3,350 results on '"Wang S. Y."'
Search Results
2. Trends and variations of tropical cyclone precipitation contributions in the Indochina Peninsula
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Ho, Thi-Ngoc-Huyen, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, and Yoon, Jin-Ho
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- 2024
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3. DPSCs regulate epithelial-T cell interactions in oral submucous fibrosis
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Wang, S. Y., Zhang, S. J., Meng, H. F., Xu, H. Q., Guo, Z. X., Yan, J. F., Gao, J. L., Niu, L. N., Wang, S. L., and Jiao, K.
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- 2024
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4. From peak to plummet: impending decline of the warm Arctic-cold continents phenomenon
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Hong, Yungi, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Son, Seok-Woo, Jeong, Jee-Hoon, Kim, Sang-Woo, Kim, Baekmin, Kim, Hyungjun, and Yoon, Jin-Ho
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- 2024
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5. Evolving winter atmospheric teleconnection patterns and their potential triggers across western North America
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Lee, Jueun, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Son, Seok-Woo, Kim, Daehyun, Jeong, Jee-Hoon, Kim, Hyungjun, and Yoon, Jin-Ho
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- 2024
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6. γ-Ray radiolysis of dihydroxyurea in water and its radiolytic by-products
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Li, Zh, Wang, S. Y., Wang, J. H., Li, Q., Wang, P., Wang, C. C., and Zheng, W. F.
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- 2024
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7. The two rings of (50000) Quaoar
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Pereira, C. L., Sicardy, B., Morgado, B. E., Braga-Ribas, F., Fernández-Valenzuela, E., Souami, D., Holler, B. J., Boufleur, R. C., Margoti, G., Assafin, M., Ortiz, J. L., Santos-Sanz, P., Epinat, B., Kervella, P., Desmars, J., Vieira-Martins, R., Kilic, Y., Gomes-Júnior, A. R., Camargo, J. I. B., Emilio, M., Vara-Lubiano, M., Kretlow, M., Albert, L., Alcock, C., Ball, J. G., Bender, K., Buie, M. W., Butterfield, K., Camarca, M., Castro-Chacón, J. H., Dunford, R., Fisher, R. S., Gamble, D., Geary, J. C., Gnilka, C. L., Green, K. D., Hartman, Z. D., Huang, C-K., Januszewski, H., Johnston, J., Kagitani, M., Kamin, R., Kavelaars, J. J., Keller, J. M., de Kleer, K. R., Lehner, M. J., Luken, A., Marchis, F., Marlin, T., McGregor, K., Nikitin, V., Nolthenius, R., Patrick, C., Redfield, S., Rengstorf, A. W., Reyes-Ruiz, M., Seccull, T., Skrutskie, M. F., Smith, A. B., Sproul, M., Stephens, A. W., Szentgyorgyi, A., Sánchez-Sanjuán, S., Tatsumi, E., Verbiscer, A., Wang, S-Y., Yoshida, F., Young, R., and Zhang, Z-W.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Quaoar is a classical Trans-Neptunian Object (TNO) with an area equivalent diameter of 1,100 km and an orbital semi-major axis of 43.3 astronomical units. Based on stellar occultations observed between 2018 and 2021, an inhomogeneous ring (Q1R, Quaoar's first ring) was detected around this body. Aims. A new stellar occultation by Quaoar was observed on August 9th, 2022 aiming to improve Quaoar's shape models and the physical parameters of Q1R while searching for additional material around the body. Methods. The occultation provided nine effective chords across Quaoar, pinning down its size, shape, and astrometric position. Large facilities, such as Gemini North and the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), were used to obtain high acquisition rates and signal-to-noise ratios. The light curves were also used to characterize the Q1R ring (radial profiles and orbital elements). Results. Quaoar's elliptical fit to the occultation chords yields the limb with an apparent semi-major axis of $579.5\pm4.0$ km, apparent oblateness of $0.12\pm0.01$, and area-equivalent radius of $543\pm2$ km. Quaoar's limb orientation is consistent with Q1R and Weywot orbiting in Quaoar's equatorial plane. The orbital radius of Q1R is refined to a value of $4,057\pm6$ km. The radial opacity profile of the more opaque ring profile follows a Lorentzian shape that extends over 60 km, with a full width at half maximum (FWHM) of $\sim5$ km and a peak normal optical depth of 0.4. Besides the secondary events related to the already reported rings, new secondary events detected during the August 2022 occultation in three different data sets are consistent with another ring around Quaoar with a radius of $2,520\pm20$ km, assuming the ring is circular and co-planar with Q1R. This new ring has a typical width of 10 km and a normal optical depth of $\sim$0.004. Like Q1R, it also lies outside Quaoar's classical Roche limit., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (17-April-2023). 18 pages, 12 figures
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- 2023
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8. Flux focusing with a superconducting nano-needle for scanning SQUID susceptometry
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Xiang, B. K., Wang, S. Y., Wang, Y. F., Zhu, J. J., Xu, H. T., and Wang, Y. H.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Nano-fabricated superconducting quantum interference device (nano-SQUID) is a direct and sensitive flux probe useful for magnetic imaging of quantum materials and mesoscopic devices. Enabled by functionalities of superconductive integrated circuits, nano-SQUID fabricated on a chip is particularly versatile but spatial resolution has been limited by its planar geometry. Here, we use femtosecond-laser 3-dimensional (3D) lithography and print a needle onto a nano-SQUID susceptometer to overcome the limit of a plane-structure. The nano-needle coated with a superconducting shell focuses the flux both from the field coil and the sample. We perform scanning imaging using such a needle-on-SQUID (NoS) device on superconducting test patterns with topographic feedback. The NoS shows improved spatial resolution in both magnetometry and susceptometry over its planarized counterpart. This work serves as a proof-of-principle for the integration and inductive coupling between superconducting 3D nano-structures and on-chip Josephson nano-devices.
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- 2022
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9. Suppression and revival of superconducting phase coherence in monolayer FeSe/SrTiO$_3$
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Ru, H., Li, Z. J., Wang, S. Y., Xiang, B. K., and Wang, Y. H.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Monolayer FeSe grown on SrTiO$_3$ (FeSe/STO) is an interfacial high temperature superconductor distinctively different from bulk FeSe. Due to the fragility of this two-dimensional system in the atmosphere, the investigation of its intrinsic superconductivity and intertwined orders has largely been limited to surface-sensitive charge probes compatible with ultra-high vacuum environment. However, the superconducting phase coherence of the interface is challenging to probe. Here, we perform in-situ mutual inductance in ultra-high vacuum on FeSe/STO in combination with band mapping by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES). We find that even though the monolayer showed a gap-closing temperature above 50 K, surprisingly no diamagnetism is visible down to 5 K. This is the case for few-layer FeSe/STO until it exceeds a critical number of 5 layers where diamagnetism suddenly appears. But the superfluid density does not saturate down to the base temperature in these thick samples. On the other hand, the suppression of diamagnetism in the few-layer FeSe/STO can be lifted by depositing a FeTe layer on top. The superconducting transition is much sharper than that in the thick FeSe/STO. However, Tc and superfluid density both decrease with increasing FeTe thickness. Shining ultraviolet light on the FeTe/FeSe/STO heterostructure enhances Tc similarly independent of the FeSe thickness, showing that the diamagnetism originates at the FeSe/STO interface. Our observation may be understood by a scenario in which interfacial superconducting phase coherence is highly anisotropic.
