, Y. M., Lee, M. -C., Padmanabhan, P., Mix, L. T., Teitelbaum, S. W., Trigo, M., Zhao, L. X., Chen, G. F., Xu, B., Yang, R., Shen, B., Hu, C., Lee, C. -C., Lin, H., Cochran, T. A., Trugman, S. A., Zhu, J. -X., Hasan, M. Z., Ni, N., Qiu, X. G., Taylor, A. J., Yarotski, D. A., and Prasankumar, R. P.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Symmetry plays a central role in conventional and topological phases of matter, making the ability to optically drive symmetry change a critical step in developing future technologies that rely on such control. Topological materials, like the newly discovered topological semimetals, are particularly sensitive to a breaking or restoring of time-reversal and crystalline symmetries, which affect both bulk and surface electronic states. While previous studies have focused on controlling symmetry via coupling to the crystal lattice, we demonstrate here an all-electronic mechanism based on photocurrent generation. Using second-harmonic generation spectroscopy as a sensitive probe of symmetry change, we observe an ultrafast breaking of time-reversal and spatial symmetries following femtosecond optical excitation in the prototypical type-I Weyl semimetal TaAs. Our results show that optically driven photocurrents can be tailored to explicitly break electronic symmetry in a generic fashion, opening up the possibility of driving phase transitions between symmetry-protected states on ultrafast time scales., Comment: 28 pages, 15 figures, 4 Tables
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- 2020
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24. Discovery of a thermonuclear Type I X-ray burst in infrared: new limits on the orbital period of 4U 1728-34
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Vincentelli, F. M., Cavecchi, Y., Casella, P., Migliari, S., Altamirano, D., Belloni, T., and Diaz-Trigo, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the detection of an infrared burst lagging a thermonuclear Type I X-ray burst from the accreting neutron star 4U 1728-34 (GX 354-0). Observations were performed simultaneously with XMM-Newton (0.7-12 keV), NuSTAR (3-79 keV) and HAWK-I@VLT (2.2$\mu$m). We measure a lag of $4.75 \pm 0.5$ s between the peaks of the emission in the two bands. Due to the length of the lag and the shape of the IR burst, we found that the most plausible cause for such a large delay is reprocessing of the Type I burst X-rays by the companion star. The inferred distance between the neutron star and the companion can be used to constrain the orbital period of the system, which we find to be larger than $\sim$ 66 minutes (or even $\gtrsim$ 2 hours, for a realistic inclination $< 75^\circ$). This is much larger than the current tentatively estimated period of $\sim 11$ minutes. We discuss the physical implications on the nature of the binary and conclude that most likely the companion of 4U 1728-34 is a helium star., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. 6 Pages, 4 Figures
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- 2020
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25. Simultaneous detection of an intrinsic absorber and a compact jet emission in the X-ray binary IGR J17091-3624 during a hard accretion state
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Gatuzz, E., Trigo, M. Díaz, Miller-Jones, J. C. A., and Migliari, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of three XMM-Newton observations of the black hole low-mass X-ray binary IGR~J17091-3624 taken during its 2016 outburst. Radio observations obtained with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) indicate the presence of a compact jet during all observations. From the best X-ray data fit results we concluded that the observations were taken during a transition from a hard accretion state to a hard-intermediate accretion state. For Observations 1 and 2 a local absorber can be identified in the EPIC-pn spectra but not in the RGS spectra, preventing us from distinguishing between absorption local to the source and that from the hot ISM component. For Observation 3, on the other hand, we have identified an intrinsic ionized static absorber in both EPIC-pn and RGS spectra. The absorber, observed simultaneously with a compact jet emission, is characterized by an ionization parameter of 1.96< log({\xi}) <2.05 and traced mainly by Ne X, Mg XII, Si XIII and Fe XVIII., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures
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- 2019
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26. Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma in HTLV-1 non-endemic regions
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Calderón, E., Rodríguez-Iglesias, M., Montiel, N., Trujillo, T., Viciana, I., Cabezas, T., Lozano, A., Fernández-Fuertes, E., Fernández, J.M., García, F., Benito, R., Algarate, S., Ducons, M., Roc, L., Cifuentes, C., Fernández-Baca, V., Fernández-Montero, J.V, Maciá, MD., Hernández-Betancor, A., Martín, A.M., Pena, M.J., Hernández, M., López-Lirola, A.M., Gómez-Sirvent, J.L., Copado, R., Cano, M.E., Rojo, S., Eirós, J.M., Rodríguez, M., Gómez-Hernando, C., González-Praetorius, A., Rando, A., Force, L., Miró, E., Cebollero, A., Delgado, J.F., Rodríguez, G., Fernández-Pereira, L., Aguilera, A., Pereira, S., García, J., Trigo, M., Diz, J., García-Campello, M., Cortizo, S., Pérez, S., Morano, L., Reina, G., Arazamendi, M., Salicio, Y., Ugalde, E., Nieto, M.C., Liendo, P., Goikoetxea, A.J., Ocete, M.D., Ramos, J.M., Escribano, I., Sauleda, S., Pirón, M., González, R., Richart, A., Barea, L., Jiménez, A., Blanco, L., Navarro, L., Ayerdi, O., Baza, B., Rodriguez, C., del Romero, J., Galar, A., Aldamiz, T., Valeiro, M., Pérez, L., Rodríguez-Avial, I., Martín-Carbonero, L., Fernández-Ruiz, M., Parra, P., Redondo, N., Ruiz-Merlo, T., Pozuelo, M.J., Barreiro, P., Treviño, A., Corral, O., Soriano, V., Pintos, I., Moreno-Torres, V., Carrizo, P., Huertas, A., Vargas-Núñez, J.A., de Mendoza, C., de Mendoza, Carmen, Rando, Ariadna, Miró, Elisenda, Pena, María José, Rodríguez-Avial, Iciar, Ortega, Diego, González-Praetorius, Alejandro, Reina, Gabriel, Pintos, Ilduara, Pozuelo, María José, and Soriano, Vicente
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- 2023
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27. Frontiers in accretion physics at high X-ray spectral resolution
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Gandhi, P., Kawamuro, T., Díaz Trigo, M., Paice, J. A., Boorman, P. G., Cappi, M., Done, C., Fabian, A. C., Fukumura, K., García, J. A., Greenwell, C. L., Guainazzi, M., Makishima, K., Tashiro, M. S., Tomaru, R., Tombesi, F., and Ueda, Y.
