14,591 results on '"A Muraki"'
Search Results
2. MOA-2022-BLG-033Lb, KMT-2023-BLG-0119Lb, and KMT-2023-BLG-1896Lb: Three low mass-ratio microlensing planets detected through dip signals
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Han, Cheongho, Bond, Ian A., Jung, Youn Kil, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Gould, Andrew, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Lee, Chung-Uk, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We examined the anomalies in the light curves of the lensing events MOA-2022-BLG-033, KMT-2023-BLG-0119, and KMT-2023-BLG-1896. We conducted detailed modeling of the light curves to uncover the nature of the anomalies. This modeling revealed that all signals originated from planetary companions to the primary lens. The planet-to-host mass ratios are very low: $q\sim 7.5\times 10^{-5}$ for MOA-2022-BLG-033, $q\sim 3.6\times 10^{-4}$ for KMT-2023-BLG-0119, and $q\sim 6.9\times 10^{-5}$ for KMT-2023-BLG-1896. The anomalies occurred as the source passed through the negative deviation region behind the central caustic along the planet-host axis. The solutions are subject to a common inner-outer degeneracy, resulting in variations in estimating the projected planet-host separation. For KMT-2023-BLG-1896, although the planetary scenario provides the best explanation of the anomaly, the binary companion scenario is marginally possible. We estimate the physical parameters of the planetary systems through Bayesian analyses based on the lensing observables. The analysis identifies MOA-2022-BLG-033L as a planetary system with an ice giant, approximately 12 times the mass of Earth, orbiting an early M dwarf star. The companion of KMT-2023-BLG-1896L is also an ice giant, with a mass around 16 Earth masses, orbiting a mid-K-type main-sequence star. The companion of KMT-2023-BLG-0119L, which has a mass about the mass of Saturn, orbits a mid-K-type dwarf star. The lens for MOA-2022-BLG-033 is highly likely to be located in the disk, whereas for the other events, the probabilities of the lens being in the disk or the bulge are roughly comparable., Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables
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- 2025
3. iCBIR-Sli: Interpretable Content-Based Image Retrieval with 2D Slice Embeddings
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Tomoshige, Shuhei, Muraki, Hayato, Oishi, Kenichi, and Iyatomi, Hitoshi
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Current methods for searching brain MR images rely on text-based approaches, highlighting a significant need for content-based image retrieval (CBIR) systems. Directly applying 3D brain MR images to machine learning models offers the benefit of effectively learning the brain's structure; however, building the generalized model necessitates a large amount of training data. While models that consider depth direction and utilize continuous 2D slices have demonstrated success in segmentation and classification tasks involving 3D data, concerns remain. Specifically, using general 2D slices may lead to the oversight of pathological features and discontinuities in depth direction information. Furthermore, to the best of the authors' knowledge, there have been no attempts to develop a practical CBIR system that preserves the entire brain's structural information. In this study, we propose an interpretable CBIR method for brain MR images, named iCBIR-Sli (Interpretable CBIR with 2D Slice Embedding), which, for the first time globally, utilizes a series of 2D slices. iCBIR-Sli addresses the challenges associated with using 2D slices by effectively aggregating slice information, thereby achieving low-dimensional representations with high completeness, usability, robustness, and interoperability, which are qualities essential for effective CBIR. In retrieval evaluation experiments utilizing five publicly available brain MR datasets (ADNI2/3, OASIS3/4, AIBL) for Alzheimer's disease and cognitively normal, iCBIR-Sli demonstrated top-1 retrieval performance (macro F1 = 0.859), comparable to existing deep learning models explicitly designed for classification, without the need for an external classifier. Additionally, the method provided high interpretability by clearly identifying the brain regions indicative of the searched-for disease., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Accepted at the SPIE Medical Imaging
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- 2025
4. Domain-invariant feature learning in brain MR imaging for content-based image retrieval
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Tobari, Shuya, Tomoshige, Shuhei, Muraki, Hayato, Oishi, Kenichi, and Iyatomi, Hitoshi
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Information Retrieval - Abstract
When conducting large-scale studies that collect brain MR images from multiple facilities, the impact of differences in imaging equipment and protocols at each site cannot be ignored, and this domain gap has become a significant issue in recent years. In this study, we propose a new low-dimensional representation (LDR) acquisition method called style encoder adversarial domain adaptation (SE-ADA) to realize content-based image retrieval (CBIR) of brain MR images. SE-ADA reduces domain differences while preserving pathological features by separating domain-specific information from LDR and minimizing domain differences using adversarial learning. In evaluation experiments comparing SE-ADA with recent domain harmonization methods on eight public brain MR datasets (ADNI1/2/3, OASIS1/2/3/4, PPMI), SE-ADA effectively removed domain information while preserving key aspects of the original brain structure and demonstrated the highest disease search accuracy., Comment: 6 pages, 1 figures. Accepted at the SPIE Medical Imaging 2025