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- 2022
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10. Data-driven estimations of ground deformations induced by tunneling: a Bayesian perspective
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Pan, Q. J., Li, X. Z., Wang, S. Y., and Phoon, K. K.
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- 2024
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11. Direct observation of quantum anomalous vortex in Fe(Se,Te)
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Lin, Y. S., Wang, S. Y., Zhang, X., Feng, Y., Pan, Y. P., Ru, H., Zhu, J. J., Xiang, B. K., Liu, K., Zheng, C. L., Wei, L. Y., Wang, M. X., Liu, Z. K., Chen, L., Jiang, K., Guo, Y. F., Wang, Ziqiang, and Wang, Y. H.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Vortices are topological defects of type-II superconductors in an external magnetic field. In a similar fashion to a quantum anomalous Hall insulator, quantum anomalous vortex (QAV) spontaneously nucleates due to orbital-and-spin exchange interaction between vortex core states and magnetic impurity moment, breaking time-reversal symmetry (TRS) of the vortex without an external field. Here, we used scanning superconducting quantum interference device microscopy (sSQUID) to search for its signatures in iron-chalcogenide superconductor Fe(Se,Te). Under zero magnetic field, we found a stochastic distribution of isolated anomalous vortices and antivortices with flux quanta $\Phi_0$. By applying a small local magnetic field under the coil of the nano-SQUID device, we observed hysteretic flipping of the vortices reminiscent of the switching of ferromagnetic domains, suggesting locally broken-TRS. We further showed vectorial rotation of a flux line linking a paired vortex-antivortex with the local field. These unique properties of the anomalous vortices satisfied the defining criteria of QAV. Our observation suggests a quantum vortex phase with spontaneous broken-TRS in a high-temperature superconductor.
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- 2022
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12. Frustrated ferromagnetic transition in AB-stacked honeycomb bilayer
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Wang, S. Y., Wang, Y., Yan, S. H., Wang, C., Xiang, B. K., Liang, K. Y., He, Q. S., Watanabe, K., Taniguchi, T., Tian, S. J., Lei, H. C., Ji, W., Qi, Y., and Wang, Y. H.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
In two-dimensional (2D) ferromagnets, anisotropy is essential for the magnetic ordering as dictated by the Mermin-Wagner theorem. But when competing anisotropies are present, the phase transition becomes nontrivial. Here, utilizing highly sensitive susceptometry of scanning superconducting quantum interference device microscopy, we probe the spin correlations of ABC-stacked CrBr3 under zero magnetic field. We identify a plateau feature in susceptibility above the critical temperature (Tc) in thick samples. It signifies a crossover regime induced by the competition between easy-plane intralayer exchange anisotropy versus uniaxial interlayer anisotropy. The evolution of the critical behavior from the bulk to 2D shows that the competition between the anisotropies is magnified in the reduced dimension. It leads to a strongly frustrated ferromagnetic transition in the bilayer with fluctuation on the order of Tc, which is distinct from both the monolayer and the bulk. Our observation potentially offers a 2D localized spin system on honeycomb lattice to explore magnetic frustration.
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- 2022
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13. Fast CCD Photometry in the Taiwan-America Occultation Survey
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Chen W. P., Zhang Z. W., King S. K., Alcock C., Byun Y. I., Cook K. H., Dave R., Giammarco J., Lee T., Lehner M., Liang C., Lissauer J., Marshall S., Pater I. de, Porrata R., Rice J., Wang A., Wang S. Y., and Wen C. Y.
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solar system ,kuiper belt objects ,methods ,observational ,techniques ,photometric ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Abstract
We describe the efforts of the Taiwan-America Occultation Survey (TAOS) project to develop a data acquisition and analysis scheme for fast CCD imaging photometry. The TAOS project aims to conduct a census of the Kuiper-belt objects (KBOs) by detecting chance stellar occultation events by these small bodies in the outer reach of the solar system. An array of telescopes, each with fast optics (f/2) of 0.5 m aperture and equipped with a 2K CCD camera (3 square degrees FOV), have been set up in central Taiwan to monitor a couple thousand stars simultaneously. By reading out the CCD chip sequentially a few rows of pixels at a time (pause-and-shift), it is possible to achieve stellar photometry with a sampling rate up to several hertz. Here we report how such a setup has been used to observe the SX Phoenicis type variable CY Aqr to illustrate the potential usefulness of the TAOS database in stellar variability studies.
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- 2003
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14. Investigations of nuclear chirality at iThemba LABS
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Bark, R. A., Lawrie, E. A., Liu, C., and Wang, S. Y.
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- 2024
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15. Interdecadal variability of summer precipitation in the Three River Source Region: Influences of SST and zonal shifts of the East Asian subtropical westerly jet
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Liu, Yumeng, Meng, Xianhong, Zhao, Lin, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Zhang, Lixia, Li, Zhaoguo, Wang, Chan, and An, Yingying
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- 2024
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16. Suppression of ferromagnetism and influence of disorder in silicon-substituted CeRh6Ge4
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Zhang, Y. J., Nie, Z. Y., Li, R., Li, Y. C., Yang, D. L., Shen, B., Ye, C., Su, H., Shi, R., Wang, S. Y., Steglich, F., Smidman, M., and Yuan, H. Q.
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Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
We report a study of isoelectronic chemical substitution in the recently discovered quantum critical ferromagnet CeRh$_6$Ge$_4$. Upon silicon-doping, the ferromagnetic ordering temperature of CeRh$_6$(Ge$_{1-x}$Si$_x$)$_4$ is continuously suppressed, and no transition is observed beyond $x_c$$\approx$0.125. Non-Fermi liquid behavior with $C/T \propto$log($T^*/T$) is observed close to $x_c$, indicating the existence of strong quantum fluctuations, while the $T$-linear behavior observed upon pressurizing the parent compound is absent in the resistivity, which appears to be a consequence of the disorder induced by silicon doping. Our findings provide evidence for the role played by disorder on the unusual ferromagnetic quantum criticality in CeRh$_6$Ge$_4$, and provides further evidence for understanding the origin of this behavior.
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- 2022
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17. Effect of municipal sludge/blue-green algae ratio on thermophilic aerobic composting and its dissolved organic matter dynamic process
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Wang, J. H., Wang, L. Y., Zhang, Q. B., Wang, J., Li, Y. C., Wang, S. Y., Li, J. C., and Chi, Y. F.