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- 2022
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28. Evolution of non-thermal phonon and electron populations in photo-excited germanium on picosecond timescales
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Murphy-Armando, F., Murray, É. D., Savić, I., Trigo, M., Reis, D., and Fahy, S.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We investigate from first-principles theory and experiment the generation of phonons on picosecond timescales and the relaxation of carriers in multiple conduction band valleys of photo-excited Ge by inter-valley electron-phonon scattering. We provide a full description of the phonon and electron relaxation dynamics without adjustable parameters. Simulations of the time-evolution of phonon populations, based on first-principles band structure and electron-phonon and phonon-phonon matrix elements, are compared with data from time-resolved x-ray diffuse scattering experiments, performed at the LCLS x-ray free-electron laser facility, which measures the diffuse scattering intensity following photo-excitation by a 50 fs near-infrared optical pulse. Comparing calculations and measurements show that the intensity of the non-thermal x-ray diffuse scattering signal, that is observed to grow substantially near the L-point of the Brillouin zone over 3-5 ps, is due to phonons generated by scattering of carriers between the $\Delta$ and L valleys. Non-thermal phonon populations throughout the Brillouin zone are observed and simulated from first principles without adjustable parameters for times up to 10 ps. With inclusion of phonon decay through 3-phonon processes, the simulations also account for other non-thermal features observed in the x-ray diffuse scattering intensity, which are due to anharmonic phonon-phonon scattering of the phonons initially generated by electron-phonon scattering., Comment: 12 pages, 14 figures
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- 2019
29. The Voyage of Metals in the Universe from Cosmological to Planetary Scales: the need for a Very High-Resolution, High Throughput Soft X-ray Spectrometer
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Nicastro, F., Kaastra, J., Argiroffi, C., Behar, E., Bianchi, S., Bocchino, F., Borgani, S., Branduardi-Raymont, G, Bregman, J., Churazov, E., Diaz-Trigo, M., Done, C., Drake, J., Fang, T., Grosso, N., Luminari, A., Mehdipour, M., Paerels, F., Piconcelli, E., Pinto, C., Porquet, D., Reeves, J., Schaye, J., Sciortino, S., Smith, R., Spiga, D., Tomaru, R., Tombesi, F., Wijers, N., and Zappacosta, L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Metals form an essential part of the Universe at all scales. Without metals we would not exist, and the Cosmos would look completely different. Metals are primarily born through nuclear processes in stars. They leave their cradles through winds or explosions, and then start their journey through space. This can lead them in and out of astronomical objects on all scales, ranging from comets, planets, stars, entire galaxies, groups and clusters of galaxies to the largest structures of the Universe. Their wanderings are fundamental in determining how these objects, and the entire universe, evolve. In addition, their bare presence can be used to trace what these structures look like. The scope of this paper is to highlight the most important open astrophysical problems that will be central in the next decades and for which a deep understanding of the Universe-wandering metals, their physical and kinematical states and their chemical composition represents the only viable solution. The majority of these studies can only be efficiently performed through High Resolution Spectroscopy in the soft X-ray band., Comment: White-Paper submitted in response to the "Voyage-2050" ESA call: cover page + 20 page text (including 16 figures) + 5 page references + list of team-members. Additional supporting authors are listed in the acknowledgment section at page 20 of the paper
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- 2019
30. Discovery of millihertz quasi-periodic oscillations in the X-ray binary EXO 0748--676
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Mancuso, G. C., Altamirano, D., García, F., Lyu, M., Méndez, M., Combi, J. A., Díaz-Trigo, M., and Zand, J. J. M. in't
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the discovery of millihertz quasi-periodic oscillations (mHz QPOs) from the bursting, high-inclination atoll neutron-star low-mass X-ray binary (NS LMXB) EXO 0748--676 with the Rossi X-ray Time Explorer (RXTE). This class of QPO, originally discovered in three NS LMXBs, has been interpreted as a consequence of a special mode of nuclear burning on the NS surface. Using all the RXTE archival observations of the source, we detected significant ($>3\sigma$) mHz QPOs in 11 observations. The frequency of the oscillations was between $\sim$ 5 and $\sim$ 13 mHz. We also found a decrease of the QPO frequency with time in two occasions; in one of these the oscillations disappeared with the onset of an X-ray burst, similar to what was reported in other sources. Our analysis of the X-ray colours revealed that EXO 0748--676 was in a soft spectral state when it exhibited the QPOs. This makes EXO 0748--676 the sixth source with mHz oscillations associated to marginally stable burning, and the second one that shows a systematic frequency drift. Our results suggest that the mechanism that produces the drift might always be present if the mHz QPOs are observed in the so-called intermediate state., Comment: Minor typos corrected