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- 2025
5. Dependence of the estimated electric potential in thunderstorms observed at GRAPES-3 on the hadronic interaction generators used in simulations
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Hariharan, B., Gupta, S. K., Hayashi, Y., Jagadeesan, P., Jain, A., Kawakami, S., Kojima, H., Mohanty, P. K., Muraki, Y., Nayak, P. K., Oshima, A., Rameez, M., Ramesh, K., Reddy, L. V., Shibata, S., and Zuberi, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
A potential difference of 1.3 Giga-Volts (GV) was inferred across a thundercloud using data from the GRAPES-3 muon telescope (G3MT). This was the first-ever estimation of gigavolt potential in thunderstorms, confirming prediction of C.T.R. Wilson almost a century ago. To infer the thundercloud potential required acceleration of muons in atmospheric electric field to be incorporated in the Monte Carlo simulation software CORSIKA. The G3MT records over 4 billion muons daily that are grouped into 169 directions covering 2.3 sr sky. This enabled changes as small as 0.1% in the muon flux on minute timescale, caused by thunderstorms to be accurately measured. But that requires high statistics simulation of muon fluxes in thunderstorm electric fields. The CORSIKA offers a choice of several generators for low- (FLUKA, GHEISHA, and UrQMD) and high-energy (SIBYLL, EPOS-LHC, and QGSJETII) hadronic interactions. Since it is unclear which combination of the low- and high-energy generators provides the correct description of hadronic interactions, all nine combinations of generators were explored, and they yielded thundercloud potentials ranging from 1.3 GV to 1.6 GV for the event recorded on 1 December 2014. The result of SIBYLL-FLUKA combination yielded the lowest electric potential of 1.3 GV was reported. Furthermore, another seven major thunderstorm events recorded between April 2011 and December 2020 were analyzed to measure the dependence of their thundercloud potential on the hadronic interaction generators. It is observed that the low-energy generators produce larger variation ($\sim$14%) in thundercloud potential than the high-energy generators ($\sim$8%). This probably reflects the fact that the GeV muons are predominantly produced in low-energy ($<$80 GeV) interactions, which effectively magnifies the differences in the meson production cross-sections among the low-energy generators.
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- 2024
6. Prediction of Toponium Levels Using a Logarithmic Potential Modeel
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Muraki, Yasushi and Shibata, Shoichi
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
In this paper, the energy levels of the resonant states of toponium, composed of top quark and anti-top quark, are given on the basis of an empirical law. We predict that the mass of the n-th resonant state of toponium is given by Mass(n)=0.81ln}(n) + 347GeV from the empirical law on the resonance level of the bottomonium. The cross-section produced by electron-positron collisions is 3X10^{-9}mb and an electron-positron collider would need an energy of 270GeV X 270 GeV to find out the resonance state of toponium. This prediction is based on the empirical law that the energy levels of hadron resonance states are expressed in logarithms. An interpretation of the appearance of quark resonance states in logarithmic intervals is also given in the paper. An application of this model, we present that the Okubo-Zwig-lizuka law can be viewed as a creation 11and annihilation problem of the two-dimensional resonance planes., Comment: 11 pages and 9 figures
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- 2024
7. Coulomb oscillations of a quantum antidot formed by an airbridged pillar gate in the integer and fractional quantum Hall regime
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Hata, Tokuro, Mitani, Hiroki, Uchiyama, Hidetaka, Akiho, Takafumi, Muraki, Koji, and Fujisawa, Toshimasa
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Quantum antidots (QAD) are attractive for manipulating quasiparticles in quantum Hall (QH) systems. Here, we form a QAD in the integer and fractional QH regimes at nominal Landau-level filling factor $\nu$ = 2, 1, and 2/3 using a submicron pillar gate with an airbridge connection. After confirming the required conditions for a fully depleted QAD, we analyze the observed Coulomb oscillations in terms of the area of the QAD and the effective charge for the oscillation period in an identical gate voltage range. The area at $\nu$ = 2/3 is significantly smaller than that at $\nu$ = 2 and 1, in qualitative agreement with the previous report. By assuming a constant gate capacitance, the effective charge at $\nu$ = 2/3 is about 2/3 of that at $\nu$ = 2 and 1. The QAD device can be used to capture and emit charges in the unit of 2e/3.
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- 2024
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8. OGLE-2015-BLG-1609Lb: Sub-jovian planet orbiting a low-mass stellar or brown dwarf host