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- 2023
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18. Atypical forcing embedded in typical forcing leading to the extreme summer 2020 precipitation in Nepal
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Sharma, Shankar, Hamal, Kalpana, Pokharel, Binod, Fosu, Boniface, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Gillies, Robert R., Aryal, Deepak, Shrestha, Archana, Marahatta, Suresh, Hussain, Azfar, and Khadka, Nitesh
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- 2023
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19. The role of the western North Pacific (WNP) as an El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) precursor in a warmer future climate
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Borhara, Krishna, Fosu, Boniface, and Wang, S.-Y. Simon
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- 2023
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20. Oscillating paramagnetic Meissner effect and Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless transition in $Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}$ monolayer
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Wang, S. Y., Yu, Y., Hao, J. X., Feng, Y., Zhu, J. J., Lin, Y. S., Xiang, B. K., Ru, H., Pan, Y. P., Gu, G. D., Watanabe, K., Taniguchi, T., Qi, Y., Zhang, Y., and Wang, Y. H.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Monolayers of a prototypical cuprate high transition-temperature ($T_C$) superconductor $Bi_2Sr_2CaCu_2O_{8+\delta}$ (Bi2212) was recently found to show $T_C$ and other electronic properties similar to those of the bulk. The robustness of superconductivity in an ideal two-dimensional (2D) system was an intriguing fact that defied the Mermin-Wagner theorem. Here, we took advantage of the high sensitivity of scanning SQUID susceptometry to image the phase stiffness throughout the phase transition of Bi2212 in the 2D limit. We found susceptibility oscillated with flux between diamagnetism and paramagnetism in a Fraunhofer-like pattern up till $T_C$. The temperature and sample size-dependence of the modulation period agreed well with our Coulomb gas analogy of a finite 2D system based on Berezinskii-Kosterlitz-Thouless (BKT) transition. In the multilayers, the susceptibility oscillation differed in a small temperature regime below $T_C$ in consistent with a dimensional-crossover led by interlayer coupling. Serving as strong evidence of BKT transition in the bulk, there appeared a sharp superfluid density jump at zero-field and paramagnetism at small fields just below $T_C$. These results unified the phase transitions from the monolayer Bi2212 to the bulk as BKT transition with finite interlayer coupling. This elucidating picture favored the pre-formed pairs scenario for the underdoped cuprates regardless of lattice dimensionality.
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- 2021
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21. Estimating wildfire potential in Taiwan under different climate change scenarios
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Yu, Hong Wen, Wang, S. Y. Simon, and Liu, Wan Yu
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- 2024
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22. Asian-Australian summer monsoons linkage to ENSO strengthened by global warming
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Xu, Chenxi, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Borhara, Krishna, Buckley, Brendan, Tan, Ning, Zhao, Yaru, An, Wenling, Sano, Masaki, Nakatsuka, Takeshi, and Guo, Zhengtang
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- 2023
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23. Arctic-associated increased fluctuations of midlatitude winter temperature in the 1.5° and 2.0° warmer world
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Hong, Yungi, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Son, Seok-Woo, Jeong, Jee-Hoon, Kim, Sang-Woo, Kim, Baekmin, Kim, Hyungjun, and Yoon, Jin-Ho
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- 2023
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24. Flux focusing with a superconducting nanoneedle for scanning SQUID susceptometry
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Xiang, B. K., Wang, S. Y., Wang, Y. F., Zhu, J. J., Xu, H. T., and Wang, Y. H.
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- 2023
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25. Long-term Dynamical Stability in the Outer Solar System I: The Regular and Chaotic Evolution of the 34 Largest Trans-Neptunian Objects
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Muñoz-Gutiérrez, M. A., Peimbert, A., Lehner, M. J., and Wang, S. -Y.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
We carried out an extensive analysis of the stability of the outer solar system, making use of the frequency analysis technique over short-term integrations of nearly a hundred thousand test particles, as well as a statistical analysis of 200, 1 Gyr long numerical simulations, which consider the mutual perturbations of the giant planets and the 34 largest trans-Neptunian objects (we have called all 34 objects ``dwarf planets'', DPs, even if probably only the largest of them are true DPs). From the frequency analysis we produced statistical diffusion maps for a wide region of the $a$-$e$ phase-space plane; we also present the average diffusion time for orbits as a function of perihelion. We later turned our attention to the 34 DPs making an individualized analysis for each of them and producing a first approximation of their future stability. From the 200 distinct realizations of the orbital evolution of the 34 DPs, we classified the sample into three categories including 17 Stable, 11 Unstable, and 6 Resonant objects each; we also found that statistically, 2 objects from the sample will leave the trans-Neptunian region within the next Gyr, most likely being ejected from the solar system, but with a non-negligible probability of going inside the orbit of Neptune, either to collide with a giant planet or even falling to the inner solar system, where our simulations are no longer able to resolve their continuous evolution., Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in AJ
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- 2021
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26. North American fire weather catalyzed by the extratropical transition of tropical cyclones
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Stuivenvolt-Allen, Jacob and Wang, S.-Y. Simon
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- 2023
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27. New $\alpha$-Emitting Isotope $^{214}$U and Abnormal Enhancement of $\alpha$-Particle Clustering in Lightest Uranium Isotopes
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Zhang, Z. Y., Yang, H. B., Huang, M. H., Gan, Z. G., Yuan, C. X., Qi, C., Andreyev, A. N., Liu, M. L., Ma, L., Zhang, M. M., Tian, Y. L., Wang, Y. S., Wang, J. G., Yang, C. L., Li, G. S., Qiang, Y. H., Yang, W. Q., Chen, R. F., Zhang, H. B., Lu, Z. W., Xu, X. X., Duan, L. M., Yang, H. R., Huang, W. X., Liu, Z., Zhou, X. H., Zhang, Y. H., Xu, H. S., Wang, N., Zhou, H. B., Wen, X. J., Huang, S., Hua, W., Zhu, L., Wang, X., Mao, Y. C., He, X. T., Wang, S. Y., Xu, W. Z., Li, H. W., Ren, Z. Z., and Zhou, S. G.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
A new $\alpha$-emitting isotope $^{214}$U, produced by fusion-evaporation reaction $^{182}$W($^{36}$Ar, 4n)$^{214}$U, was identified by employing the gas-filled recoil separator SHANS and recoil-$\alpha$ correlation technique. More precise $\alpha$-decay properties of even-even nuclei $^{216,218}$U were also measured in reactions of $^{40}$Ar, $^{40}$Ca with $^{180, 182, 184}$W targets. By combining the experimental data, improved $\alpha$-decay reduced widths $\delta^2$ for the even-even Po--Pu nuclei in the vicinity of magic neutron number $N=126$ were deduced. Their systematic trends are discussed in terms of $N_{p}N_{n}$ scheme in order to study the influence of proton-neutron interaction on $\alpha$ decay in this region of nuclei. It is strikingly found that the reduced widths of $^{214,216}$U are significantly enhanced by a factor of two as compared with the $N_{p}N_{n}$ systematics for the $84 \leq Z \leq 90$ and $N<126$ even-even nuclei. The abnormal enhancement is interpreted by the strong monopole interaction between the valence protons and neutrons occupying the $\pi 1f_{7/2}$ and $\nu 1f_{5/2}$ spin-orbit partner orbits, which is supported by a large-scale shell model calculation.
