12,790 results on '"BROWN, PETER"'
Search Results
202. Water Provision in Early Islamic Cities: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Urban Water Governance
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Brown, Peter J., van Berkel, Maaike, Wheeler, Bonnie, Series Editor, Rose, Els, editor, Flierman, Robert, editor, and de Bruin-van de Beek, Merel, editor
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- 2024
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203. The Study of Elites in Late Antiquity
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Brown, Peter
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- 2000
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204. The Origin and Evolution of the Normal Type Ia SN 2018aoz with Infant-phase Reddening and Excess Emission
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Ni, Yuan Qi, Moon, Dae-Sik, Drout, Maria R, Polin, Abigail, Sand, David J, González-Gaitán, Santiago, Kim, Sang Chul, Lee, Youngdae, Park, Hong Soo, Howell, D Andrew, Nugent, Peter E, Piro, Anthony L, Brown, Peter J, Galbany, Lluís, Burke, Jamison, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Valenti, Stefano, Afsariardchi, Niloufar, Andrews, Jennifer E, Antoniadis, John, Beaton, Rachael L, Bostroem, K Azalee, Carlberg, Raymond G, Cenko, S Bradley, Cha, Sang-Mok, Dong, Yize, Gal-Yam, Avishay, Haislip, Joshua, Holoien, Thomas W-S, Johnson, Sean D, Kouprianov, Vladimir, Lee, Yongseok, Matzner, Christopher D, Morrell, Nidia, McCully, Curtis, Pignata, Giuliano, Reichart, Daniel E, Rich, Jeffrey, Ryder, Stuart D, Smith, Nathan, Wyatt, Samuel, and Yang, Sheng
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Space Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Binary stars ,Supernovae ,Type Ia supernovae ,White dwarf stars ,Transient sources ,Time domain astronomy ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
SN 2018aoz is a Type Ia SN with a B-band plateau and excess emission in infant-phase light curves ≲1 day after the first light, evidencing an over-density of surface iron-peak elements as shown in our previous study. Here, we advance the constraints on the nature and origin of SN 2018aoz based on its evolution until the nebular phase. Near-peak spectroscopic features show that the SN is intermediate between two subtypes of normal Type Ia: core normal and broad line. The excess emission may be attributable to the radioactive decay of surface iron-peak elements as well as the interaction of ejecta with either the binary companion or a small torus of circumstellar material. Nebular-phase limits on Hα and He i favor a white dwarf companion, consistent with the small companion size constrained by the low early SN luminosity, while the absence of [O i] and He i disfavors a violent merger of the progenitor. Of the two main explosion mechanisms proposed to explain the distribution of surface iron-peak elements in SN 2018aoz, the asymmetric Chandrasekhar-mass explosion is less consistent with the progenitor constraints and the observed blueshifts of nebular-phase [Fe ii] and [Ni ii]. The helium-shell double-detonation explosion is compatible with the observed lack of C spectral features, but current 1D models are incompatible with the infant-phase excess emission, B max - V max color, and weak strength of nebular-phase [Ca ii]. Although the explosion processes of SN 2018aoz still need to be more precisely understood, the same processes could produce a significant fraction of Type Ia SNe that appear to be normal after ∼1 day.
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- 2023
205. Artificial Intelligence Assisted Inversion (AIAI): Quantifying the Spectral Features of $^{56}$Ni of Type Ia Supernovae
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Chen, Xingzhuo, Wang, Lifan, Hu, Lei, and Brown, Peter J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Following our previous study of Artificial Intelligence Assisted Inversion (AIAI) of supernova analyses (Chen et al. 2020), we train a set of deep neural networks based on the one-dimensional radiative transfer code TARDIS (Kerzendorf & Sim 2014) to simulate the optical spectra of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) between 10 and 40 days after the explosion. The neural networks are applied to derive the mass of 56Ni in velocity ranges well above the photosphere for a sample of 153 well-observed SNe Ia. Many SNe have multi-epoch observations for which the decay of the radioactive 56Ni can be tested quantitatively. The 56Ni mass derived from AIAI using the observed spectra as input for the sample is found to agree with the theoretical 56Ni decay rate. The AIAI reveals a spectral signature near 3890 \AA which can be identified as being produced by multiple Ni II lines between 3950 and 4100 \AA. The mass deduced from AIAI is correlated to the light-curve shapes of SNe Ia, with the SNe Ia with broader light curves showing larger 56Ni mass in the envelope. AIAI enables spectral data of SNe to be quantitatively analyzed under theoretical frameworks based on well-defined physical assumptions., Comment: DLTD, Corrected typos, deleted unnecessary figures
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- 2022
206. Using 1991T/1999aa-like Type Ia Supernovae as Standardizable Candles
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Yang, Jiawen, Wang, Lifan, Suntzeff, Nicholas, Hu, Lei, Aldoroty, Lauren, Brown, Peter J., Krisciunas, Kevin, Arcavi, Iair, Burke, Jamison, Galbany, Lluís, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Howell, D. Andrew, McCully, Curtis, Pellegrino, Craig, and Valenti, Stefano
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the photometry of 16 91T/99aa-like Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) observed by the Las Cumbres Observatory. We also use an additional set of 21 91T/99aa-like SNe Ia and 87 normal SNe Ia from the literature for an analysis of the standardizability of the luminosity of 91T/99aa-like SNe. We find that 91T/99aa-like SNe are 0.2 mag brighter than normal SNe Ia, even when fully corrected by the light curve shapes and colors. The weighted root-mean-square of 91T/99aa-like SNe (with $z_{CMB}>0.01$) Hubble residuals is $0.25\pm0.03$ mag, suggesting that 91T/99aa-like SNe are also excellent relative distance indicators to $\pm$12%. We compare the Hubble residuals with the pseudo-equivalent width (pEW) of Si II $\lambda\lambda$6355 around the date of maximum brightness. We find that there is a broken linear correlation in between those two measurements for our sample including both 91T/99aa-like and normal SNe Ia. As the $pEW_{max}$(Si II $\lambda\lambda$6355) increasing, the Hubble residual increases when $pEW_{max}$(Si II $\lambda\lambda$6355)$<55.6$ \r{A}. However, the Hubble residual stays constant beyond this. Given that 91T/99aa-like SNe possess shallower Si II lines than normal SNe Ia, the linear correlation at $pEW_{max}$(Si II $\lambda\lambda$6355)$<55.6$ \r{A} can account for the overall discrepancy of Hubble residuals derived from the two subgroups. Such a systematic effect needs to be taken into account when using SNe Ia to measure luminosity distances., Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, 10 tables, Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2022
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207. Preatmospheric detection of a meter-sized Earth impactor
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Clark, David L., Wiegert, Paul A., Brown, Peter G., Vida, Denis, Heinze, Aren, and Denneau, Larry
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
On 2020 September 18 US Government sensors detected a bolide with peak bolometric magnitude of -19 over the western Pacific. The impact was also detected by the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) instrument on the GOES-17 satellite and infrasound sensors in Hawaii. The USG measurements reported a steep entry angle of $67^{\circ}$ from horizontal from a radiant $13^{\circ}$ E of N and an impact speed of 11.7 km s$^{-1}$. Interpretation of all energy yields produces a preferred energy estimate of 0.4 kt TNT, corresponding to a $23000$ kilogram $3$ meter diameter meteoroid. A post-impact search of telescopic images found that the ATLAS survey captured the object just 10 minutes prior to impact at an Earth-centred distance of nearly $11900$ kilometers with apparent magnitude $m\text{=}12.5$. The object appears as a $0.44^{\circ}$ streak originating on the eastern edge of the image extending one-third of the USG state vector-based prediction of $1.26^{\circ}$ over the 30 second exposure. The streak shows brightness variability consistent with small asteroid rotation. The position of Earth's shadow, the object's size, and its consistency with the reported USG state vector confirm the object is likely natural. This is the eighth preatmospheric detection of a Near-Earth Asteroid (NEA) impactor and the closest initial telescopic detection prior to impact. The high altitude of peak fireball brightness suggest it was a weak object comparable in many respects with 2008 TC3 (Almahata Sitta meteorite), with absolute magnitude $H=32.5$ and likely low albedo. Therefore we suggest the NEA was a C-complex asteroid., Comment: 26 pages, 11 figures. This article has been submitted for publication in The Planetary Science Journal
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- 2022
208. Microscopic motility of isolated E. coli flagella
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Djutanta, Franky, Brown, Peter T., Nainggolan, Bonfilio, Coullomb, Alexis, Radhakrishnan, Sritharini, Sentosa, Jason, Yurke, Bernard, Hariadi, Rizal F., and Shepherd, Douglas P.