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Mróz, M. J., Poleski, R., Udalski, A., Sumi, T., Tsapras, Y., Hundertmark, M., Pietrukowicz, P., Szymański, M. K., Skowron, J., Mróz, P., Gromadzki, M., Iwanek, P., Kozłowski, S., Ratajczak, M., Rybicki, K. A., Skowron, D. M., Soszyński, I., Ulaczyk, K., Wrona, M., Abe, F., Bando, K., Bennett, D. P., Bhattacharya, A., Bond, I. A., Fukui, A., Hamada, R., Hamada, S., Hamasaki, N., Hirao, Y., Silva, S. Ishitani, Itow, Y., Koshimoto, N., Matsubara, Y., Miyazaki, S., Muraki, Y., Nagai, T., Nunota, K., Olmschenk, G., Ranc, C., Rattenbury, N. J., Satoh, Y., Suzuki, D., Terry, S. K., Tristram, P. J., Vandorou, A., Yama, H., Street, R. A., Bachelet, E., Dominik, M., Cassan, A., Jaimes, R. Figuera, Horne, K., Schmidt, R., Snodgrass, C., Wambsganss, J., Steele, I. A., Menzies, J., Jørgensen, U. G., Longa-Peña, P., Peixinho, N., Skottfelt, J., Southworth, J., Andersen, M. I., Bozza, V., Burgdorf, M. J., D'Ago, G., Hinse, T. C., Kerins, E., Korhonen, H., Küffmeier, M., Mancini, L., Rabus, M., and Rahvar, S.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a comprehensive analysis of a planetary microlensing event OGLE-2015-BLG-1609. The planetary anomaly was detected by two survey telescopes, OGLE and MOA. Each of these surveys collected enough data over the planetary anomaly to allow for an unambiguous planet detection. Such survey detections of planetary anomalies are needed to build a robust sample of planets that could improve studies on the microlensing planetary occurrence rate by reducing biases and statistical uncertainties. In this work, we examined different methods for modeling microlensing events using individual datasets, particularly we incorporated a Galactic model prior to better constrain poorly defined microlensing parallax. Ultimately, we fitted a comprehensive model to all available data, identifying three potential typologies, with two showing comparably high Bayesian evidence. Our analysis indicates that the host of the planet is a brown dwarf with a probability of 34%, or a low-mass stellar object (M-dwarf) with the probability of 66%., Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures
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- 2024
9. KMT-2021-BLG-0284, KMT-2022-BLG-2480, and KMT-2024-BLG-0412: Three microlensing events involving two lens masses and two source stars
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Han, Cheongho, Udalski, Andrzej, Bond, Ian A., Lee, Chung-Uk, Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Mróz, Przemek, Szymański, Michał K., Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Mróz, Mateusz J., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We carried out a project involving the systematic analysis of microlensing data from the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network survey. The aim of this project is to identify lensing events with complex anomaly features that are difficult to explain using standard binary-lens or binary-source models. Our investigation reveals that the light curves of microlensing events KMT-2021-BLG-0284, KMT-2022-BLG-2480, and KMT-2024-BLG-0412 display highly complex patterns with three or more anomaly features. These features cannot be adequately explained by a binary-lens (2L1S) model alone. However, the 2L1S model can effectively describe certain segments of the light curve. By incorporating an additional source into the modeling, we identified a comprehensive model that accounts for all the observed anomaly features. Bayesian analysis, based on constraints provided by lensing observables, indicates that the lenses of KMT-2021-BLG-0284 and KMT-2024-BLG-0412 are binary systems composed of M dwarfs. For KMT-2022-BLG-2480, the primary lens is an early K-type main-sequence star with an M dwarf companion. The lenses of KMT-2021-BLG-0284 and KMT-2024-BLG-0412 are likely located in the bulge, whereas the lens of KMT-2022-BLG-2480 is more likely situated in the disk. In all events, the binary stars of the sources have similar magnitudes due to a detection bias favoring binary source events with a relatively bright secondary source star, which increases detection efficiency., Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
10. The Microlensing Event Rate and Optical Depth from MOA-II 9 year Survey toward the Galactic Bulge
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Nunota, Kansuke, Sumi, Takahiro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamada, Shunya, Hamasaki, Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tsutsumi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clement, Satoh, Yuki K., Suzuki, Daisuke, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, and Yama, Hibiki
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present measurements of the microlensing optical depth and event rate toward the Galactic bulge using the dataset from the 2006--2014 MOA-II survey, which covers 22 bulge fields spanning ~42 deg^2 between -5 deg < l < 10 deg and -7 deg < b < -1 deg. In the central region with |l|<5 deg, we estimate an optical depth of {\tau} = [1.75+-0.04]*10^-6exp[(0.34+-0.02)(3 deg-|b|)] and an event rate of {\Gamma} = [16.08+-0.28]*10^-6exp[(0.44+-0.02)(3 deg-|b|)] star^-1 year^-1 using a sample consisting of 3525 microlensing events, with Einstein radius crossing times of tE < 760 days and source star magnitude of IsWe confirm our results are consistent with the latest measurements from OGLE-IV 8 year dataset (Mr\'oz et al. 2019). We find our result is inconsistent with a prediction based on Galactic models, especially in the central region with |b|<3 deg. These results can be used to improve the Galactic bulge model, and more central regions can be further elucidated by future microlensing experiments, such as The PRime-focus Infrared Microlensing Experiment (PRIME) and Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope.