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- 2021
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28. Breakdown of equipartition of energy for vibrational heat capacity of diatomic molecular gas due to nonvanishing bond length
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Wu, X. Y., Wang, S. Y., Yang, J. R., Wang, X., and Liu, Q. H.
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Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Physics - Classical Physics - Abstract
When the theorem of equipartition of energy applies to the vibrational degree of freedom within diatomic molecular gas, the bond length is usually taken as zero so that the theorem is valid. Once the bond length is taken into consideration, calculations show that the mean energy of the vibrational heat capacity will significantly deviate from the standard value near the high temperature which breaks down the bond., Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures
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- 2020
29. SPIRou: nIR velocimetry & spectropolarimetry at the CFHT
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Donati, J. -F., Kouach, D., Moutou, C., Doyon, R., Delfosse, X., Artigau, E., Baratchart, S., Lacombe, M., Barrick, G., Hebrard, G., Bouchy, F., Saddlemyer, L., Pares, L., Rabou, P., Micheau, Y., Dolon, F., Reshetov, V., Challita, Z., Carmona, A., Striebig, N., Thibault, S., Martioli, E., Cook, N., Fouque, P., Vermeulen, T., Wang, S. Y., Arnold, L., Pepe, F., Boisse, I., Figueira, P., Bouvier, J., Ray, T. P., Feugeade, C., Morin, J., Alencar, S., Hobson, M., Castilho, B., Udry, S., Santos, N. C., Hernandez, O., Benedict, T., Vallee, P., Gallou, G., Dupieux, M., Larrieu, M., Perruchot, S., Sottile, R., Moreau, F., Usher, C., Baril, M., Wildi, F., Chazelas, B., Malo, L., Bonfils, X., Loop, D., Kerley, D., Wevers, I., Dunn, J., Pazder, J., Macdonald, S., Dubois, B., Carrie, E., Valentin, H., Henault, F., Yan, C. H., and Steinmetz, T.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
This paper presents an overview of SPIRou, the new-generation near-infrared spectropolarimeter / precision velocimeter recently installed on the 3.6-m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT). Starting from the two main science goals, namely the quest for planetary systems around nearby M dwarfs and the study of magnetized star / planet formation, we outline the instrument concept that was designed to efficiently address these forefront topics, and detail the in-lab and on-sky instrument performances measured throughout the intensive testing phase that SPIRou was submitted to before passing the final acceptance review in early 2019 and initiating science observations. With a central position among the newly started programmes, the SPIRou Legacy Survey (SLS) Large Programme was allocated 300 CFHT nights until at least mid 2022. We also briefly describe a few of the first results obtained in the various science topics that SPIRou started investigating, focusing in particular on planetary systems of nearby M dwarfs, transiting exoplanets and their atmospheres, magnetic fields of young stars, but also on alternate science goals like the atmospheres of M dwarfs and the Earth's atmosphere. We finally conclude on the essential role that SPIRou and the CFHT can play in coordination with forthcoming major facilities like the JWST, the ELTs, PLATO and ARIEL over the decade., Comment: MNRAS, in press (20 pages, 18 figures, 1 table)
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- 2020
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30. Study on the factors influencing the interaction and coalescence of shock waves from multiple explosion sources in free field
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Wang, S. Y., Qiu, J. L., Wang, Y. W., and Jiang, J. W.
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- 2023
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31. 3D nano-bridge-based SQUID susceptometers for scanning magnetic imaging of quantum materials
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Pan, Y. P., Wang, S. Y., Liu, X. Y., Lin, Y. S., Ma, L. X., Feng, Y., Wang, Z., Chen, L., and Wang, Y. H.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
We designed and fabricated a new type of superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) susceptometers for magnetic imaging of quantum materials. The 2-junction SQUID sensors employ 3D Nb nano-bridges fabricated using electron beam lithography. The two counter-wound balanced pickup loops of the SQUID enable gradiometric measurement and they are surrounded by a one-turn field coil for susceptibility measurements. The smallest pickup loop of the SQUIDs were 1 ${\mu}m$ in diameter and the flux noise was around 1 $\mu{\Phi}_0/\sqrt{Hz}$ at 100 Hz. We demonstrate scanning magnetometry, susceptometry and current magnetometry on some test samples using these nano-SQUIDs.
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- 2019
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32. Winter–summer contrast of the 1990s decadal change in relation to Afro–Asian monsoons
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Wu, Chi-Hua, Tsai, Pei-Chia, Huang, Wan-Ru, and Wang, S.-Y. Simon
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- 2022
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33. BENDING ANALYSIS OF DOUBLE VISCOELASTIC NANOPLATES BASED ON THE MODIFIED COUPLE STRESS THEORY AND RELAXATION THEORY
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Wang, S. Y., Fang, Y., Wang, Y. Y., and Zhang, Y. Q.
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- 2022
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34. Effect of temperature on the tensile deformation behavior and fracture mechanism of a transient liquid-phase bonding joint of γ′-strengthened Co-based single-crystal superalloy
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Wang, S. Y., Hou, X. Y., Cheng, Y., Sun, Y., Yang, Y. H., Li, J. G., Zhang, H. W., and Zhou, Y. Z.
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- 2022
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35. Coexistence of chiral symmetry and pseudospin symmetry in one nucleus: triplet bands in $^{105}$Ag
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Jia, H., Qi, B., Liu, C., and Wang, S. Y.