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- 2019
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31. Accretion in Stellar-Mass Black Holes at High X-ray Spectral Resolution
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Miller, J. M., Barret, D., Cackett, E., Trigo, M. Diaz, Done, C., Gallo, E., Kaastra, J., Motch, C., Pinto, C., Ponti, G., Webb, N., and Zoghbi, A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Accretion disks around stellar-mass black holes offer unique opportunities to study the fundamental physics of standard thin disks, super-Eddington disks, and structure that may be connected to flux variability. These local analogues of active galactic nuclei (AGN) are particularly attractive for their proximity, high flux, and peak emissivity in the X-ray band. X-ray calorimeter spectrometers, with energy resolutions of 2-5 eV, are ideally suited to study accretion in stellar-mass black holes. The results will make strong tests of seminal disk theory that applies in a broad range of circumstances, help to drive new numerical simulations, and will inform our understanding of AGN fueling, evolution, and feedback., Comment: White Paper, submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey
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- 2019
32. Applying wind patterns and land use to estimate the concentrations of airborne pollen of herbaceous taxa in a statistical framework
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Picornell, Antonio, Ruiz-Mata, Rocío, Rojo, Jesús, Oteros, Jose, Recio, Marta, de Gálvez-Montañez, Enrique, and Trigo, M. Mar
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- 2023
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33. Energy-Efficient Edge and Cloud Image Classification with Multi-Reservoir Echo State Network and Data Processing Units
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López-Ortiz, E. J., primary, Perea-Trigo, M., additional, Soria-Morillo, L. M., additional, Álvarez-García, J. A., additional, and Vegas-Olmos, J. J., additional
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- 2024
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34. Chandra high-resolution spectra of 4U~1630-47: the disappearance of the wind
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Gatuzz, E., Trigo, M. Diaz, Miller-Jones, J. C. A., and Migliari, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the analysis of six {\it Chandra} X-ray high-resolution observations of the black hole low-mass X-ray binary 4U~1630-47 taken during its 2012-2013 outburst. {\rm Fe}~{\sc XXVI} K$\alpha$, K$\beta$, {\rm Fe}~{\sc XXV} K$\alpha$, K$\beta$ and {\rm Ca}~{\sc XX} K$\alpha$ blueshifted absorption lines were identified in the first four observations, which correspond to soft accretion states. The remaining observations, associated to intermediate and possibly hard accretion states, do not show significant absorption features down to equivalent width of 1 eV for both {\rm Fe}~{\sc XXVI} and {\rm Fe}~{\sc XXV}. We inferred wind launching radii between $1.2- 2.0$ ($10^{12}$ cm$/n$)$ \times 10^{11}$~cm and column densities $N({\rm H})> 10^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$. In the first four observations we found that thermal pressure is likely to be the dominant launching mechanism for the wind, although such conclusions depend on the assumed density. We used the spectral energy distributions obtained from our continuum modeling to compute thermal stability curves for all observations using the {\sc xstar} photoionization code. We found that the absence of lines in the transitional state cannot be attributed to an evolution of the plasma caused by thermal instabilities derived from the change in the continuum spectrum. In contrast, the disappearance of the wind could indicate an acceleration of the flow or that the plasma has been exhausted during the soft state., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures
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- 2018
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35. Coherent order parameter dynamics in SmTe$_3$
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Trigo, M., Giraldo-Gallo, P., Kozina, M. E., Henighan, T., Jiang, M. P., Liu, H., Clark, J. N., Chollet, M., Glownia, J. M., Zhu, D., Katayama, T., Leuenberger, D., Kirchmann, P. S., Fisher, I. R., Shen, Z. X., and Reis, D. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We present a combined ultrafast optical pump-probe and ultrafast x-ray diffraction measurement of the CDW dynamics in SmTe$_3$ at 300 K. The ultrafast x-ray diffraction measurements, taken at the Linac Coherent Light Source reveal a $\sim 1.55$ THz mode that becomes overdamped with increasing fluence. We identify this oscillation with the lattice component of the amplitude mode. Furthermore, these data allow for a more clear identification of the frequencies present in the optical pump-probe data. In both, reflectivity and diffraction, we observe a crossover of the response from linear (for small displacements) to quadratic in the amplitude of the order parameter displacement. Finally, a time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau model captures the essential features of the experimental observations., Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures