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- 2024
11. Static quantum dot on a potential hilltop for generating and analyzing hot electrons in the quantum Hall regime
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Oishi, Ryo, Hongu, Yuto, Hata, Tokuro, Lin, Chaojing, Akiho, Takafumi, Muraki, Koji, and Fujisawa, Toshimasa
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We propose and demonstrate a static quantum dot on a potential hilltop to generate and analyze ballistic hot electrons along a quantum Hall edge channel well above the chemical potential. High energy resolution associated with discrete energy levels is attractive for studying hot-electron dynamics. Particularly, the energy distribution function of hot electrons weakly coupled to cold electrons is investigated to reveal spectral diffusion with energy relaxation. The analysis allows us to estimate the maximum energy exchange per scattering, which is an important parameter to describe interacting electrons in the edge channel., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures
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- 2024
12. Microlensing brown-dwarf companions in binaries detected during the 2022 and 2023 seasons
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Han, Cheongho, Bond, Ian A., Udalski, Andrzej, Lee, Chung-Uk, Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Bando, Ken, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamada, Shunya, Hamasaki, Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tutumi, Nunota, Kansuke, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Szymański, Przemek Mróz Michał K., Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, and Mróz, Mateusz J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Building on previous works to construct a homogeneous sample of brown dwarfs in binary systems, we investigate microlensing events detected by the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet) survey during the 2022 and 2023 seasons. Given the difficulty in distinguishing brown-dwarf events from those produced by binary lenses with nearly equal-mass components, we analyze all lensing events detected during the seasons that exhibit anomalies characteristic of binary-lens systems. Using the same criteria consistently applied in previous studies, we identify six additional brown dwarf candidates through the analysis of lensing events KMT-2022-BLG-0412, KMT-2022-BLG-2286, KMT-2023-BLG-0201, KMT-2023-BLG-0601, KMT-2023-BLG-1684, and KMT-2023-BLG-1743. An examination of the mass posteriors shows that the median mass of the lens companions ranges from 0.02 $M_\odot$ to 0.05 $M_\odot$, indicating that these companions fall within the brown-dwarf mass range. The mass of the primary lenses ranges from 0.11 $M_\odot$ to 0.68 $M_\odot$, indicating that they are low-mass stars with substantially lower masses compared to the Sun., Comment: 13 pages, 17 figures, 12 tables
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- 2024
13. Andreev Reflection in the Quantum Hall Regime at an Al/InAs Junction on a Cleaved Edge
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Akiho, Takafumi, Irie, Hiroshi, Nakazawa, Yusuke, Sasaki, Satoshi, Kumada, Norio, and Muraki, Koji
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We have fabricated a superconductor/semiconductor (S/Sm) junction composed of Al and InAs using cleaved edge overgrowth. By exploiting the unique geometry with a thin Al/Pt/Al trilayer formed on the side surface of an in-situ cleaved heterostructure wafer containing an InAs quantum well, we achieve a superconducting critical field of 5 T, allowing superconductivity and quantum Hall (QH) effects to coexist down to Landau-level filling factor nu = 3. Andreev reflection at zero magnetic field shows a conductance enhancement that is limited solely by the Fermi velocity mismatch, demonstrating a virtually barrier-free, high-quality S/Sm junction. Bias spectroscopy in the QH regime reveals the opening of a superconducting gap, with the reduced downstream resistance demonstrating that the electron-hole Andreev conversion probability consistently exceeds 50%. Our results, obtained in a new experimental regime characterized by a clean edge-contacted junction with a superconducting electrode narrower than the coherence length, open new avenues for both theoretical and experimental studies of the interplay between superconductivity and QH effects and the engineering of exotic quasiparticles., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
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- 2024
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14. Analysis of the full Spitzer microlensing sample I: Dark remnant candidates and Gaia predictions
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Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Shvartzvald, Yossi, Yee, Jennifer C., Novati, Sebastiano Calchi, Ofek, Eran O., Bond, Ian A., Beichman, Charles, Bryden, Geoff, Carey, Sean, Henderson, Calen, Zhu, Wei, Fausnaugh, Michael M., Wibking, Benjamin, Udalski, Andrzej, Poleski, Radek, Mróz, Przemek, Szymański, Michal K., Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Skowron, Jan, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Iwanek, Patryk, Wrona, Marcin, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Gould, Andrew, Han, Cheongho, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Shin, In-Gu, Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Hyoun-Woo, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Chung-Uk, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamada, Shunya, Hamasaki, Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tutumi, NUNOTA, Kansuke, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clement, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki K., Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tristram, Paul . J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Wyrzykowski, Lukasz, Howil, Kornel, and Kruszyńska, Katarzyna