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Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The nearly degenerate triplet bands with the $\pi g_{9/2}^{-1}\otimes \nu h_{11/2} (g_{7/2},d_{5/2})$ configuration in $^{105}$Ag are studied via the relativistic mean-field (RMF) theory and the multiparticle plus rotor model (MPRM), which indicates that these bands are associated with chiral symmetry and pseudospin symmetry. The configuration-fixed constrained triaxial RMF calculations exhibit the pseudospin symmetry in single particle spectra and the triaxial shape coexistence. The experimental excitation energies and the electromagnetic transition probabilities for the triplet bands are reproduced very well by the MPRM calculaitons. The chiral doublet bands show the same phase in the $B(M1)/B(E2)$ staggering, while the pseudospin doublet bands hold the opposite phase. The coexistence of chiral symmetry and pseudospin symmetry in one nucleus and its corresponding characteristic of the rotational structure are discussed for the first time., Comment: 15pages,4figures
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- 2018
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36. The maximum mass of dark matter existing in compact stars based on the self-interacting fermionic model
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Wang, X. D., Qi, B., Zhang, N. B., and Wang, S. Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
By assuming that only gravitation acts between dark matter (DM) and normal matter (NM), we studied DM admixed neutron stars (DANSs) using the two-fluid TOV equations. The NM and DM of compact stars are simulated by the relativistic mean field (RMF) theory and non-self-annihilating self-interacting fermionic model, respectively. The effects of the particle mass of fermionic DM $m_f$ and the interaction strength parameter $y$ on the properties of DANSs are investigated in detail. $m_f$ and $y$ are considered as the free parameters due to the lack of information about the particle nature of DM so far. For a DANS, we suggest a simple universal relationship $M_D^{\max}=(0.267 y +0.627-3.21\frac{M_N}{\M_{\odot}})( \frac{1\GeV}{{m_f}})^2 \M_{\odot}$ for $y>100$, where $M_D^{\max}$ is the maximum mass of DM existing in DANSs and $M_N$ is the mass of the neutron star without DM. For free fermion DM model ($y$=0), the relationship becomes $ M_D^{\max}=(0.627-0.027\frac{M_N^2}{\M_{\odot}^2}) ( \frac{1\GeV}{{m_f}})^2 \M_{\odot}$. The radius of DM $R_D$ shows a linear relationship with $M_D^{\max}$ in DANSs, namely $R_D=(7.02 \frac{M_D^{\max}}{ \M_{\odot}}+1.36)$~km. These conclusions are independent of the different NM EOSs from RMF theory. Such a kind of universal relationship connecting the nature of DM particle and mass of stars might shed light on the constraining the nature of the DM by indirect method., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures
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- 2018
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37. SPICA - a large cryogenic infrared space telescope Unveiling the obscured Universe
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Roelfsema, P. R., Shibai, H., Armus, L., Arrazola, D., Audard, M., Audley, M. D., Bradford, C. M., Charles, I., Dieleman, P., Doi, Y., Duband, L., Eggens, M., Evers, J., Funaki, I., Gao, J. R., Giard, M., Fernández, A. di Giorgio L. M. González, Griffin, M., Helmich, F. P., Hijmering, R., Huisman, R., Ishihara, D., Isobe, N., Jackson, B., Jacobs, H., Jellema, W., Kamp, I., Kaneda, H., Kawada, M., Kemper, F., Kerschbaum, F., Khosropanah, P., Kohno, K., Kooijman, P. P., Krause, O., van der Kuur, J., Kwon, J., Laauwen, W. M., de Lange, G., Larsson, B., van Loon, D., Madden, S. C., Matsuhara, H., Najarro, F., Nakagawa, T., Naylor, D., Ogawa, H., Onaka, T., Oyabu, S., Poglitsch, A., Reveret, V., Rodriguez, L., Spinoglio, L., Sakon, I., Sato, Y., Shinozaki, K., Shipman, R., Sugita, H., Suzuki, T., van der Tak, F. F. S., Redondo, J. Torres, Wada, T., Wang, S. Y., Wafelbakker, C. K., van Weers, H., Withington, S., Vandenbussche, B., Yamada, T., and Yamamura, I.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Measurements in the infrared wavelength domain allow us to assess directly the physical state and energy balance of cool matter in space, thus enabling the detailed study of the various processes that govern the formation and early evolution of stars and planetary systems in galaxies over cosmic time. Previous infrared missions, from IRAS to Herschel, have revealed a great deal about the obscured Universe, but sensitivity has been limited because up to now it has not been possible to fly a telescope that is both large and cold. SPICA is a mission concept aimed at taking the next step in mid- and far-infrared observational capability by combining a large and cold telescope with instruments employing state-of-the-art ultra-sensitive detectors. The mission concept foresees a 2.5-meter diameter telescope cooled to below 8 K. With cooling provided by mechanical coolers instead of depending on a limited cryogen supply, the mission lifetime can extend significantly beyond the required three years. SPICA offers instrumentation with spectral resolving powers ranging from R ~50 through 11000 in the 17-230 $\mu$m domain as well as R~28.000 spectroscopy between 12 and 18 $\mu$m. Additionally SPICA will provide efficient 30-37 $\mu$m broad band mapping, and polarimetric imaging in the 100-350 $\mu$m range. SPICA will provide unprecedented spectroscopic sensitivity of ~5 x $10^{-20}$ W/m$^2$ (5$\sigma$/1hr) - at least two orders of magnitude improvement over what has been attained to date. With this exceptional leap in performance, new domains in infrared astronomy will become accessible, allowing us, for example, to unravel definitively galaxy evolution and metal production over cosmic time, to study dust formation and evolution from very early epochs onwards, and to trace the formation history of planetary systems., Comment: 34 pages, 22 figures, paper accepted for publication in PASA on 2nd February 2018, part of the PASA SPICA Special Issue
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- 2018
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38. Subaru High-z Exploration of Low-Luminosity Quasars (SHELLQs). IV. Discovery of 41 Quasars and Luminous Galaxies at 5.7 < z < 6.9
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Matsuoka, Y., Iwasawa, K., Onoue, M., Kashikawa, N., Strauss, M. A., Lee, C. -H., Imanishi, M., Nagao, T., Akiyama, M., Asami, N., Bosch, J., Furusawa, H., Goto, T., Gunn, J. E., Harikane, Y., Ikeda, H., Izumi, T., Kawaguchi, T., Kato, N., Kikuta, S., Kohno, K., Komiyama, Y., Lupton, R. H., Minezaki, T., Miyazaki, S., Morokuma, T., Murayama, H., Niida, M., Nishizawa, A. J., Oguri, M., Ono, Y., Ouchi, M., Price, P. A., Sameshima, H., Schulze, A., Shirakata, H., Silverman, J. D., Sugiyama, N., Tait, P. J., Takada, M., Takata, T., Tanaka, M., Tang, J. -J., Toba, Y., Utsumi, Y., Wang, S. -Y., and Yamashita, T.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report discovery of 41 new high-z quasars and luminous galaxies, which were spectroscopically identified at 5.7 < z < 6.9. This is the fourth in a series of papers from the Subaru High-z Exploration of Low-Luminosity Quasars (SHELLQs) project, based on the deep multi-band imaging data collected by the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) Subaru Strategic Program survey. We selected the photometric candidates by a Bayesian probabilistic algorithm, and then carried out follow-up spectroscopy with the Gran Telescopio Canarias and the Subaru Telescope. Combined with the sample presented in the previous papers, we have now spectroscopically identified 137 extremely-red HSC sources over about 650 deg2, which include 64 high-z quasars, 24 high-z luminous galaxies, 6 [O III] emitters at z ~ 0.8, and 43 Galactic cool dwarfs (low-mass stars and brown dwarfs). The new quasars span the luminosity range from M1450 ~ -26 to -22 mag, and continue to populate a few magnitude lower luminosities than have been probed by previous wide-field surveys. In a companion paper, we derive the quasar luminosity function at z ~ 6 over an unprecedentedly wide range of M1450 ~ -28 to -21 mag, exploiting the SHELLQs and other survey outcomes., Comment: ApJS in press. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1704.05854
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- 2018
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39. Differential cross section and photon-beam asymmetry for the gamma p -> pi- Delta++(1232) reaction at forward pi- angles for Egamma=1.5-2.95 GeV
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Kohri, H., Shiu, S. H., Chang, W. C., Yanai, Y., Ahn, D. S., Ahn, J. K., Chen, J. Y., Date, S., Ejiri, H., Fujimura, H., Fujiwara, M., Fukui, S., Gohn, W., Hicks, K., Hosaka, A., Hotta, T., Hwang, S. H., Imai, K., Ishikawa, T., Joo, K., Kato, Y., Kon, Y., Lee, H. S., Maeda, Y., Mibe, T., Miyabe, M., Morino, Y., Muramatsu, N., Nakano, T., Nakatsugawa, Y., Nam, S. i., Niiyama, M., Noumi, H., Ohashi, Y., Ohta, T., Oka, M., Parker, J. D., Rangacharyulu, C., Ryu, R. Y., Sawada, T., Shimizu, H., Strokovsky, E. A., Sugaya, Y., Sumihama, M., Tsunemi, T., Uchida, M., Ungaro, M., Wang, S. Y., and Yosoi, M.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Differential cross sections and photon-beam asymmetries for the gamma p -> pi- Delta++(1232) reaction have been measured for 0.7
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- 2018
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40. Optimal Orientations of Quartz Crystals for Bulk Acoustic Wave Resonators with the Consideration of Thermal Properties
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Wang, J., Zhang, L. M., Wang, S. Y., Xie, L. T., Huang, B., Ma, T. F., Du, J. K., Chao, M. C., Shen, S., Wu, R. X., and Zhang, H. F.