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Physics - Biological Physics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
The fluctuation-dissipation theorem describes the intimate connection between the Brownian diffusion of thermal particles and their drag coefficients. In the simple case of spherical particles, it takes the form of the Stokes-Einstein relationship that links the particle geometry, fluid viscosity, and diffusive behavior. However, studying the fundamental properties of microscopic asymmetric particles, such as the helical-shaped propeller used by $\textit{E. coli}$, has remained out of reach for experimental approaches due to the need to quantify correlated translation and rotation simultaneously with sufficient spatial and temporal resolution. To solve this outstanding problem, we generated volumetric movies of fluorophore-labeled, freely diffusing, isolated $\textit{E. Coli}$ flagella using oblique plane microscopy. From these movies, we extracted trajectories and determined the hydrodynamic propulsion matrix directly from the diffusion of flagella via a generalized Einstein relation. Our results validate prior proposals, based on macroscopic wire helices and low Reynolds number scaling laws, that the average flagellum is a highly inefficient propeller. Specifically, we found the maximum propulsion efficiency of flagella is less than 5%. Beyond extending Brownian motion analysis to asymmetric 3D particles, our approach opens new avenues to study the propulsion matrix of particles in complex environments where direct hydrodynamic approaches are not feasible., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 9 supplemental sections, 7 supplemental figures, 3 supplemental movies *authors contributed equally and reserve the right to change order for first authorship
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- 2022
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209. Men treated with BEACOPP for Hodgkin lymphoma may be at increased risk of testosterone deficiency
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Micas Pedersen, Signe, Feltoft, Claus Larsen, Nielsen, Torsten Holm, de Nully Brown, Peter, Gang, Anne Ortved, Pedersen, Lars Møller, and Jørgensen, Niels
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- 2024
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210. The Rise and Function of the Holy Man in Late Antiquity, 1971-1997
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Brown, Peter Robert Lamont
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- 1998
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211. The origin and evolution of the normal Type Ia SN 2018aoz with infant-phase reddening and excess emission
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Ni, Yuan Qi, Moon, Dae-Sik, Drout, Maria R., Polin, Abigail, Sand, David J., GonzÁlez-GaitÁn, Santiago, Kim, Sang Chul, Lee, Youngdae, Park, Hong Soo, Howell, D. Andrew, Nugent, Peter E., Piro, Anthony L., Brown, Peter J., Galbany, LluÍs, Burke, Jamison, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Valenti, Stefano, Afsariardchi, Niloufar, Andrews, Jennifer E., Antoniadis, John, Beaton, Rachael L., Bostroem, K. Azalee, Carlberg, Raymond G., Cenko, S. Bradley, Cha, Sang-Mok, Dong, Yize, Gal-Yam, Avishay, Haislip, Joshua, Holoien, Thomas W. -S., Johnson, Sean D., Kouprianov, Vladimir, Lee, Yongseok, Matzner, Christopher D., Morrell, Nidia, Mccully, Curtis, Pignata, Giuliano, Reichart, Daniel E., Rich, Jeffrey, Ryder, Stuart D., Smith, Nathan, Wyatt, Samuel, and Yang, Sheng
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
SN~2018aoz is a Type Ia SN with a $B$-band plateau and excess emission in the infant-phase light curves $\lesssim$ 1 day after first light, evidencing an over-density of surface iron-peak elements as shown in our previous study. Here, we advance the constraints on the nature and origin of SN~2018aoz based on its evolution until the nebular phase. Near-peak spectroscopic features show the SN is intermediate between two subtypes of normal Type Ia: Core-Normal and Broad-Line. The excess emission could have contributions from the radioactive decay of surface iron-peak elements as well as ejecta interaction with either the binary companion or a small torus of circumstellar material. Nebular-phase limits on H$\alpha$ and He~I favour a white dwarf companion, consistent with the small companion size constrained by the low early SN luminosity, while the absence of [O~I] and He~I disfavours a violent merger of the progenitor. Of the two main explosion mechanisms proposed to explain the distribution of surface iron-peak elements in SN~2018aoz, the asymmetric Chandrasekhar-mass explosion is less consistent with the progenitor constraints and the observed blueshifts of nebular-phase [Fe~II] and [Ni~II]. The helium-shell double-detonation explosion is compatible with the observed lack of C spectral features, but current 1-D models are incompatible with the infant-phase excess emission, $B_{\rm max}-V_{\rm max}$ color, and absence of nebular-phase [Ca~II]. Although the explosion processes of SN~2018aoz still need to be more precisely understood, the same processes could produce a significant fraction of Type Ia SNe that appear normal after $\sim$ 1 day., Comment: Submitted for publication in ApJ. 35 pages, 16 figures, 7 tables
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- 2022
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212. Computing optical meteor flux using Global Meteor Network data
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Vida, Denis, Erskine, Rhiannon C. Blaauw, Brown, Peter G., Kambulow, Jonathon, Campbell-Brown, Margaret, and Mazur, Michael J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
Meteor showers and their outbursts are the dominant source of meteoroid impact risk to spacecraft on short time scales. Meteor shower prediction models depend on historical observations to produce accurate forecasts. However, the current lack of quality and persistent world-wide monitoring at optical meteoroid sizes has left some recent major outbursts poorly observed. A novel method of computing meteor shower flux is developed and applied to Global Meteor Network data. The method is verified against previously published observations of the Perseids and the Geminids. The complete mathematical and algorithmic details of computing meteor shower fluxes from video observations are described. As an example application of our approach, the flux measurements of the 2021 Perseid outburst, the 2020-2022 Quadrantids, and 2020-2021 Geminids are presented. The flux of the 2021 Perseids reached similar levels to the 1991-1994 and 2016 outbursts (ZHR $\sim$ 280). The flux of the Quadrantids shows high year-to-year variability in the core of the stream while the longer lasting background activity is less variable, consistent with an age difference between the two components. The Geminids show a double peak in flux near the time of peak., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 18 pages, 15 figures
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- 2022
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213. Observations of the Very Young Type Ia Supernova 2019np with Early-excess Emission