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In the pursuit of understanding the population of stellar remnants within the Milky Way, we analyze the sample of $\sim 950$ microlensing events observed by the Spitzer Space Telescope between 2014 and 2019. In this study we focus on a sub-sample of nine microlensing events, selected based on their long timescales, small microlensing parallaxes and joint observations by the Gaia mission, to increase the probability that the chosen lenses are massive and the mass is measurable. Among the selected events we identify lensing black holes and neutron star candidates, with potential confirmation through forthcoming release of the Gaia time-series astrometry in 2026. Utilizing Bayesian analysis and Galactic models, along with the Gaia Data Release 3 proper motion data, four good candidates for dark remnants were identified: OGLE-2016-BLG-0293, OGLE-2018-BLG-0483, OGLE-2018-BLG-0662, and OGLE-2015-BLG-0149, with lens masses of $2.98^{+1.75}_{-1.28}~M_{\odot}$, $4.65^{+3.12}_{-2.08}~M_{\odot}$, $3.15^{+0.66}_{-0.64}~M_{\odot}$ and $1.4^{+0.75}_{-0.55}~M_{\odot}$, respectively. Notably, the first two candidates are expected to exhibit astrometric microlensing signals detectable by Gaia, offering the prospect of validating the lens masses. The methodologies developed in this work will be applied to the full Spitzer microlensing sample, populating and analyzing the time-scale ($t_{\rm E}$) vs. parallax ($\pi_{\rm E}$) diagram to derive constraints on the population of lenses in general and massive remnants in particular., Comment: submitted to ApJ
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- 2024
15. Effects of GaAs buffer layer on quantum anomalous Hall insulator Vy(BixSb1-x)2-yTe3
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Nakazawa, Yusuke, Akiho, Takafumi, Kanisawa, Kiyoshi, Irie, Hiroshi, Kumada, Norio, and Muraki, Koji
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Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We report the growth, structural characterization, and transport properties of the quantum anomalous Hall insulator Vy(BixSb1-x)2-yTe3 (VBST) grown on a GaAs buffer layer by molecular beam epitaxy on a GaAs(111)A substrate. X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy show that the implementation of a GaAs buffer layer improves the crystal and interface quality compared to the control sample grown directly on an InP substrate. Both samples exhibit the quantum anomalous Hall effect (QAHE), but with similar thermal stability despite the different structural properties. Notably, the QAHE in the sample grown on a GaAs buffer layer displays a significantly larger (almost double) coercive field with a much smaller resistivity peak at the magnetization reversal. Possible effects of the interface quality on the magnetic properties of VBST and the QAHE are discussed., Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. The following article has been accepted by Applied Physics Letter. After it is published, it will be found at https://pubs.aip.org/aip/apl
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- 2024
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16. Comparison of Ampullary and Pancreatic Adenocarcinomas: Smaller Invasion, Common Adenomatous Components, Resectability, and Histology are Factors for Improved Survival for Patients with Ampullary Adenocarcinoma
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Memis, Bahar, Saka, Burcu, Pehlivanoglu, Burcin, Kim, Grace, Balci, Serdar, Tajiri, Takuma, Ohike, Nobuyuki, Bagci, Pelin, Akar, Kadriye Ebru, Muraki, Takashi, Jang, Kee-Taek, Maithel, Shishir K., Sarmiento, Juan, Kooby, David A., Esmer, Rohat, Tarcan, Zeynep Cagla, Goodman, Michael, Xue, Yue, Krasinskas, Alyssa, Reid, Michelle, Basturk, Olca, and Adsay, Volkan
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- 2025
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17. Association between vertebral fractures and brain volume: insights from a community cohort study
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Nakajima, Koji, Horii, Chiaki, Kodama, Hiroyasu, Shirokoshi, Tomohiko, Ogawa, Akitoshi, Osada, Takahiro, Konishi, Seiki, Oshima, Yasushi, Iidaka, Toshiko, Muraki, Shigeyuki, Oka, Hiroyuki, Kawaguchi, Hiroshi, Akune, Toru, Hashizume, Hiroshi, Yamada, Hiroshi, Yoshida, Munehito, Nakamura, Kozo, Shojima, Masaaki, Tanaka, Sakae, and Yoshimura, Noriko
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- 2025
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18. BBNJ Agreement: Considerations for Scientists and Commercial End Users of MGR at Research, Development and Commercialization Stages
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Rabone, Muriel, Horton, Tammy, Humphries, Fran, Lyal, Christopher H. C., Muraki Gottlieb, Hiroko, Scholz, Amber H., Vanagt, Thomas, Jaspars, Marcel, and Humphries, Fran, editor
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- 2025
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19. Understanding the Preamble, Objectives and Principles of the BBNJ Agreement: A Focus on the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits of Marine Genetic Resources
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Gottlieb, Hiroko Muraki, Kachelriess, Daniel, Slobodian, Lydia, and Humphries, Fran, editor
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- 2025
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20. BBNJ Agreement: A New Infrastructure to Foster Benefit Sharing of Marine Genetic Resources
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Gottlieb, Hiroko Muraki, Ardron, Jeff A., Brown, Abbe E. L., and Humphries, Fran, editor
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- 2025
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21. Bridging Divides: The Evolution of Marine Genetic Resource Governance Beyond National Jurisdiction
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Humphries, Fran, Berry, Todd, Gottlieb, Hiroko Muraki, and Humphries, Fran, editor
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- 2025
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22. Resonant plasmon-assisted tunneling in a double quantum dot coupled to a quantum-Hall plasmon resonator
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Lin, Chaojing, Futamata, Ko, Akiho, Takafumi, Muraki, Koji, and Fujisawa, Toshimasa
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Edge magnetoplasmon is an emergent chiral bosonic mode promising for studying electronic quantum optics. While the plasmon transport has been investigated with various techniques for decades,its coupling to a mesoscopic device remained unexplored. Here, we demonstrate the coupling between a single plasmon mode in a quantum Hall plasmon resonator and a double quantum dot (DQD). Resonant plasmon-assisted tunneling is observed in the DQD through absorbing or emitting plasmons stored in the resonator. By using the DQD as a spectrometer, the plasmon energy and the coupling strength are evaluated, which can be controlled by changing the electrostatic environment of the quantum Hall edge. The observed plasmon-electron coupling encourages us for studying strong coupling regimes of plasmonic cavity quantum electrodynamics., Comment: 6+5 pages, 5+5 figures