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Piezoelectric crystals are widely used for acoustic wave resonators of different functioning modes and types including BAW and SAW. It is well-known that only some special orientations of crystals will exhibit desirable properties such as mode couplings, thermal sensitivity, acceleration sensitivity, and others that are important in design and applications of resonators. With extensive studies on physical properties in last decades and increasing industrial needs of novel products, it is necessary to comb the known knowledge of quartz crystal material for novel orientations and better products as agendas in the industry. With known material properties like elastic, piezoelectric, dielectric, and thermal constants, we can establish the relationships between vibrations and bias fields such as temperature to ensure a resonator immunizing from excessive response to changes causing significant degradation of resonator properties and performances. Since the theoretical framework of wave propagation in piezoelectric solids is known, we need to use the existing data and results for the validation of current orientations in actual products. The agreement will give us needed confidence of the theory and analytical procedures. Through rotations, we calculated physical properties as functions of angles and bias fields, enabling the calculation of resonator properties for the identification of optimal cuts. Such a procedure can also be applied to similar crystals for a careful examination of possible orientations to maximize the potential use of materials in acoustic wave resonators., Comment: 5 pages, 8 figures
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- 2017
41. Metrics for understanding large-scale controls of multivariate temperature and precipitation variability
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O’Brien, John P, O’Brien, Travis A, Patricola, Christina M, and Wang, S-Y Simon
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Earth Sciences ,Atmospheric Sciences ,Climate Change Science ,Climate Action ,ENSO ,El Nino ,La Nina ,PDO ,AMO ,Global change ,Climate variability ,Teleconnections ,California ,Joint extremes ,Precipitation extremes ,Non-stationarity ,Oceanography ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,Climate change science - Abstract
Two or more spatio-temporally co-located meteorological/climatological extremes (co-occurring extremes) place far greater stress on human and ecological systems than any single extreme could. This was observed during the California drought of 2011–2015 where multiple years of negative precipitation anomalies occurred simultaneously with positive temperature anomalies resulting in California’s worst drought on observational record. The large-scale drivers which modulate the occurrence of extremes in two or more variables remains largely unexplored. Using California wintertime (November–April) temperature and precipitation as a case study, we apply a novel, nonparametric conditional probability distribution method that allows for evaluation of complex, multivariate, and nonlinear relationships that exist among temperature, precipitation, and various indicators of large-scale climate variability and change. We find that multivariate variability and statistics of temperature and precipitation exhibit strong spatial variation across scales that are often treated as being homogeneous. Further, we demonstrate that the multivariate statistics of temperature and precipitation are highly non-stationary and therefore require more robust and sophisticated statistical techniques for accurate characterization. Of all the indicators of the large-scale climate conditions we studied, the dipole index explains the greatest fraction of multivariate variability in the co-occurrence of California wintertime extremes in temperature and precipitation.
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- 2019
42. Tree-ring isotopes adjacent to Lake Superior reveal cold winter anomalies for the Great Lakes region of North America.
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Voelker, Steven L, Wang, S-Y Simon, Dawson, Todd E, Roden, John S, Still, Christopher J, Longstaffe, Fred J, and Ayalon, Avner
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Tree-ring carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13C) and oxygen isotopes (δ18O) collected from white pine (Pinus strobus) trees adjacent to Lake Superior show potential to produce the first winter-specific paleoclimate reconstruction with inter-annual resolution for this region. Isotopic signatures from 1976 to 2015 were strongly linked to antecedent winter minimum temperatures (Tmin), Lake Superior peak ice cover, and regional to continental-scale atmospheric winter pressure variability including the North American Dipole. The immense thermal inertia of Lake Superior underlies the unique connection between winter conditions and tree-ring Δ13C and δ18O signals from the following growing season in trees located near the lake. By combining these signals, we demonstrate feasibility to reconstruct variability in Tmin, ice cover, and continental-scale atmospheric circulation patterns (r ≥ 0.65, P
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- 2019
43. The Space Physics Environment Data Analysis System (SPEDAS).
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Angelopoulos, V, Cruce, P, Drozdov, A, Grimes, EW, Hatzigeorgiu, N, King, DA, Larson, D, Lewis, JW, McTiernan, JM, Roberts, DA, Russell, CL, Hori, T, Kasahara, Y, Kumamoto, A, Matsuoka, A, Miyashita, Y, Miyoshi, Y, Shinohara, I, Teramoto, M, Faden, JB, Halford, AJ, McCarthy, M, Millan, RM, Sample, JG, Smith, DM, Woodger, LA, Masson, A, Narock, AA, Asamura, K, Chang, TF, Chiang, C-Y, Kazama, Y, Keika, K, Matsuda, S, Segawa, T, Seki, K, Shoji, M, Tam, SWY, Umemura, N, Wang, B-J, Wang, S-Y, Redmon, R, Rodriguez, JV, Singer, HJ, Vandegriff, J, Abe, S, Nose, M, Shinbori, A, Tanaka, Y-M, UeNo, S, Andersson, L, Dunn, P, Fowler, C, Halekas, JS, Hara, T, Harada, Y, Lee, CO, Lillis, R, Mitchell, DL, Argall, MR, Bromund, K, Burch, JL, Cohen, IJ, Galloy, M, Giles, B, Jaynes, AN, Le Contel, O, Oka, M, Phan, TD, Walsh, BM, Westlake, J, Wilder, FD, Bale, SD, Livi, R, Pulupa, M, Whittlesey, P, DeWolfe, A, Harter, B, Lucas, E, Auster, U, Bonnell, JW, Cully, CM, Donovan, E, Ergun, RE, Frey, HU, Jackel, B, Keiling, A, Korth, H, McFadden, JP, Nishimura, Y, Plaschke, F, Robert, P, Turner, DL, Weygand, JM, Candey, RM, Johnson, RC, Kovalick, T, Liu, MH, McGuire, RE, and Breneman, A
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Geospace science ,Ionospheric physics ,Magnetospheric physics ,Planetary magnetospheres ,Solar wind ,Space plasmas ,Solarwind ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