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Sai, Hanna, Wang, Xiaofeng, Elias-Rosa, Nancy, Yang, Yi, Zhang, Jujia, Lin, Weili, Mo, Jun, Piro, Anthony L., Zeng, Xiangyun, Andrea, Reguitti, Brown, Peter, Burns, Christopher R., Cai, Yongzhi, Fiore, Achille, Hsiao, Eric Y., Isern, Jordi, Itagaki, K., Li, Wenxiong, Li, Zhitong, Pessi, Priscila J., Phillips, M. M., Schuldt, Stefan, Shahbandeh, Melissa, Stritzinger, Maximilian D., Tomasella, Lina, Vogl, Christian, Wang, Bo, Wang, Lingzhi, Wu, Chengyuan, Yang, Sheng, Zhang, Jicheng, Zhang, Tianmeng, and Zhang, Xinghan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Early-time radiative signals from type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) can provide important constraints on the explosion mechanism and the progenitor system. We present observations and analysis of SN 2019np, a nearby SN Ia discovered within 1-2 days after the explosion. Follow-up observations were conducted in optical, ultraviolet, and near-infrared bands, covering the phases from $\sim-$16.7 days to $\sim$+367.8 days relative to its $B-$band peak luminosity. The photometric and spectral evolutions of SN 2019np resembles the average behavior of normal SNe Ia. The absolute B-band peak magnitude and the post-peak decline rate are $M_{\rm max}(B)=-19.52 \pm 0.47$mag and $\Delta m_{\rm15}(B) =1.04 \pm 0.04$mag, respectively. No Hydrogen line has been detected in the near-infrared and nebular-phase spectra of SN 2019np. Assuming that the $^{56}$Ni powering the light curve is centrally located, we find that the bolometric light curve of SN 2019np shows a flux excess up to 5.0% in the early phase compared to the radiative diffusion model. Such an extra radiation perhaps suggests the presence of an additional energy source beyond the radioactive decay of central nickel. Comparing the observed color evolution with that predicted by different models such as interactions of SN ejecta with circumstellar matter (CSM)/companion star, a double-detonation explosion from a sub-Chandrasekhar mass white dwarf (WD), and surface $^{56}$Ni mixing, the latter one is favored., Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2022
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214. Malaria and Rome: A History of Malaria in Ancient Italy (review)
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Brown, Peter J
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- 2004
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215. To the Editors
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Brown, Peter B.
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- 2014
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216. Rental analysis and valuation
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Bond, Patrick H., primary and Brown, Peter K., additional
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- 2023
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217. Rating administration, collection and enforcement
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Bond, Patrick H., primary and Brown, Peter K., additional
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- 2023
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218. The valuation of offices
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Bond, Patrick H., primary and Brown, Peter K., additional
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- 2023
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219. The rateable occupier
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Bond, Patrick H., primary and Brown, Peter K., additional
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- 2023
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220. Tight analytic bound on the trade-off between device-independent randomness and nonlocality
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Wooltorton, Lewis, Brown, Peter, and Colbeck, Roger
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Quantum Physics - Abstract
Two parties sharing entangled quantum systems can generate correlations that cannot be produced using only shared classical resources. These nonlocal correlations are a fundamental feature of quantum theory but also have practical applications. For instance, they can be used for device-independent (DI) random number generation, whose security is certified independently of the operations performed inside the devices. The amount of certifiable randomness that can be generated from some given non-local correlations is a key quantity of interest. Here we derive tight analytic bounds on the maximum certifiable randomness as a function of the nonlocality as expressed using the Clauser-Horne-Shimony-Holt (CHSH) value. We show that for every CHSH value greater than the local value ($2$) and up to $3\sqrt{3}/2\approx2.598$ there exist quantum correlations with that CHSH value that certify a maximal two bits of global randomness. Beyond this CHSH value the maximum certifiable randomness drops. We give a second family of Bell inequalities for CHSH values above $3\sqrt{3}/2$, and show that they certify the maximum possible randomness for the given CHSH value. Our work hence provides an achievable upper bound on the amount of randomness that can be certified for any CHSH value. We illustrate the robustness of our results, and how they could be used to improve randomness generation rates in practice, using a Werner state noise model., Comment: 4+16 pages, 2 figures v2: minor updates
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- 2022
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221. Connecting Infrared Surface Brightness Fluctuation Distances to Type Ia Supernova Hosts: Testing the Top Rung of the Distance Ladder
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Garnavich, Peter, Wood, Charlotte M., Milne, Peter, Jensen, Joseph B., Blakeslee, John P., Brown, Peter J., Scolnic, Daniel, Rose, Benjamin, and Brout, Dillon
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
We compare infrared surface brightness fluctuation (IR SBF) distances measured in galaxies that have hosted type Ia supernovae (SNIa) to distances estimated from SNIa light curve fits. We show that the properties of SNIa found in IR SBF hosts are very different from those exploding in Cepheid calibrators, therefore, this is a direct test of systematic uncertainties on estimation of the Hubble constant (Ho) using supernovae. The IR SBF results from Jensen et al. (2021; arXiv:2105.08299) provide a large and uniformly measured sample of IR SBF distances which we directly compare with distances to 25 SNIa host galaxies. We divide the Hubble flow SNIa into sub-samples that best match the divergent supernova properties seen in the IR SBF hosts and Cepheid hosts. We further divide the SNIa into a sample with light curve widths and host masses that are congruent to those found in the SBF-calibrated hosts. We refit the light curve stretch and color correlations with luminosity, and use these revised parameters to calibrate the Hubble flow supernovae with IR SBF calibrators. Relative to the Hubble flow, the average calibrator distance moduli vary by 0.03mag depending on the SNIa subsamples examined and this adds a 1.8% systematic uncertainty to our Hubble constant estimate. Based on the IR SBF calibrators, Ho=74.6$\pm$0.9(stat)$\pm$ 2.7(syst) km/s/Mpc, which is consistent with the Hubble constant derived from supernovae calibrated from Cepheid variables. We conclude that IR SBF provides reliable calibration of SNIa with a precision comparable to Cepheid calibrators, and with a significant saving in telescope time., Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2022
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222. Comparisons of Type Ia Supernova Light Curves in the UV and Optical with the Swift Ultra-Violet/Optical Telescope