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- 2018
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36. A wildly flickering jet in the black hole X-ray binary MAXI J1535-571
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Baglio, M. C., Russell, D. M., Casella, P., Noori, H. Al, Yazeedi, A. Al, Belloni, T., Buckley, D. A. H., Bel, M. Cadolle, Ceccobello, C., Corbel, S., Zelati, F. Coti, Trigo, M. Diaz, Fender, R. P., Gallo, E., Gandhi, P., Homan, J., koljonen, K. I. I., lewis, F., Maccarone, T. J., Malzac, J., Markoff, S., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., O'Brien, K., Russell, T. D., Saikia, P., Shahbaz, T., Sivakoff, G. R., Soria, R., Testa, V., Tetarenko, A. J., Ancker, M. E. van den, and Vincentelli, F. M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the results of optical, near-infrared (NIR) and mid-infrared observations of the black hole X-ray binary candidate (BHB) MAXI J1535-571 during its 2017/2018 outburst. During the first part of the outburst (MJD 58004-58012), the source shows an optical-NIR spectrum that is consistent with an optically thin synchrotron power-law from a jet. After MJD 58015, however, the source faded considerably, the drop in flux being much more evident at lower frequencies. Before the fading, we measure a de-reddened flux density of $\gtrsim$100 mJy in the mid-infrared, making MAXI J1535-571 one of the brightest mid-infrared BHBs known so far. A significant softening of the X-ray spectrum is evident contemporaneous with the infrared fade. We interpret it as due to the suppression of the jet emission, similar to the accretion-ejection coupling seen in other BHBs. However, MAXI J1535-571 did not transition smoothly to the soft state, instead showing X-ray hardness deviations, associated with infrared flaring. We also present the first mid-IR variability study of a BHB on minute timescales, with a fractional rms variability of the light curves of $\sim 15-22 \%$, which is similar to that expected from the internal shock jet model, and much higher than the optical fractional rms ($\lesssim 7 \%$). These results represent an excellent case of multi-wavelength jet spectral-timing and demonstrate how rich, multi-wavelength time-resolved data of X-ray binaries over accretion state transitions can help refining models of the disk-jet connection and jet launching in these systems., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2018
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37. The evolving jet spectrum of the neutron star X-ray binary Aql X-1 in transitional states during its 2016 outburst
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Trigo, M. Diaz, Altamirano, D., Dincer, T., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Russell, D. M., Sanna, A., Bailyn, C., Lewis, F., Migliari, S., and Rahoui, F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on quasi-simultaneous observations from radio to X-ray frequencies of the neutron star X-ray binary Aql X-1 over accretion state transitions during its 2016 outburst. All the observations show radio to millimetre spectra consistent with emission from a jet, with a spectral break from optically thick to optically thin synchrotron emission that decreases from ~100 GHz to <5.5 GHz during the transition from a hard to a soft accretion state. The 5.5 GHz radio flux density as the source reaches the soft state, 0.82$\pm$0.03 mJy, is the highest recorded to date for this source. During the decay of the outburst, the jet spectral break is detected again at a frequency of ~30-100 GHz. The flux density is 0.75$\pm$0.03 mJy at 97.5 GHz at this stage. This is the first time that a change in the frequency of the jet break of a neutron star X-ray binary has been measured, indicating that the processes at play in black holes are also present in neutron stars, thus supporting the idea that the internal properties of the jet rely most critically on the conditions of the accretion disc and corona around the compact object, rather than the black hole mass or spin or the neutron star surface or magnetic field., Comment: Accepted for publication in A$\&$A. (17 pages, 6 figures)
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- 2018
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38. A persistent ultraviolet outflow from an accreting neutron star binary transient
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Castro Segura, N., Knigge, C., Long, K. S., Altamirano, D., Armas Padilla, M., Bailyn, C., Buckley, D. A. H., Buisson, D. J. K., Casares, J., Charles, P., Combi, J. A., Cúneo, V. A., Degenaar, N. D., del Palacio, S., Díaz Trigo, M., Fender, R., Gandhi, P., Georganti, M., Gutiérrez, C., Hernandez Santisteban, J. V., Jiménez-Ibarra, F., Matthews, J., Méndez, M., Middleton, M., Muñoz-Darias, T., Özbey Arabacı, M., Pahari, M., Rhodes, L., Russell, T. D., Scaringi, S., van den Eijnden, J., Vasilopoulos, G., Vincentelli, F. M., and Wiseman, P.