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- 2024
23. Four microlensing giant planets detected through signals produced by minor-image perturbations
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Han, Cheongho, Bond, Ian A., Lee, Chung-Uk, Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Bando, Ken, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamasaki, Shunya Hamada Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tutumi, Nunota, Kansuke, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Bachelet, Etienne, Rota, Paolo, Bozza, Valerio, Zielinski, Paweł, Street, Rachel A., Tsapras, Yiannis, Hundertmark, Markus, Wambsganss, Joachim, Wyrzykowski, Łukasz, Jaimes, Roberto Figuera, Cassan, Arnaud, Dominik, Martin, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., and Rabus, Markus
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigated the nature of the anomalies appearing in four microlensing events KMT-2020-BLG-0757, KMT-2022-BLG-0732, KMT-2022-BLG-1787, and KMT-2022-BLG-1852. The light curves of these events commonly exhibit initial bumps followed by subsequent troughs that extend across a substantial portion of the light curves. We performed thorough modeling of the anomalies to elucidate their characteristics. Despite their prolonged durations, which differ from the usual brief anomalies observed in typical planetary events, our analysis revealed that each anomaly in these events originated from a planetary companion located within the Einstein ring of the primary star. It was found that the initial bump arouse when the source star crossed one of the planetary caustics, while the subsequent trough feature occurred as the source traversed the region of minor image perturbations lying between the pair of planetary caustics. The estimated masses of the host and planet, their mass ratios, and the distance to the discovered planetary systems are $(M_{\rm host}/M_\odot, M_{\rm planet}/M_{\rm J}, q/10^{-3}, \dl/{\rm kpc}) = (0.58^{+0.33}_{-0.30}, 10.71^{+6.17}_{-5.61}, 17.61\pm 2.25,6.67^{+0.93}_{-1.30})$ for KMT-2020-BLG-0757, $(0.53^{+0.31}_{-0.31}, 1.12^{+0.65}_{-0.65}, 2.01 \pm 0.07, 6.66^{+1.19}_{-1.84})$ for KMT-2022-BLG-0732, $(0.42^{+0.32}_{-0.23}, 6.64^{+4.98}_{-3.64}, 15.07\pm 0.86, 7.55^{+0.89}_{-1.30})$ for KMT-2022-BLG-1787, and $(0.32^{+0.34}_{-0.19}, 4.98^{+5.42}_{-2.94}, 8.74\pm 0.49, 6.27^{+0.90}_{-1.15})$ for KMT-2022-BLG-1852. These parameters indicate that all the planets are giants with masses exceeding the mass of Jupiter in our solar system and the hosts are low-mass stars with masses substantially less massive than the Sun., Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, 7 tables
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- 2024
24. Spurious reconstruction from brain activity
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Shirakawa, Ken, Nagano, Yoshihiro, Tanaka, Misato, Aoki, Shuntaro C., Majima, Kei, Muraki, Yusuke, and Kamitani, Yukiyasu
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Advances in brain decoding, particularly visual image reconstruction, have sparked discussions about the societal implications and ethical considerations of neurotechnology. As these methods aim to recover visual experiences from brain activity and achieve prediction beyond training samples (zero-shot prediction), it is crucial to assess their capabilities and limitations to inform public expectations and regulations. Our case study of recent text-guided reconstruction methods, which leverage a large-scale dataset (Natural Scene Dataset, NSD) and text-to-image diffusion models, reveals limitations in their generalizability. We found poor performance when applying these methods to a different dataset designed to prevent category overlaps between training and test sets. UMAP visualization of the text features with NSD images showed a limited diversity of semantic and visual clusters, with overlap between training and test sets. Formal analysis and simulations demonstrated that clustered training samples can lead to "output dimension collapse," restricting predictable output feature dimensions. Simulations further showed that diversifying the training set improved generalizability. However, text features alone are insufficient for mapping to the visual space. We argue that recent realistic reconstructions may primarily be a blend of classification into trained categories and generation of inauthentic images through text-to-image diffusion (hallucination). Diverse datasets and compositional representations spanning the image space are essential for genuine zero-shot prediction. Interdisciplinary discussions grounded in understanding the current capabilities and limitations, as well as ethical considerations, of the technology are crucial for its responsible development.
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- 2024
25. KMT-2023-BLG-1866Lb: Microlensing super-Earth around an M dwarf host
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Han, Cheongho, Bond, Ian A., Udalski, Andrzej, Lee, Chung-Uk, Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Bando, Ken, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamada, Shunya, Hamasaki, Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tutumi, Nunota, Kansuke, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Mróz, Przemek, Szymański, Michał K., Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, and Mróz, Mateusz J.