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Devarakonda, Yaswant and Brown, Peter J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We examine the light curve parameters of 97 nearby Type Ia supernovae in the ultraviolet and optical using observations from the Swift Ultra-Violet/Optical Telescope. Our light curve models used a linear combinations of templates, which were based on Functional Principal Component Analysis of the optical photometry of SNe Ia. The weights for each principal component used in the fit capture certain aspects of the light curve properties. We find that there is little difference in the overall variability of principal component scores across filters. We also find correlations between certain filters and PC components, indicating that the UV and optical properties seem to be tied together. This is a promising step in UV SNe Ia analysis, and suggests that UV light curves may be used to infer optical properties, paving the way for future cosmological studies., Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in AJ
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- 2022
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223. Weak Mass Loss from the Red Supergiant Progenitor of the Type II SN 2021yja
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Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Kilpatrick, Charles D., Dong, Yize, Sand, David J., Andrews, Jennifer E., Bostroem, K. Azalee, Janzen, Daryl, Jencson, Jacob E., Lundquist, Michael, Retamal, Nicolas E. Meza, Pearson, Jeniveve, Valenti, Stefano, Wyatt, Samuel, Burke, Jamison, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Howell, D. Andrew, McCully, Curtis, Newsome, Megan, Gonzalez, Estefania Padilla, Pellegrino, Craig, Terreran, Giacomo, Auchettl, Katie, Davis, Kyle W., Foley, Ryan J., Miao, Hao-Yu, Pan, Yen-Chen, Rest, Armin, Siebert, Matthew R., Taggart, Kirsty, Tucker, Brad E., Leung, Feng Lin Cyrus, Swift, Jonathan J., Yang, Grace, Anderson, Joseph P., Ashall, Chris, Benetti, Stefano, Brown, Peter J., Cartier, Régis, Chen, Ting-Wan, Della Valle, Massimo, Galbany, Lluís, Gomez, Sebastian, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Haislip, Joshua, Hsiao, Eric Y., Inserra, Cosimo, Jha, Saurabh W., Killestein, Thomas L., Kouprianov, Vladimir, Kozyreva, Alexandra, Müller-Bravo, Tomás E., Nicholl, Matt, Paraskeva, Emmy, Reichart, Daniel E., Ryder, Stuart, Shahbandeh, Melissa, Shappee, Ben, Smith, Nathan, and Young, David R.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-cadence optical, ultraviolet (UV), and near-infrared data of the nearby ($D\approx23$ Mpc) Type II supernova (SN) 2021yja. Many Type II SNe show signs of interaction with circumstellar material (CSM) during the first few days after explosion, implying that their red supergiant (RSG) progenitors experience episodic or eruptive mass loss. However, because it is difficult to discover SNe early, the diversity of CSM configurations in RSGs has not been fully mapped. SN 2021yja, first detected within ${\approx}5.4$ hours of explosion, shows some signatures of CSM interaction (high UV luminosity, radio and x-ray emission) but without the narrow emission lines or early light curve peak that can accompany CSM. Here we analyze the densely sampled early light curve and spectral series of this nearby SN to infer the properties of its progenitor and CSM. We find that the most likely progenitor was an RSG with an extended envelope, encompassed by low-density CSM. We also present archival Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the host galaxy of SN 2021yja, which allows us to place a stringent upper limit of ${\lesssim}9\ M_\odot$ on the progenitor mass. However, this is in tension with some aspects of the SN evolution, which point to a more massive progenitor. Our analysis highlights the need to consider progenitor structure when making inferences about CSM properties, and that a comprehensive view of CSM tracers should be made to give a fuller view of the last years of RSG evolution., Comment: updated to match accepted version
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- 2022
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224. Early-Time Ultraviolet Spectroscopy and Optical Follow-up Observations of the Type IIP Supernova 2021yja
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Vasylyev, Sergiy S., Filippenko, Alexei V., Vogl, Christian, Brink, Thomas G., Brown, Peter J., de Jaeger, Thomas, Matheson, Thomas, Gal-Yam, Avishay, Mazzali, Paolo A., Modjaz, Maryam, Patra, Kishore C., Rowe, Micalyn, Smith, Nathan, Van Dyk, Schuyler D., Williamson, Marc, Yang, Yi, Zheng, WeiKang, deGraw, Asia, Fox, Ori D., Gates, Elinor L., Jennings, Connor, and Rich, R. Michael
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present three epochs of early-time ultraviolet (UV) and optical HST/STIS spectroscopy of the young, nearby Type IIP supernova (SN) 2021yja. We complement the HST data with two earlier epochs of Swift UVOT spectroscopy. The HST and Swift UVOT spectra are consistent with those of other well-studied Type IIP supernovae (SNe). The UV spectra exhibit rapid cooling at early times, while less dramatic changes are seen in the optical. We also present Lick/KAIT optical photometry up to the late-time-tail phase, showing a very long plateau and shallow decline compared with other SNe IIP. Our modeling of the UV spectrum with the TARDIS radiative-transfer code produces a good fit for a high-velocity explosion, a low total extinction $E(B-V) = 0.07$ mag, and a subsolar metallicity. We do not find a significant contribution to the UV flux from an additional heating source, such as interaction with the circumstellar medium, consistent with the observed flat plateau. Furthermore, the velocity width of the Mg II $\lambda$2798 line is comparable to that of the hydrogen Balmer lines, suggesting that the UV emission is confined to a region close to the photosphere., Comment: Accepted to ApJ
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- 2022
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225. Infant-phase reddening by surface Fe-peak elements in a normal Type Ia Supernova
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Ni, Yuan Qi, Moon, Dae-Sik, Drout, Maria R., Polin, Abigail, Sand, David J., Gonzalez-Gaitan, Santiago, Kim, Sang Chul, Lee, Youngdae, Park, Hong Soo, Howell, D. Andrew, Nugent, Peter E., Piro, Anthony L., Brown, Peter J., Galbany, Lluis, Burke, Jamison, Hiramatsu, Daichi, Hosseinzadeh, Griffin, Valenti, Stefano, Afsariardchi, Niloufar, Andrews, Jennifer E., Antoniadis, John, Arcavi, Iair, Beaton, Rachael L., Bostroem, K. Azalee, Carlberg, Raymond G., Cenko, S. Bradley, Cha, Sang-Mok, Dong, Yize, Gal-Yam, Avishay, Haislip, Joshua, Holoien, Thomas W. -S., Johnson, Sean D., Kouprianov, Vladimir, Lee, Yongseok, Matzner, Christopher D., Morrell, Nidia, McCully, Curtis, Pignata, Giuliano, Reichart, Daniel E., Rich, Jeffrey, Ryder, Stuart D., Smith, Nathan, Wyatt, Samuel, and Yang, Sheng