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- 2022
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39. Paving the way to simultaneous multi-wavelength astronomy
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Middleton, M. J., Casella, P., Gandhi, P., Bozzo, E., Anderson, G., Degenaar, N., Donnarumma, I., Israel, G., Knigge, C., Lohfink, A., Markoff, S., Marsh, T., Rea, N., Tingay, S., Wiersema, K., Altamirano, D., Bhattacharya, D., Brandt, W. N., Carey, S., Charles, P., Trigo, M. Diaz, Done, C., Kotze, M., Eikenberry, S., Fender, R., Ferruit, P., Fuerst, F., Greiner, J., Ingram, A., Heil, L., Jonker, P., Komossa, S., Leibundgut, B., Maccarone, T., Malzac, J., McBride, V., Miller-Jones, J., Page, M., Rossi, E. M., Russell, D. M., Shahbaz, T., Sivakoff, G. R., Tanaka, M., Thompson, D. J., Uemura, M., Uttley, P., van Moorsel, G., Van Doesburgh, M., Warner, B., Wilkes, B., Wilms, J., and Woudt, P.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Whilst astronomy as a science is historically founded on observations at optical wavelengths, studying the Universe in other bands has yielded remarkable discoveries, from pulsars in the radio, signatures of the Big Bang at submm wavelengths, through to high energy emission from accreting, gravitationally-compact objects and the discovery of gamma-ray bursts. Unsurprisingly, the result of combining multiple wavebands leads to an enormous increase in diagnostic power, but powerful insights can be lost when the sources studied vary on timescales shorter than the temporal separation between observations in different bands. In July 2015, the workshop "Paving the way to simultaneous multi-wavelength astronomy" was held as a concerted effort to address this at the Lorentz Center, Leiden. It was attended by 50 astronomers from diverse fields as well as the directors and staff of observatories and spaced-based missions. This community white paper has been written with the goal of disseminating the findings of that workshop by providing a concise review of the field of multi-wavelength astronomy covering a wide range of important source classes, the problems associated with their study and the solutions we believe need to be implemented for the future of observational astronomy. We hope that this paper will both stimulate further discussion and raise overall awareness within the community of the issues faced in a developing, important field., Comment: 52 pages, 15 figures, accepted, invited review (to appear in New Astronomy Reviews), v3: updated figure and text
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- 2017
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40. ESO-Athena Synergy White Paper
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Padovani, P., Combes, F., Trigo, M. Diaz, Ettori, S., Hatziminaoglou, E., Jonker, P., Salvato, M., Viti, S., Adami, C., Aird, J., Alexander, D., Casella, P., Ceccarelli, C., Churazov, E., Cirasuolo, M., Daddi, E., Edge, A., Feruglio, C., Mainieri, V., Markoff, S., Merloni, A., Nicastro, F., O'Brien, P., Oskinova, L., Panessa, F., Pointecouteau, E., Rau, A., Robrade, J., Schaye, J., Stoehr, F., Testi, L., and Tombesi, F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Advanced Telescope for High ENergy Astrophysics (Athena) is the X-ray observatory mission selected by ESA within its Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 programme to address the Hot and Energetic Universe scientific theme. The ESO-Athena Synergy Team (EAST) has been tasked to single out the potential scientific synergies between Athena and optical/near-infrared (NIR) and sub/mm ground based facilities, in particular those of ESO (i.e., the VLT and ELT, ALMA and APEX), by producing a White Paper to identify and develop the: 1. needs to access ESO ground-based facilities to achieve the formulated Athena science objectives; 2. needs to access Athena to achieve the formulated science objectives of ESO facilities contemporary to Athena; 3. science areas where the synergetic use of Athena and ESO facilities in the late 2020s will result in scientific added value. Community input to the process happened primarily via a dedicated ESO - Athena Synergy Workshop that took place on Sept. 14 - 16, 2016 at ESO, Garching. This White Paper presents the results of the EAST's work, sorted by synergy area, and deals with the following topics: 1. the Hot Universe: Early groups and clusters and their evolution, Physics of the Intracluster medium, Missing baryons in cosmic filaments; 2. the Energetic Universe: Supermassive black hole (SMBH) history, SMBH accretion disks, Active Galactic Nuclei feedback - Molecular outflows, Ultra-fast outflows, Accretion Physics, Transient Science; 3. Observatory Science: Star Formation, Stars. It then discusses the optical-NIR-sub-mm perspective by providing details on VLT/MOONS, the E-ELT instruments, in particular the MOS, VISTA/4MOST, the ESO and ALMA archives, future ALMA and ESO developments, and finally the (likely) ESO - Athena astronomical scene in the 2020s. (abridged), Comment: 70 pages, 16 figures
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- 2017
41. Impact of the Invasive Prosopis juliflora on Terrestrial Ecosystems
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Hussain, M. Iftikhar, Shackleton, Ross, El-Keblawy, Ali, González, Luís, Trigo, M. Mar, Lichtfouse, Eric, Series Editor, Ranjan, Shivendu, Advisory Editor, and Dasgupta, Nandita, Advisory Editor