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the nature of the short-term anomaly that appears in the lensing light curve of KMT-2023-BLG-1866. The anomaly was only partly covered due to its short duration, less than a day, coupled with cloudy weather conditions and restricted nighttime duration. Considering intricacy of interpreting partially covered signals, we thoroughly explore all potential degenerate solutions. Through this process, we identify three planetary scenarios that equally well account for the observed anomaly. These scenarios are characterized by the specific planetary parameters: $(s, q)_{\rm inner} = [0.9740 \pm 0.0083, (2.46 \pm 1.07) \times 10^{-5}]$, $(s, q)_{\rm intermediate} = [0.9779 \pm 0.0017, (1.56 \pm 0.25)\times 10^{-5}]$, and $(s, q)_{\rm outer} = [0.9894 \pm 0.0107, (2.31 \pm 1.29)\times 10^{-5}]$, where $s$ and $q$ denote the projected separation (scaled to the Einstein radius) and mass ratio between the planet and its host, respectively. We identify that the ambiguity between the inner and outer solutions stems from the inner-outer degeneracy, while the similarity between the intermediate solution and the others is due to an accidental degeneracy caused by incomplete anomaly coverage. Through Bayesian analysis utilizing the constraints derived from measured lensing observables and blending flux, our estimation indicates that the lens system comprises a very low-mass planet orbiting an early M-type star situated approximately (6.2 -- 6.5)~kpc from Earth in terms of median posterior values for the different solutions. The median mass of the planet host is in the range of (0.48 -- 0.51)~$M_\odot$, and that of the planet's mass spans a range of (2.6 -- 4.0)~$M_{\rm E}$, varying across different solutions. The detection of KMT-2023-BLG-1866Lb signifies the extension of the lensing surveys to very low-mass planets that have been difficult to be detected from earlier surveys., Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables
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- 2024
26. OGLE-2015-BLG-0845L: A low-mass M dwarf from the microlensing parallax and xallarap effects
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Hu, Zhecheng, Zhu, Wei, Gould, Andrew, Udalski, Andrzej, Sumi, Takahiro, Chen, Ping, Novati, Sebastiano Calchi, Yee, Jennifer C., Beichman, Charles A., Bryden, Geoffery, Carey, Sean, Fausnaugh, Michael, Gaudi, B. Scott, Henderson, Calen B., Shvartzvald, Yossi, Wibking, Benjamin, Mróz, Przemek, Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Szymański, Michał K., Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Bond, Ian A., Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul. J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the analysis of the microlensing event OGLE-2015-BLG-0845, which was affected by both the microlensing parallax and xallarap effects. The former was detected via the simultaneous observations from the ground and Spitzer, and the latter was caused by the orbital motion of the source star in a relatively close binary. The combination of these two effects led to a mass measurement of the lens object, revealing a low-mass ($0.14 \pm 0.05 M_{\odot}$) M-dwarf at the bulge distance ($7.6 \pm 1.0$ kpc). The source binary consists of a late F-type subgiant and a K-type dwarf of $\sim1.2 M_{\odot}$ and $\sim 0.9 M_{\odot}$, respectively, and the orbital period is $70 \pm 10$ days. OGLE-2015-BLG-0845 is the first single-lens event in which the lens mass is measured via the binarity of the source. Given the abundance of binary systems as potential microlensing sources, the xallarap effect may not be a rare phenomenon. Our work thus highlights the application of the xallarap effect in the mass determination of microlenses, and the same method can be used to identify isolated dark lenses., Comment: New version after the review process. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2024
27. OGLE-2018-BLG-0971, MOA-2023-BLG-065, and OGLE-2023-BLG-0136: Microlensing events with prominent orbital effects
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Han, Cheongho, Udalski, Andrzej, Bond, Ian A., Lee, Chung-Uk, Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Kim, Hyoun-Woo, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Mróz, Przemek, Szymański, Michał K., Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Mróz, Mateusz J., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We undertake a project to reexamine microlensing data gathered from high-cadence surveys. The aim of the project is to reinvestigate lensing events with light curves exhibiting intricate anomaly features associated with caustics, yet lacking prior proposed models to explain these features. Through detailed reanalyses considering higher-order effects, we identify that accounting for orbital motions of lenses is vital in accurately explaining the anomaly features observed in the light curves of the lensing events OGLE-2018-BLG-0971, MOA-2023-BLG-065, and OGLE-2023-BLG-0136. We estimate the masses and distances to the lenses by conducting Bayesian analyses using the lensing parameters of the newly found lensing solutions. From these analyses, we identify that the lenses of the events OGLE-2018-BLG-0971 and MOA-2023-BLG-065 are binaries composed of M dwarfs, while the lens of OGLE-2023-BLG-0136 is likely to be a binary composed of an early K-dwarf primary and a late M-dwarf companion. For all lensing events, the probability of the lens residing in the bulge is considerably higher than that of it being located in the disk., Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables
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- 2024
28. Socialness Effects in Lexical-Semantic Processing
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Veronica Diveica, Emiko J. Muraki, Richard J. Binney, and Penny M. Pexman
- Abstract
Contemporary theories of semantic representation posit that social experience is an important source of information for deriving meaning. However, there is a lack of behavioral evidence in support of this proposal. The aim of the present work was to test whether words' degree of social relevance, or "socialness", influences lexical-semantic processing. In Study 1, across a series of item-level regression analyses, we found that (a) socialness can facilitate responses in lexical, semantic, and memory tasks, and (b) limited evidence for an interaction of socialness with concreteness. In Studies 2-3, we tested the preregistered hypothesis that social words, compared to nonsocial words, will be associated with faster and more accurate responses during a syntactic classification task. We found that socialness has a facilitatory effect on noun decisions (Study 3), but not verb decisions (Study 2). Overall, our results suggest that the socialness of a word affects lexical-semantic processing but also that this is task-dependent. These findings constitute novel evidence in support of proposals that social information is an important dimension of semantic representation.