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Type Ia Supernovae are thermonuclear explosions of white dwarf stars. They play a central role in the chemical evolution of the Universe and are an important measure of cosmological distances. However, outstanding questions remain about their origins. Despite extensive efforts to obtain natal information from their earliest signals, observations have thus far failed to identify how the majority of them explode. Here, we present infant-phase detections of SN 2018aoz from a brightness of -10.5 absolute AB magnitudes -- the lowest luminosity early Type Ia signals ever detected -- revealing a hitherto unseen plateau in the $B$-band that results in a rapid redward color evolution between 1.0 and 12.4 hours after the estimated epoch of first light. The missing $B$-band flux is best-explained by line-blanket absorption from Fe-peak elements in the outer 1% of the ejected mass. The observed $B-V$ color evolution of the SN also matches the prediction from an over-density of Fe-peak elements in the same outer 1% of the ejected mass, whereas bluer colors are expected from a purely monotonic distribution of Fe-peak elements. The presence of excess nucleosynthetic material in the extreme outer layers of the ejecta points to enhanced surface nuclear burning or extended sub-sonic mixing processes in some normal Type Ia Supernova explosions., Comment: Accepted for publication in Nature Astronomy. Main text = 8 pages, 4 figures, 1 table; Full document = 46 pages, with Methods, Supplementary Information, 7 Supplementary figures, 2 Supplementary tables and references. Nat Astron (2022)
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- 2022
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226. The Pantheon+ Analysis: Cosmological Constraints
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Brout, Dillon, Scolnic, Dan, Popovic, Brodie, Riess, Adam G., Zuntz, Joe, Kessler, Rick, Carr, Anthony, Davis, Tamara M., Hinton, Samuel, Jones, David, Kenworthy, W. D'Arcy, Peterson, Erik R., Said, Khaled, Taylor, Georgie, Ali, Noor, Armstrong, Patrick, Charvu, Pranav, Dwomoh, Arianna, Palmese, Antonella, Qu, Helen, Rose, Benjamin M., Stubbs, Christopher W., Vincenzi, Maria, Wood, Charlotte M., Brown, Peter J., Chen, Rebecca, Chambers, Ken, Coulter, David A., Dai, Mi, Dimitriadis, Georgios, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Kelsey, Lisa, Kirshner, Robert P., Möller, Anais, Muir, Jessie, Nadathur, Seshadri, Pan, Yen-Chen, Rest, Armin, Rojas-Bravo, Cesar, Sako, Masao, Siebert, Matthew R., Smith, Mat, Stahl, Benjamin E., and Wiseman, Phil
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present constraints on cosmological parameters from the Pantheon+ analysis of 1701 light curves of 1550 distinct Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) ranging in redshift from $z=0.001$ to 2.26. This work features an increased sample size, increased redshift span, and improved treatment of systematic uncertainties in comparison to the original Pantheon analysis and results in a factor of two improvement in cosmological constraining power. For a Flat$\Lambda$CDM model, we find $\Omega_M=0.334\pm0.018$ from SNe Ia alone. For a Flat$w_0$CDM model, we measure $w_0=-0.90\pm0.14$ from SNe Ia alone, H$_0=73.5\pm1.1$ km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$ when including the Cepheid host distances and covariance (SH0ES), and $w_0=-0.978^{+0.024}_{-0.031}$ when combining the SN likelihood with constraints from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO); both $w_0$ values are consistent with a cosmological constant. We also present the most precise measurements to date on the evolution of dark energy in a Flat$w_0w_a$CDM universe, and measure $w_a=-0.1^{+0.9}_{-2.0}$ from Pantheon+ alone, H$_0=73.3\pm1.1$ km s$^{-1}$ Mpc$^{-1}$ when including SH0ES, and $w_a=-0.65^{+0.28}_{-0.32}$ when combining Pantheon+ with CMB and BAO data. Finally, we find that systematic uncertainties in the use of SNe Ia along the distance ladder comprise less than one third of the total uncertainty in the measurement of H$_0$ and cannot explain the present "Hubble tension" between local measurements and early-Universe predictions from the cosmological model., Comment: 34 Pages, 16 Figures, 7 Tables. Published in ApJ. Comments welcome. Papers and data release here: https://pantheonplussh0es.github.io
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- 2022
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227. Predictive multibody dynamic simulation of human neuromusculoskeletal systems: a review
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Febrer-Nafría, Míriam, Nasr, Ali, Ezati, Mahdokht, Brown, Peter, Font-Llagunes, Josep M., and McPhee, John
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- 2023
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228. The Pantheon+ Analysis: The Full Dataset and Light-Curve Release
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Scolnic, Dan, Brout, Dillon, Carr, Anthony, Riess, Adam G., Davis, Tamara M., Dwomoh, Arianna, Jones, David O., Ali, Noor, Charvu, Pranav, Chen, Rebecca, Peterson, Erik R., Popovic, Brodie, Rose, Benjamin M., Wood, Charlotte, Brown, Peter J., Chambers, Ken, Coulter, David A., Dettman, Kyle G., Dimitriadis, Georgios, Filippenko, Alexei V., Foley, Ryan J., Jha, Saurabh W., Kilpatrick, Charles D., Kirshner, Robert P., Pan, Yen-Chen, Rest, Armin, Rojas-Bravo, Cesar, Siebert, Matthew R., Stahl, Benjamin E., and Zheng, WeiKang
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we present 1701 light curves of 1550 spectroscopically confirmed Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) that will be used to infer cosmological parameters as part of the Pantheon+ SN analysis and the SH0ES (Supernovae and H0 for the Equation of State of dark energy) distance-ladder analysis. This effort is one part of a series of works that perform an extensive review of redshifts, peculiar velocities, photometric calibration, and intrinsic-scatter models of SNe Ia. The total number of light curves, which are compiled across 18 different surveys, is a significant increase from the first Pantheon analysis (1048 SNe), particularly at low redshift ($z$). Furthermore, unlike in the Pantheon analysis, we include light curves for SNe with $z<0.01$ such that SN systematic covariance can be included in a joint measurement of the Hubble constant (H$_0$) and the dark energy equation-of-state parameter ($w$). We use the large sample to compare properties of 151 SNe Ia observed by multiple surveys and 12 pairs/triplets of "SN siblings" - SNe found in the same host galaxy. Distance measurements, application of bias corrections, and inference of cosmological parameters are discussed in the companion paper by Brout et al. (2022b), and the determination of H$_0$ is discussed by Riess et al. (2022). These analyses will measure w with $\sim3\%$ precision and H$_0$ with 1 km/s/Mpc precision., Comment: Submitted to ApJL. Comments welcome. Papers and data release here: https://github.com/PantheonPlusSH0ES/PantheonPlusSH0ES.github.io
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- 2021
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229. Supernovae Shock Breakout/Emergence Detection Predictions for a Wide-Field X-ray Survey
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Bayless, Amanda J., Fryer, Chris, Brown, Peter J., Young, Patrick, Roming, Pete, Davis, Michael, Lechner, Thomas, Slocum, Samuel, Echon, Janie D., and Froning, Cynthia
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