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- 2021
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42. ALMA observations of 4U 1728-34 and 4U 1820-30: first detection of neutron star X-ray binaries at 300 GHz
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Trigo, M. Diaz, Migliari, S., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Rahoui, F., Russell, D. M., and Tudor, V.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the first observations of neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) at $\sim$300 GHz. Quasi-simultaneous observations of 4U 1728-34 and 4U 1820-30 were performed at radio (ATCA), infrared (VLT) and X-ray (Swift) frequencies, spanning more than eight decades in frequency coverage. Both sources are detected at high significance with ALMA. The spectral energy distribution of 4U 1728-34 is consistent with synchrotron emission from a jet with a break from optically thick to optically thin emission at 1.3-11.0$\times$10$^{13}$ Hz. This is the third time a jet spectral break has been reported for a neutron star X-ray binary. The radio to mm spectral energy distribution of 4U 1820-30 has significant detections at 5 and 300~GHz. This confirms the presence of radio emission during a soft state for this neutron star and represents the first detection of mm emission during such a state, unambiguously pointing to the presence of a jet. We also report on three additional unrelated sources - showing mm emission - in the ALMA fields of view of 4U 1728-34 and 4U 1820-30., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 12 pages, 6 figures
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- 2016
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43. Ultrafast THz Field Control of Electronic and Structural Interactions in Vanadium Dioxide
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Gray, A. X., Hoffmann, M. C., Jeong, J., Aetukuri, N. P., Zhu, D., Hwang, H. Y., Brandt, N. C., Wen, H., Sternbach, A. J., Bonetti, S., Reid, A. H., Kukreja, R., Graves, C., Wang, T., Granitzka, P., Chen, Z., Higley, D. J., Chase, T., Jal, E., Abreu, E., Liu, M. K., Weng, T. -C., Sokaras, D., Nordlund, D., Chollet, M., Lemke, H., Glownia, J., Trigo, M., Zhu, Y., Ohldag, H., Freeland, J. W., Samant, M. G., Berakdar, J., Averitt, R. D., Nelson, K. A., Parkin, S. S. P., and Dürr, H. A.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Vanadium dioxide, an archetypal correlated-electron material, undergoes an insulator-metal transition near room temperature that exhibits electron-correlation-driven and structurally-driven physics. Using ultrafast optical spectroscopy and x-ray scattering we show that these processes can be disentangled in the time domain. Specifically, following intense sub-picosecond electric-field excitation, a partial collapse of the insulating gap occurs within the first ps. Subsequently, this electronic reconfiguration initiates a change in lattice symmetry taking place on a slower timescale. We identify the kinetic energy increase of electrons tunneling in the strong electric field as the driving force, illustrating a novel method to control electronic interactions in correlated materials on an ultrafast timescale.
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- 2016
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44. The Voyage of Metals in the Universe from Cosmological to Planetary Scales: the need for a Very High-Resolution, High Throughput Soft X-ray Spectrometer
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Nicastro, F., Kaastra, J., Argiroffi, C., Behar, E., Bianchi, S., Bocchino, F., Borgani, S., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Bregman, J., Churazov, E., Diaz-Trigo, M., Done, C., Drake, J., Fang, T., Grosso, N., Luminari, A., Mehdipour, M., Paerels, F., Piconcelli, E., Pinto, C., Porquet, D., Reeves, J., Schaye, J., Sciortino, S., Smith, R., Spiga, D., Tomaru, R., Tombesi, F., Wijers, N., and Zappacosta, L.
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- 2021
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45. Photoinduced suppression of the ferroelectric instability in PbTe
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Jiang, M. P., Trigo, M., Fahy, S., Murray, É. D., Savić, I., Bray, C., Clark, J., Henighan, T., Kozina, M., Chollet, M., Glownia, J. M., Hoffmann, M., Zhu, D., Delaire, O., May, A. F., Sales, B. C., Lindenberg, A. M., Zalden, P., Sato, T., Merlin, R., and Reis, D. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