With the advent of the Heliophysics/Geospace System Observatory (H/GSO), a complement of multi-spacecraft missions and ground-based observatories to study the space environment, data retrieval, analysis, and visualization of space physics data can be daunting. The Space Physics Environment Data Analysis System (SPEDAS), a grass-roots software development platform (www.spedas.org), is now officially supported by NASA Heliophysics as part of its data environment infrastructure. It serves more than a dozen space missions and ground observatories and can integrate the full complement of past and upcoming space physics missions with minimal resources, following clear, simple, and well-proven guidelines. Free, modular and configurable to the needs of individual missions, it works in both command-line (ideal for experienced users) and Graphical User Interface (GUI) mode (reducing the learning curve for first-time users). Both options have "crib-sheets," user-command sequences in ASCII format that can facilitate record-and-repeat actions, especially for complex operations and plotting. Crib-sheets enhance scientific interactions, as users can move rapidly and accurately from exchanges of technical information on data processing to efficient discussions regarding data interpretation and science. SPEDAS can readily query and ingest all International Solar Terrestrial Physics (ISTP)-compatible products from the Space Physics Data Facility (SPDF), enabling access to a vast collection of historic and current mission data. The planned incorporation of Heliophysics Application Programmer's Interface (HAPI) standards will facilitate data ingestion from distributed datasets that adhere to these standards. Although SPEDAS is currently Interactive Data Language (IDL)-based (and interfaces to Java-based tools such as Autoplot), efforts are under-way to expand it further to work with python (first as an interface tool and potentially even receiving an under-the-hood replacement). We review the SPEDAS development history, goals, and current implementation. We explain its "modes of use" with examples geared for users and outline its technical implementation and requirements with software developers in mind. We also describe SPEDAS personnel and software management, interfaces with other organizations, resources and support structure available to the community, and future development plans.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (10.1007/s11214-018-0576-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2019
44. Differential cross section and photon beam asymmetry for the gamma p -> pi+ n reaction at forward pi+ angles at Egamma=1.5-2.95 GeV
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Kohri, H., Wang, S. Y., Shiu, S. H., Chang, W. C., Yanai, Y., Ahn, D. S., Ahn, J. K., Chen, J. Y., Date, S., Ejiri, H., Fujimura, H., Fujiwara, M., Fukui, S., Gohn, W., Hicks, K., Hosaka, A., Hotta, T., Hwang, S. H., Imai, K., Ishikawa, T., Joo, K., Kato, Y., Kim, S. H., Kon, Y., Lee, H. S., Maeda, Y., Mibe, T., Miyabe, M., Morino, Y., Muramatsu, N., Nakano, T., Nakatsugawa, Y., Niiyama, M., Noumi, H., Oh, Y., Ohashi, Y., Ohta, T., Oka, M., Parker, J. D., Rangacharyulu, C., Ryu, S. Y., Sawada, T., Shimizu, H., Sugaya, Y., Sumihama, M., Tsunemi, T., Uchida, M., Ungaro, M., and Yosoi, M.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Differential cross sections and photon beam asymmetries for the gamma p -> pi+ n reaction have been measured for 0.6
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- 2017
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45. The Hyper Suprime-Cam SSP Survey: Overview and Survey Design
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Aihara, H., Arimoto, N., Armstrong, R., Arnouts, S., Bahcall, N. A., Bickerton, S., Bosch, J., Bundy, K., Capak, P. L., Chan, J. H. H., Chiba, M., Coupon, J., Egami, E., Enoki, M., Finet, F., Fujimori, H., Fujimoto, S., Furusawa, H., Furusawa, J., Goto, T., Goulding, A., Greco, J. P., Greene, J. E., Gunn, J. E., Hamana, T., Harikane, Y., Hashimoto, Y., Hattori, T., Hayashi, M., Hayashi, Y., Hełminiak, K. G., Higuchi, R., Hikage, C., Ho, P. T. P., Hsieh, B. -C., Huang, K., Huang, S., Ikeda, H., Imanishi, M., Inoue, A. K., Iwasawa, K., Iwata, I., Jaelani, A. T., Jian, H. -Y., Kamata, Y., Karoji, H., Kashikawa, N., Katayama, N., Kawanomoto, S., Kayo, I., Koda, J., Koike, M., Kojima, T., Komiyama, Y., Konno, A., Koshida, S., Koyama, Y., Kusakabe, H., Leauthaud, A., Lee, C. -H., Lin, L., Lin, Y. -T., Lupton, R. H., Mandelbaum, R., Matsuoka, Y., Medezinski, E., Mineo, S., Miyama, S., Miyatake, H., Miyazaki, S., Momose, R., More, A., More, S., Moritani, Y., Moriya, T. J., Morokuma, T., Mukae, S., Murata, R., Murayama, H., Nagao, T., Nakata, F., Niida, M., Niikura, H., Nishizawa, A. J., Obuchi, Y., Oguri, M., Oishi, Y., Okabe, N., Okura, Y., Ono, Y., Onodera, M., Onoue, M., Osato, K., Ouchi, M., Price, P. A., Pyo, T. -S., Sako, M., Okamoto, S., Sawicki, M., Shibuya, T., Shimasaku, K., Shimono, A., Shirasaki, M., Silverman, J. D., Simet, M., Speagle, J., Spergel, D. N., Strauss, M. A., Sugahara, Y., Sugiyama, N., Suto, Y., Suyu, S. H., Suzuki, N., Tait, P. J., Takata, T., Takada, M., Tamura, N., Tanaka, M. M., Tanaka, M., Tanaka, Y., Terai, T., Terashima, Y., Toba, Y., Toshikawa, J., Turner, E. L., Uchida, T., Uchiyama, H., Umetsu, K., Uraguchi, F., Urata, Y., Usuda, T., Utsumi, Y., Wang, S. -Y., Wang, W. -H., Wong, K. C., Yabe, K., Yamada, Y., Yamanoi, H., Yasuda, N., Yeh, S., Yonehara, A., and Yuma, S.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) is a wide-field imaging camera on the prime focus of the 8.2m Subaru telescope on the summit of Maunakea in Hawaii. A team of scientists from Japan, Taiwan and Princeton University is using HSC to carry out a 300-night multi-band imaging survey of the high-latitude sky. The survey includes three layers: the Wide layer will cover 1400 deg$^2$ in five broad bands ($grizy$), with a $5\,\sigma$ point-source depth of $r \approx 26$. The Deep layer covers a total of 26~deg$^2$ in four fields, going roughly a magnitude fainter, while the UltraDeep layer goes almost a magnitude fainter still in two pointings of HSC (a total of 3.5 deg$^2$). Here we describe the instrument, the science goals of the survey, and the survey strategy and data processing. This paper serves as an introduction to a special issue of the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, which includes a large number of technical and scientific papers describing results from the early phases of this survey., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables. Corrected for a typo in the coordinates of HSC-Wide spring equatorial field in Table 5
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- 2017
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46. Summer High-Altitude Diurnal Rainfall Change in the Three Rivers Source Region and Associated Mechanism.