There are currently many large-field surveys operational and planned including the powerful Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time. These surveys will increase the number and diversity of transients dramatically. However, for some transients, like supernovae (SNe), we can gain more understanding by directed observations (e.g. shock breakout, $\gamma$-ray detections) than by simply increasing the sample size. For example, the initial emission from these transients can be a powerful probe of these explosions. Upcoming ground-based detectors are not ideally suited to observe the initial emission (shock emergence) of these transients. These observations require a large field-of-view X-ray mission with a UV follow up within the first hour of shock breakout. The emission in the first one hour to even one day provides strong constraints on the stellar radius and asymmetries in the outer layers of stars, the properties of the circumstellar medium (e.g. inhomogeneities in the wind for core-collapse SNe, accreting companion in thermonuclear SNe), and the transition region between these two. This paper describes a simulation for the number of SNe that could be seen by a large field of view lobster eye X-ray and UV observatory., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2021
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230. Miscanthus for farm forestry
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Brown, Peter
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- 2014
231. The Zephyr
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Brown, Peter
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- 2014
232. Social capital enhances the resilience of agricultural cooperatives: Comparative case studies in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam
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Hua, Hieu Hong and Brown, Peter R.
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- 2024
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233. SN 2021csp -- the explosion of a stripped envelope star within a H and He-poor circumstellar medium
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Fraser, Morgan, Stritzinger, Maximilian D., Brennan, Sean J., Pastorello, Andrea, Cai, Yongzhi, Piro, Anthony L., Ashall, Chris, Brown, Peter, Burns, Christopher R., Elias-Rosa, Nancy, Kotak, Rubina, Filippenko, Alexei V., Galbany, L., Hsiao, E. Y., Jha, Saurabh W., Reguitti, Andrea, Zhang, Ju-jia, Moran, Shane, Morrell, Nidia, Shappee, B. J., Tomasella, Lina, Anderson, J. P., Barna, Tyler, Ochner, Paolo, Phillips, M. M., Tucker, Michael, Wang, Xiaofeng, Baron, E., Benetti, Stefano, Bersten, Melina C., Brink, Thomas G., Camacho-Neves, Yssavo, Davis, Scott, Dettman, Kyle G., Folatelli, Gaston, Gutierrez, Claudia P., Hoflich, Peter, Holoien, Thomas W. -S., Kankare, Erkki, Kumar, Sahana, Lu, Jing, Mazzali, Paolo, Taubenberger, Stefan, Tinyanont, Samaporn, Kuncarayakti, Hanindyo, Kwok, Lindsey, Shahbandeh, Melissa, Suntzeff, Nicholas B., Yan, Shengyu, Yang, Yi, and Zheng, WeiKang
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present observations of SN 2021csp, a unique supernova (SN) which displays evidence for interaction with H- and He- poor circumstellar material (CSM) at early times. Using high-cadence spectroscopy taken over the first week after explosion, we show that the spectra of SN 2021csp are dominated by C III lines with a velocity of 1800 km s$^{-1}$. We associate this emission with CSM lost by the progenitor prior to explosion. Subsequently, the SN displays narrow He lines before metamorphosing into a broad-lined Type Ic SN. We model the bolometric light curve of SN 2021csp, and show that it is consistent with the energetic ($4\times10^{51}$ erg) explosion of a stripped star, producing 0.4 M$_\odot$ of 56Ni within a $\sim$1 M$_\odot$ shell of CSM extending out to 400 R$_\odot$., Comment: 19 pg, submitted
- Published
- 2021
234. A conservative first-collision source treatment for ray effect mitigation in discrete-ordinate radiation transport solutions
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Christensen, Alex B., Kunen, Adam, Loffeld, John, Brown, Peter, and Fratoni, Massimiliano
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- 2024
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235. Sexual health and testosterone concentration in male lymphoma survivors: A systematic review
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Micas Pedersen, Signe, Hersby, Ditte Stampe, Jarden, Mary, Nielsen, Torsten Holm, Gang, Anne Ortved, Poulsen, Christian Bjørn, de Nully Brown, Peter, Jørgensen, Niels, Feltoft, Claus Larsen, and Pedersen, Lars Møller
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- 2024
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236. Inflammatory and subtype-dependent serum protein signatures predict survival beyond the ctDNA in aggressive B cell lymphomas
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Arffman, Maare, Meriranta, Leo, Autio, Matias, Holte, Harald, Jørgensen, Judit, Brown, Peter, Jyrkkiö, Sirkku, Jerkeman, Mats, Drott, Kristina, Fluge, Øystein, Björkholm, Magnus, Karjalainen-Lindsberg, Marja-Liisa, Beiske, Klaus, Pedersen, Mette Ølgod, Leivonen, Suvi-Katri, and Leppä, Sirpa
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- 2024
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237. The New South Wales Mouse Plague 2020-2021: A One Health description
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White, Jennifer, Taylor, Joanne, Brown, Peter R., Henry, Steve, Carter, Lucy, Mankad, Aditi, Chang, Wei-Shan, Stanley, Priscilla, Collins, Kerry, Durrheim, David N., and Thompson, Kirrilly
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- 2024
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238. An observational investigation of very low frequency radio emissions originating from meteors
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Vankawala, Paraksh M., Marshall, Robert A., Vida, Denis, and Brown, Peter
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- 2024
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239. Prognostic indices in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma: a population-based comparison and validation study of multiple models
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Jelicic, Jelena, Juul-Jensen, Karen, Bukumiric, Zoran, Roost Clausen, Michael, Ludvigsen Al-Mashhadi, Ahmed, Pedersen, Robert Schou, Poulsen, Christian Bjørn, Brown, Peter, El-Galaly, Tarec Christoffer, and Stauffer Larsen, Thomas
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- 2023
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240. Educational differences in healthcare use among survivors after breast, prostate, lung, and colon cancer – a SEQUEL cohort study
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Levinsen, Anne Katrine Graudal, Kjaer, Trille Kristina, Maltesen, Thomas, Jakobsen, Erik, Gögenur, Ismail, Borre, Michael, Christiansen, Peer, Zachariae, Robert, Laurberg, Søren, Christensen, Peter, Kroman, Niels, Larsen, Signe Benzon, Degett, Thea Helene, Hölmich, Lisbet Rosenkrantz, Brown, Peter de Nully, Johansen, Christoffer, Kjær, Susanne K., Thygesen, Lau Caspar, and Dalton, Susanne Oksbjerg
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- 2023
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241. Reference compounds for characterizing cellular injury in high-content cellular morphology assays
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Dahlin, Jayme L., Hua, Bruce K., Zucconi, Beth E., Nelson, Jr, Shawn D., Singh, Shantanu, Carpenter, Anne E., Shrimp, Jonathan H., Lima-Fernandes, Evelyne, Wawer, Mathias J., Chung, Lawrence P. W., Agrawal, Ayushi, O’Reilly, Mary, Barsyte-Lovejoy, Dalia, Szewczyk, Magdalena, Li, Fengling, Lak, Parnian, Cuellar, Matthew, Cole, Philip A., Meier, Jordan L., Thomas, Tim, Baell, Jonathan B., Brown, Peter J., Walters, Michael A., Clemons, Paul A., Schreiber, Stuart L., and Wagner, Bridget K.