The interactions between electrons and phonons drive a large array of technologically relevant material properties including ferroelectricity, thermoelectricity, and phase-change behaviour. In the case of many group IV-VI, V, and related materials, these interactions are strong and the materials exist near electronic and structural phase transitions. Their close proximity to phase instability produces a fragile balance among the various properties. The prototypical example is PbTe whose incipient ferroelectric behaviour has been associated with large phonon anharmonicity and thermoelectricity. Experimental measurements on PbTe reveal anomalous lattice dynamics, especially in the soft transverse optical phonon branch. This has been interpreted in terms of both giant anharmonicity and local symmetry breaking due to off-centering of the Pb ions. The observed anomalies have prompted renewed theoretical and computational interest, which has in turn revived focus on the extent that electron-phonon interactions drive lattice instabilities in PbTe and related materials. Here, we use Fourier-transform inelastic x-ray scattering (FT-IXS) to show that photo-injection of free carriers stabilizes the paraelectric state. With support from constrained density functional theory (CDFT) calculations, we find that photoexcitation weakens the long-range forces along the cubic direction tied to resonant bonding and incipient ferroelectricity. This demonstrates the importance of electronic states near the band edges in determining the equilibrium structure., Comment: 9 page, 3 figures
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- 2015
46. Direct measurement of non-equilibrium phonon occupations in femtosecond laser heated Au films
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Chase, T., Trigo, M., Reid, A. H., Li, R., Vecchione, T., Shen, X., Weatherby, S., Coffee, R., Hartmann, N., Reis, D. A., Wang, X. J., and Dürr, H. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We use ultrafast electron diffraction to detect the temporal evolution of phonon populations in femtosecond laser-excited ultrathin single-crystalline gold films. From the time-dependence of the Debye-Waller factor we extract a 4.7 ps time-constant for the increase in mean-square atomic displacements. We show from the increase of the diffuse scattering intensity that the population of phonon modes near the X and K points in the Au fcc Brillouin zone grows with timescales of 2.3 and 2.9 ps, respectively, faster than the Debye-Waller average. We find that thermalization continues within the initially non-equilibrium phonon distribution after 10 ps. The observed momentum dependent timescale of phonon populations is in contrast to what is usually predicted in a two-temperature model., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 1 table
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- 2015
47. Accretion disc atmospheres and winds in low-mass X-ray binaries
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Trigo, M. Díaz and Boirin, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
In the last decade, X-ray spectroscopy has enabled a wealth of discoveries of photoionised absorbers in X-ray binaries. Studies of such accretion disc atmospheres and winds are of fundamental importance to understand accretion processes and possible feedback mechanisms to the environment. In this work, we review the current observational state and theoretical understanding of accretion disc atmospheres and winds in low-mass X-ray binaries, focusing on the wind launching mechanisms and on the dependence on accretion state. We conclude with issues that deserve particular attention., Comment: 6 pages. Accepted for publication in Astronomical Notes (Proceedings of "The Extremes of Black Hole Accretion" workshop, held at ESAC, Madrid, in June 2015)
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- 2015
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48. How to distinguish squeezed and coherent phonons in femtosecond x-ray diffuse scattering
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Henighan, T., Trigo, M., Chollet, M., Clark, J. N., Fahy, S., Glownia, J. M., Jiang, M. P., Kozina, M., Liu, H., Song, S., Zhu, D., and Reis, D. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Impulsive optical excitation can generate both coherent and squeezed phonons. The expectation value of the phonon displacement $
$ oscillates at the mode frequency for the coherent state but remains zero for a pure squeezed state. In contrast, both show oscillations in $<|u_q|^2>$ at twice the mode frequency. Therefore it can be difficult to distinguish them in a second-order measurement of the displacements, such as in first-order x-ray diffuse scattering. Here we demonstrate a simple method to distinguish squeezed from coherent atomic motion by measurement of the diffuse scattering following double impulsive excitation. We find that femtosecond optical excitation generates squeezed phonons spanning the Brillouin zone in Ge, GaAs and InSb. Our results confirm the mechanism suggested in [Nature Physics 9, 790 (2013)]., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures - Published
- 2015
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49. Generation of high-frequency strain waves during femtosecond demagnetization of Fe/MgO films
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Henighan, T., Trigo, M., Bonetti, S., Granitzka, P., Higley, D., Chen, Z., Jiang, M. P., Kukreja, R., Gray, A., Reid, A. H., Jal, E., Hoffmann, M. C., Kozina, M., Song, S., Chollet, M., Zhu, D., Xu, P. F., Jeong, J., Carva, K., Maldonado, P., Oppeneer, P. M., Samant, M. G., Parkin, S. S. P., Reis, D. A., and Dürr, H. A.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
We use femtosecond time-resolved hard x-ray scattering to detect coherent acoustic phonons excited during ultrafast laser demagnetization of bcc Fe films. We determine the lattice strain propagating through the film through analysis of the oscillations in the x-ray scattering signal as a function of momentum transfer. The width of the strain wavefront is ~100 fs, similar to demagnetization timescales. First-principles calculations show that the high-frequency Fourier components of the strain, which give rise to the sharp wavefront, could in part originate from non-thermal dynamics of the lattice not considered in the two-temperature model., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures