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Zhao, Lin, Meng, Xianhong, Wang, S.-Y. Simon, Li, Zhaoguo, Chen, Hao, Shang, Lunyu, Yang, Xianyu, Wang, Shaoying, Shu, Lele, and Ma, Di
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VERTICAL motion ,RAINFALL ,WATER supply ,TROPOSPHERE ,THERMODYNAMICS - Abstract
The Tibetan Plateau (TP), a crucial area influencing global climatic patterns and water resources, is experiencing a unique climatic paradox, particularly evident in the Three Rivers Source Region (TRSR). A striking summer asymmetry in the increases of near-surface temperature and precipitation is observed from 1989 to 2018: the rate of daily minimum temperature (0.64°C decade−1) surpasses the daily maximum temperature (0.52°C decade−1), while the daytime precipitation intensity (0.40 mm day−1 decade−1) increases at a faster rate compared to nighttime (0.30 mm day−1 decade−1). Despite these trends, the summer mean nighttime precipitation intensity consistently remains higher than the daytime average. Notably, this pattern is accompanied by an increasing trend of moisture transport during both daytime and nighttime in TRSR. This paper deciphers the thermodynamic and dynamic processes behind this trend. The daytime warmth not only alters the stability of atmosphere but also modulates convective inhibition (CIN), thereby reshaping precipitation mechanics and potentially dampening or delaying daytime convection. Thermodynamically, a shift from unstable to stable anomalies in the summer troposphere suppresses precipitation development. The combination of increased CIN during those period leads to fewer but more intense rainy days. Dynamically, the shift from a consistent downward motion anomaly throughout troposphere to an upward motion anomaly becomes dominant during nighttime, exhibiting a similar transition but only below 500 hPa during daytime. These findings reveal the complex interplay between thermodynamics, dynamics, and precipitation, highlighting the need for refined climatic models that can accurately simulate these summer diurnal processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. An efficient face and mask detection by embedded device via thermal imaging camera.
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Wu, R C, Xu, H W, and Wang, S Y
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- 2024
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48. Precipitation of Auroral Electrons Accelerated at Very High Altitudes: Impact on the Ionosphere and a Possible Acceleration Mechanism.
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Imajo, S., Miyoshi, Y., Kazama, Y., Asamura, K., Shinohara, I., Shiokawa, K., Kasahara, Y., Kasaba, Y., Matsuoka, A., Wang, S.‐Y., Tam, S. W. Y., Chang, T.‐F., Wang, B.‐J., Jun, C.‐W., Teramoto, M., Kurita, S., Tsuchiya, F., Kumamoto, A., Saito, K., and Hori, T.
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ELECTRON distribution ,AURORAS ,ION beams ,ELECTRIC fields ,MAGNETOSPHERE - Abstract
The Arase satellite observed the precipitation of monoenergetic electrons accelerated from a very high altitude above 32,000 km altitude on 16 September 2017. The event was selected in the period when the high‐angular resolution channel of the electron detector looked at pitch angles within ∼5° from the ambient magnetic field direction, and thereby was the first to examine the detailed distribution of electron flux near the energy‐dependent loss cone at such high altitudes. The potential energy below the satellite estimated from the observed energy‐dependence of the loss cone was consistent with the energy of the upgoing ion beams, indicating that ionospheric ions were accelerated by a lower‐altitude acceleration region. The accelerated electrons inside the loss cone carried a significant net field‐aligned current (FAC) density corresponding to ionospheric‐altitude FAC of up to ∼3μA/m2. Based on the anisotropy of the accelerated electrons, we estimated the height of the upper boundary of the acceleration region to be >∼2 RE above the satellite. The height distribution of the acceleration region below the satellite, estimated from the frequency of auroral kilometric radiation, was ∼4,000–13,000 km altitude, suggesting that the very‐high‐altitude acceleration region was separated from the lower acceleration region. Additionally, we observed time domain structure (TDS) electric fields on a subsecond time scale with a thin FAC indicated by magnetic deflections. Such a TDS may be generated by the formation of double layers in the magnetotail, and its potential drop could significantly contribute (∼40%–60%) to the parallel energization of precipitating auroral electrons. Plain Language Summary: The auroral arc is produced by electrons in the magnetosphere accelerated downward by a quasi‐static electric field. The region of the electric field, so called the auroral acceleration region, is typically located just above the ionosphere, at altitudes of a few thousand kilometers. However, recent studies have shown that it can be extended to altitudes higher than 30,000 km. The mechanism and impact of such a very‐high‐altitude acceleration region remain a mystery. The high‐angular resolution electron detector on board the Arase satellite successfully measured current and energy flows carried by the electron accelerated at the very‐high‐altitude acceleration region above the satellite altitude of 32,000 km. This acceleration at very‐high‐altitudes contributed significantly to the energy flow into the ionosphere. Based on the anisotropy of the accelerated electrons, the frequency of auroral kilometric radiation, and the presence of spiky electrostatic waves, we estimate that the very‐high‐altitude acceleration region was located more than 12,000 km above the satellite as a thin charge separation layer, apart from the acceleration region below the satellite. Our results suggest that localized electric fields at very high altitudes, which were not previously associated with the aurora, can energize auroral electrons and affect auroral visibility. Key Points: We comprehensively analyzed a very‐high‐altitude (>32,000 km) auroral acceleration eventNet precipitation of accelerated electrons significantly contributes to the field‐aligned current and energy flux into the ionosphereDouble layers in the magnetotail are possible candidates for very‐high‐altitude auroral accelerations [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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49. Can we rely on drought‐ending “miracles” in the Colorado River Basin?
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Pokharel, Binod, primary, Jagannathan, Kripa Akila, additional, Wang, S.‐Y. Simon, additional, Jones, Andrew, additional, LaPlante, Matthew D., additional, Buddhavarapu, Smitha, additional, Borhara, Krishna, additional, Ulrich, Paul, additional, Leung, Lai‐Yung Ruby, additional, Eklund, James, additional, Hasenyager, Candice, additional, Serago, Jake, additional, Prairie, James R., additional, Kaatz, Laurna, additional, Winchell, Taylor, additional, and Kugel, Frank, additional
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- 2024
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50. First observation of band structure in As76 : Possible chirality and octupole correlations
- Author
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Xu, W. Z., primary, Sun, D. P., additional, Wang, S. Y., additional, Bark, R. A., additional, Hua, H., additional, Meng, J., additional, Zhang, S. Q., additional, Jones, P., additional, Wyngaardt, S. M., additional, Liu, C., additional, Wang, S., additional, Li, G. Y., additional, Mu, L., additional, Bai, H. F., additional, Xiao, X., additional, Li, Z. Q., additional, Zhang, N. B., additional, Jia, H., additional, Guo, R. J., additional, Han, X. C., additional, Qi, B., additional, Niu, C. Y., additional, Wang, C. G., additional, Lawrie, E. A., additional, Lawrie, J. J., additional, Sharpey-Schafer, J. F., additional, Wiedeking, M., additional, Majola, S. N. T., additional, Bucher, T. D., additional, Dinoko, T., additional, Maqabuka, B., additional, Makhathini, L., additional, Mdletshe, L., additional, Khumalo, N. A., additional, Shirinda, O., additional, and Sowazi, K., additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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