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- 2023
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242. Innovation in the Philadelphia School System *
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Goldfarb, Lawrence, primary, Brown, Peter, additional, and Gallagher, Thomas, additional
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- 2023
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243. The Global Meteor Network -- Methodology and First Results
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Vida, Denis, Šegon, Damir, Gural, Peter S., Brown, Peter G., McIntyre, Mark J. M., Dijkema, Tammo Jan, Pavletić, Lovro, Kukić, Patrik, Mazur, Michael J., Eschman, Peter, Roggemans, Paul, Merlak, Aleksandar, and Zubović, Dario
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Global Meteor Network (GMN) utilizes highly sensitive low-cost CMOS video cameras which run open-source meteor detection software on Raspberry Pi computers. Currently, over 450 GMN cameras in 30 countries are deployed. The main goal of the network is to provide long-term characterization of the radiants, flux, and size distribution of annual meteor showers and outbursts in the optical meteor mass range. The rapid 24-hour publication cycle the orbital data will enhance the public situational awareness of the near-Earth meteoroid environment. The GMN also aims to increase the number of instrumentally observed meteorite falls and the transparency of data reduction methods. A novel astrometry calibration method is presented which allows decoupling of the camera pointing from the distortion, and is used for frequent pointing calibrations through the night. Using wide-field cameras ($88^{\circ}\times48^{\circ}$) with a limiting stellar magnitude of $+6.0 \pm 0.5$ at 25 frames per second, over 220,000 precise meteoroid orbits were collected since December 2018 until June 2021. The median radiant precision of all computed trajectories is $0.47^{\circ}$, $0.32^{\circ}$ for $\sim20\%$ of meteors which were observed from 4+ stations, a precision sufficient to measure physical dispersions of meteor showers. All non-daytime annual established meteor showers were observed during that time, including five outbursts. An analysis of a meteorite-dropping fireball is presented which showed visible wake, fragmentation details, and several discernible fragments. It had spatial trajectory fit errors of only ~40 m, which translated into the estimated radiant and velocity errors of 3 arc minutes and tens of meters per second., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 30 pages, 31 figures
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- 2021
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244. Radiative Transfer Modeling of An SN 1987A Light Echo$-$AT2019xis
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Ding, Jiachen, Wang, Lifan, Brown, Peter, and Yang, Ping
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We use a Monte Carlo radiative transfer model (MCRTM) to simulate the UBVRI light curves, images and linear polarization of a light echo from supernova SN$~$1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using various dust cloud shapes, sizes, and optical properties. We compare the theoretical simulations to the observations of AT2019xis, a light echo detected at a large angular distance (4.05$^{'}$) from SN$~$1987A. We estimate the size and optical thickness of the dust cloud based on the simulation results and the observations of Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE-IV) Transient Detection System (OTDS) I-band light curve. The mass of the dust cloud is calculated using the estimated size, optical thickness and extinction coefficient. If the dust cloud is assumed to correspond to a gas-to-dust ratio of 300, the total mass of the dust cloud is approximately 7.8-9.3 $M_{\odot}$. Based on these theoretical models, we show that the morphological shapes of the light echoes in the wavelength range in or shorter than the U-band to be very different from those in the longer wavelength bands, and the difference carries important information on the early UV radiation of SN$~$1987A., Comment: 21 pages, 20 figures, accepted to ApJ. Corrected several typos
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- 2021
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245. Device-independent lower bounds on the conditional von Neumann entropy
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Brown, Peter, Fawzi, Hamza, and Fawzi, Omar
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
The rates of several device-independent (DI) protocols, including quantum key-distribution (QKD) and randomness expansion (RE), can be computed via an optimization of the conditional von Neumann entropy over a particular class of quantum states. In this work we introduce a numerical method to compute lower bounds on such rates. We derive a sequence of optimization problems that converge to the conditional von Neumann entropy of systems defined on general separable Hilbert spaces. Using the Navascu\'es-Pironio-Ac\'in hierarchy we can then relax these problems to semidefinite programs, giving a computationally tractable method to compute lower bounds on the rates of DI protocols. Applying our method to compute the rates of DI-RE and DI-QKD protocols we find substantial improvements over all previous numerical techniques, demonstrating significantly higher rates for both DI-RE and DI-QKD. In particular, for DI-QKD we show a minimal detection efficiency threshold which is within the realm of current capabilities. Moreover, we demonstrate that our method is capable of converging rapidly by recovering all known tight analytical bounds up to several decimal places. Finally, we note that our method is compatible with the entropy accumulation theorem and can thus be used to compute rates of finite round protocols and subsequently prove their security., Comment: 21 (+11) pages, 4 (+2) figures. V2: improved numerics and restructured article. V3: Accepted in Quantum, minor changes
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- 2021
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246. SN 2015bf: a fast declining type II supernova with flash-ionised signatures