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- 2015
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50. An Overview of the 2014 ALMA Long Baseline Campaign
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Partnership, ALMA, Fomalont, E. B., Vlahakis, C., Corder, S., Remijan, A., Barkats, D., Lucas, R., Hunter, T. R., Brogan, C. L., Asaki, Y., Matsushita, S., Dent, W. R. F., Hills, R. E., Phillips, N., Richards, A. M. S., Cox, P., Amestica, R., Broguiere, D., Cotton, W., Hales, A. S., Hiriart, R., Hirota, A., Hodge, J. A., Impellizzeri, C. M. V., Kern, J., Kneissl, R., Liuzzo, E., Marcelino, N., Marson, R., Mignano, A., Nakanishi, K., Nikolic, B., Perez, J. E., Pérez, L. M., Toledo, I., Aladro, R., Butler, B., Cortes, J., Cortes, P., Dhawan, V., Di Francesco, J., Espada, D., Galarza, F., Garcia-Appadoo, D., Guzman-Ramirez, L., Humphreys, E. M., Jung, T., Kameno, S., Laing, R. A., Leon, S., Mangum, J., Marconi, G., Nagai, H., Nyman, L. -A., Radiszcz, M., Rodón, J. A., Sawada, T., Takahashi, S., Tilanus, R. P. J., van Kempen, T., Vilaro, B. Vila, Watson, L. C., Wiklind, T., Gueth, F., Tatematsu, K., Wootten, A., Castro-Carrizo, A., Chapillon, E., Dumas, G., de Gregorio-Monsalvo, I., Francke, H., Gallardo, J., Garcia, J., Gonzalez, S., Hibbard, J. E., Hill, T., Kaminski, T., Karim, A., Krips, M., Kurono, Y., Lopez, C., Martin, S., Maud, L., Morales, F., Pietu, V., Plarre, K., Schieven, G., Testi, L., Videla, L., Villard, E., Whyborn, N., Zwaan, M. A., Alves, F., Andreani, P., Avison, A., Barta, M., Bedosti, F., Bendo, G. J., Bertoldi, F., Bethermin, M., Biggs, A., Boissier, J., Brand, J., Burkutean, S., Casasola, V., Conway, J., Cortese, L., Dabrowski, B., Davis, T. A., Trigo, M. Diaz, Fontani, F., Franco-Hernandez, R., Fuller, G., Madrid, R. Galvan, Giannetti, A., Ginsburg, A., Graves, S. F., Hatziminaoglou, E., Hogerheijde, M., Jachym, P., Serra, I. Jimenez, Karlicky, M., Klaasen, P., Kraus, M., Kunneriath, D., Lagos, C., Longmore, S., Leurini, S., Maercker, M., Magnelli, B., Vidal, I. Marti, Massardi, M., Maury, A., Muehle, S., Muller, S., Muxlow, T., O'Gorman, E., Paladino, R., Petry, D., Pineda, J., Randall, S., Richer, J. S., Rossetti, A., Rushton, A., Rygl, K., Monge, A. Sanchez, Schaaf, R., Schilke, P., Stanke, T., Schmalzl, M., Stoehr, F., Urban, S., van Kampen, E., Vlemmings, W., Wang, K., Wild, W., Yang, Y., Iguchi, S., Hasegawa, T., Saito, M., Inatani, J., Mizuno, N., Asayama, S., Kosugi, G., Morita, K. -I., Chiba, K., Kawashima, S., Okumura, S. K., Ohashi, N., Ogasawara, R., Sakamoto, S., Noguchi, T., Huang, Y. -D., Liu, S. -Y., Kemper, F., Koch, P. M., Chen, M. -T., Chikada, Y., Hiramatsu, M., Iono, D., Shimojo, M., Komugi, S., Kim, J., Lyo, A. -R., Muller, E., Herrera, C., Miura, R. E., Ueda, J., Chibueze, J., Su, Y. -N., Trejo-Cruz, A., Wang, K. -S., Kiuchi, H., Ukita, N., Sugimoto, M., Kawabe, R., Hayashi, M., Miyama, S., Ho, P. T. P., Kaifu, N., Ishiguro, M., Beasley, A. J., Bhatnagar, S., Braatz III, J. A., Brisbin, D. G., Brunetti, N., Carilli, C., Crossley, J. H., D'Addario, L., Meyer, J. L. Donovan, Emerson, D. T., Evans, A. S., Fisher, P., Golap, K., Griffith, D. M., Hale, A. E., Halstead, D., Hardy, E. J., Hatz, M. C., Holdaway, M., Indebetouw, R., Jewell, P. R., Kepley, A. A., Kim, D. -C., Lacy, M. D., Leroy, A. K., Liszt, H. S., Lonsdale, C. J., Matthews, B., McKinnon, M., Mason, B. S., Moellenbrock, G., Moullet, A., Myers, S. T., Ott, J., Peck, A. B., Pisano, J., Radford, S. J. E., Randolph, W. T., Venkata, U. Rao, Rawlings, M. G., Rosen, R., Schnee, S. L., Scott, K. S., Sharp, N. K., Sheth, K., Simon, R. S., Tsutsumi, T., and Wood, S. J.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
A major goal of the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) is to make accurate images with resolutions of tens of milliarcseconds, which at submillimeter (submm) wavelengths requires baselines up to ~15 km. To develop and test this capability, a Long Baseline Campaign (LBC) was carried out from September to late November 2014, culminating in end-to-end observations, calibrations, and imaging of selected Science Verification (SV) targets. This paper presents an overview of the campaign and its main results, including an investigation of the short-term coherence properties and systematic phase errors over the long baselines at the ALMA site, a summary of the SV targets and observations, and recommendations for science observing strategies at long baselines. Deep ALMA images of the quasar 3C138 at 97 and 241 GHz are also compared to VLA 43 GHz results, demonstrating an agreement at a level of a few percent. As a result of the extensive program of LBC testing, the highly successful SV imaging at long baselines achieved angular resolutions as fine as 19 mas at ~350 GHz. Observing with ALMA on baselines of up to 15 km is now possible, and opens up new parameter space for submm astronomy., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letters; this version with small changes to affiliations
- Published
- 2015
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