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Lin, Han, Wang, Xiaofeng, Zhang, Jujia, Lin, Weili, Mo, Jun, Filippenko, Alexei V., Zheng, WeiKang, Brown, Peter J., Xiang, Danfeng, Huang, Fang, Cai, Yongzhi, Zhang, Tianmeng, Li, Xue, Rui, Liming, Zhang, Xinghan, Sai, Hanna, Zhao, Xulin, Graham, Melissa L., Shivvers, I., Halevi, G., Yuk, H., and Brink, Thomas G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present optical and ultraviolet photometry, as well as optical spectra, for the type II supernova (SN) 2015bf. Our observations cover the phases from $\sim 2$ to $\sim 200$ d after explosion. The first spectrum is characterised by a blue continuum with a blackbody temperature of $\sim 24,000$K and flash-ionised emission lines. After about one week, the spectra of SN 2015bf evolve like those of a regular SN II. From the luminosity of the narrow emission component of H$\alpha$, we deduce that the mass-loss rate is larger than $\sim 3.7\times10^{-3}\,{\rm M_\odot\,yr^{-1}}$. The disappearance of the flash features in the first week after explosion indicates that the circumstellar material is confined within $\sim 6 \times 10^{14}$ cm. Thus, we suggest that the progenitor of SN 2015bf experienced violent mass loss shortly before the supernova explosion. The multiband light curves show that SN 2015bf has a high peak luminosity with an absolute visual magnitude $M_V = -18.11 \pm 0.08$ mag and a fast post-peak decline with a $V$-band decay of $1.22 \pm 0.09$ mag within $\sim 50$ d after maximum light. Moreover, the $R$-band tail luminosity of SN 2015bf is fainter than that of SNe~II with similar peak by 1--2 mag, suggesting a small amount of ${\rm ^{56}Ni}$ ($\sim 0.009\,{\rm M_\odot}$) synthesised during the explosion. Such a low nickel mass indicates that the progenitor of SN 2015bf could be a super-asymptotic-giant-branch star that collapsed owing to electron capture., Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2021
247. Infrared Surface Brightness Fluctuation Distances for MASSIVE and Type Ia Supernova Host Galaxies
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Jensen, Joseph B., Blakeslee, John P., Ma, Chung-Pei, Milne, Peter A., Brown, Peter J., Cantiello, Michele, Garnavich, Peter M., Greene, Jenny E., Lucey, John R., Phan, Anh, Tully, R. Brent, and Wood, Charlotte M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We measured high-quality surface brightness fluctuation (SBF) distances for a sample of 63 massive early-type galaxies using the WFC3/IR camera on the Hubble Space Telescope. The median uncertainty on the SBF distance measurements is 0.085 mag, or 3.9% in distance. Achieving this precision at distances of 50 to 100 Mpc required significant improvements to the SBF calibration and data analysis procedures for WFC3/IR data. Forty-two of the galaxies are from the MASSIVE Galaxy Survey, a complete sample of massive galaxies within ~100 Mpc; the SBF distances for these will be used to improve the estimates of the stellar and central supermassive black hole masses in these galaxies. Twenty-four of the galaxies are Type Ia supernova hosts, useful for calibrating SN Ia distances for early-type galaxies and exploring possible systematic trends in the peak luminosities. Our results demonstrate that the SBF method is a powerful and versatile technique for measuring distances to galaxies with evolved stellar populations out to 100 Mpc and constraining the local value of the Hubble constant., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series; 22 pages, 7 figures, with 61 additional figures to be published as an online figure set
- Published
- 2021
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248. The impact and recovery of asteroid 2018 LA
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Jenniskens, Peter, Gabadirwe, Mohutsiwa, Yin, Qing-Zhu, Proyer, Alexander, Moses, Oliver, Kohout, Tomas, Franchi, Fulvio, Gibson, Roger L., Kowalski, Richard, Christensen, Eric J., Gibbs, Alex R., Heinze, Aren, Denneau, Larry, Farnocchia, Davide, Chodas, Paul W., Gray, William, Micheli, Marco, Moskovitz, Nick, Onken, Christopher A., Wolf, Christian, Devillepoix, Hadrien A. R., Ye, Quanzhi, Robertson, Darrel K., Brown, Peter, Lyytinen, Esko, Moilanen, Jarmo, Albers, Jim, Cooper, Tim, Assink, Jelle, Evers, Läslo, Lahtinen, Panu, Seitshiro, Lesedi, Laubenstein, Matthias, Wantlo, Nggie, Moleje, Phemo, Maritinkole, Joseph, Suhonen, Heikki, Zolensky, Michael E., Ashwal, Lewis, Hiroi, Takahiro, Sears, Derek W., Sehlke, Alexander, Maturilli, Alessandro, Sanborn, Matthew E., Huyskens, Magdalena H., Dey, Supratim, Ziegler, Karen, Busemann, Henner, Riebe, My E. I., Meier, Matthias M. M., Welten, Kees C., Caffee, Marc W., Zhou, Qin, Li, Qiu-Li, Li, Xian-Hua, Liu, Yu, Tang, Guo-Qiang, McLain, Hannah L., Dworkin, Jason P., Glavin, Daniel P., Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe, Sabbah, Hassan, Joblin, Christine, Granvik, Mikael, Mosarwa, Babutsi, and Botepe, Koketso
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Physics - Geophysics - Abstract
The June 2, 2018, impact of asteroid 2018 LA over Botswana is only the second asteroid detected in space prior to impacting over land. Here, we report on the successful recovery of meteorites. Additional astrometric data refine the approach orbit and define the spin period and shape of the asteroid. Video observations of the fireball constrain the asteroid's position in its orbit and were used to triangulate the location of the fireball's main flare over the Central Kalahari Game Reserve. 23 meteorites were recovered. A consortium study of eight of these classifies Motopi Pan as a HED polymict breccia derived from howardite, cumulate and basaltic eucrite, and diogenite lithologies. Before impact, 2018 LA was a solid rock of about 156 cm diameter with high bulk density about 2.85 g/cm3, a relatively low albedo pV about 0.25, no significant opposition effect on the asteroid brightness, and an impact kinetic energy of about 0.2 kt. The orbit of 2018 LA is consistent with an origin at Vesta (or its Vestoids) and delivery into an Earth-impacting orbit via the nu_6 resonance. The impact that ejected 2018 LA in an orbit towards Earth occurred 22.8 +/- 3.8 Ma ago. Zircons record a concordant U-Pb age of 4563 +/- 11 Ma and a consistent 207Pb/206Pb age of 4563 +/- 6 Ma. A much younger Pb-Pb phosphate resetting age of 4234 +/- 41 Ma was found. From this impact chronology, we discuss what is the possible source crater of Motopi Pan and the age of Vesta's Veneneia impact basin., Comment: Meteoritics & Planetary Science (2021)
- Published
- 2021
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249. Clever ways to patent your food innovation
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Brown, Peter, Dr
- Published
- 2012
250. Exporting our knowledge in the food industry
- Author
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Brown, Peter, Dr
- Published
- 2012
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