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- 2024
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29. Association between Diet-Related Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Mortality among Japanese Adults: The Japan Collaborative Cohort Study
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Watanabe, Daiki, Maruyama, Kotatsu, Tamakoshi, Akiko, and Muraki, Isao
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Research ,Patient outcomes ,Health aspects ,Environmental aspects ,Causes of ,Mortality -- Environmental aspects -- Causes of -- Japan ,Greenhouse gases -- Health aspects ,Food habits -- Health aspects -- Environmental aspects ,Cardiovascular diseases -- Environmental aspects -- Patient outcomes ,Environmental health -- Research ,Adults -- Health aspects -- Environmental aspects - Abstract
Introduction Climate change is the biggest global health threat of the 21st century (1) because it adversely affects lifestyle through food shortages, extreme weather conditions, sea-level rise, and reduced productivity. [...], BACKGROUND: Planetary and human health are highly intertwined; our current food system is associated with high greenhouse gas emissions (GHGE) and burden of disease. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to investigate the associations of diet-related GHGE with all-cause and cause-specific mortality in Japan. METHODS: This study included 58,031 Japanese adults (35,078 women and 22,953 men) 40-79 y of age who participated in the Japan Collaborative Cohort Study during the period 1988-1990. Diet-related GHGE was calculated from dietary intake estimated by a validated food frequency questionnaire and previously developed GHGE tables of each food and beverage. Participants were classified into quintiles of diet-related GHGE per kg food/d. Hazard ratios (HRs) of all-cause and cause-specific mortality were calculated using the Cox proportional hazard and restricted cubic spline models. RESULTS: The average diet-related GHGE was 1,522 g-[CO.sub.2]-eq/kg food/d. Over a period of 19.3 y (955,819 person-years) of median follow-up, 11,508 deaths were documented. After adjusting for lifestyle and medical history, in comparison with the fourth quintiles of diet-related GHGE, the first and fifth quintiles were associated with a higher risk of all-cause mortality: multivariable HR of all-cause mortality was 1.11 [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.05, 1.18] and 1.09 (95% CI: 1.03, 1.17) for the lowest and highest GHGE, respectively; those of cardiovascular disease mortality were 1.23 (95% CI: 1.10, 1.38) and 1.22 (95% CI: 1.08, 1.37), respectively. The diet-related GHGE range with the lowest HR of all-cause mortality was 1,400-1,600 g-[CO.sub.2]eq/kg food/d (p for nonlinearity DISCUSSION: Diet-related GHGE was associated with all-cause and cardiovascular disease mortality in a U-shaped fashion. This finding could be useful for creating a policy for sustainable shifts in dietary habits that will benefit the population and environmental health. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP14935
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- 2024
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30. Occurrence of respiratory and urinary tract infections in patients treated with docetaxel compared with afatinib based on a health insurance claims database in Japan
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Inose, Ryo, Goto, Ryota, Hosogi, Shigekuni, Ashihara, Eishi, and Muraki, Yuichi
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- 2024
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31. The Ooty muon telescope reveals what climate did in 2022 summer
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Nayak, Pranaba K., Dugad, S. R., Hariharan, B., Jagadeesan, P., Jain, A., Mohanty, Pravata K., Ramesh, K., Zuberi, M., Hayashi, Y., Kojima, H., Oshima, A., Shibata, S., Muraki, Y., and Nonaka, T.
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- 2024
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32. CT colonography has advantages over colonoscopy for size measurement of colorectal polyps
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Tsurumaru, Daisuke, Nishimuta, Yusuke, Nanjo, Katsuya, Kai, Satohiro, Miyasaka, Mitsutoshi, Muraki, Toshio, and Ishigami, Kousei
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- 2024
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33. Unseen but influential associates: Properties of words’ associates influence lexical and semantic processing
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Muraki, Emiko J. and Pexman, Penny M.
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- 2024
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34. Inter-individual and inter-site neural code conversion without shared stimuli
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Wang, Haibao, Ho, Jun Kai, Cheng, Fan L., Aoki, Shuntaro C., Muraki, Yusuke, Tanaka, Misato, and Kamitani, Yukiyasu
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Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition ,Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Inter-individual variability in fine-grained functional brain organization poses challenges for scalable data analysis and modeling. Functional alignment techniques can help mitigate these individual differences but typically require paired brain data with the same stimuli between individuals, which is often unavailable. We present a neural code conversion method that overcomes this constraint by optimizing conversion parameters based on the discrepancy between the stimulus contents represented by original and converted brain activity patterns. This approach, combined with hierarchical features of deep neural networks (DNNs) as latent content representations, achieves conversion accuracy comparable to methods using shared stimuli. The converted brain activity from a source subject can be accurately decoded using the target's pre-trained decoders, producing high-quality visual image reconstructions that rival within-individual decoding, even with data across different sites and limited training samples. Our approach offers a promising framework for scalable neural data analysis and modeling and a foundation for brain-to-brain communication.
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- 2024
35. Beyond Wilson? Carroll from current deformations
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Bagchi, Arjun, Banerjee, Aritra, Mondal, Saikat, Mukherjee, Debangshu, and Muraki, Hisayoshi
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High Energy Physics - Theory - Abstract
At extreme energies, both low and high, the spacetime symmetries of relativistic quantum field theories (QFTs) are expected to change with Galilean symmetries emerging in the very low energy domain and, as we will argue, Carrollian symmetries appearing at very high energies. The formulation of Wilsonian renormalisation group seems inadequate for handling these changes of the underlying Poincare symmetry of QFTs and it seems unlikely that these drastic changes can be seen within the realms of relativistic QFT. We show that contrary to this expectation, changes in the spacetime algebra occurs at the very edges of parameter space. In particular, we focus on the very high energy sector and show how bilinears of $U(1)$ currents added to a two dimensional (massless) scalar field theory deform the relativistic spacetime conformal algebra to conformal Carroll as the effective coupling of the deformation is dialed to infinity. We demonstrate this using both a symmetric and an antisymmetric current-current deformation for theories with multiple scalar fields. These two operators generate distinct kinds of quantum flows in the coupling space, the symmetric driven by Bogoliubov transformations and the antisymmetric by spectral flows, both leading to Carrollian CFTs at the end of the flow., Comment: 46 pages, one figure, comments are welcome!
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- 2024
36. Dark lens candidates from Gaia Data Release 3
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Kruszyńska, K., Wyrzykowski, Ł., Rybicki, K. A., Howil, K., Jabłońska, M., Kaczmarek, Z., Ihanec, N., Maskoliūnas, M., Bronikowski, M., Pylypenko, U., Udalski, A., Mróz, P., Poleski, R., Skowron, J., Szymański, M. K., Soszyński, I., Pietrukowicz, P., Kozłowski, S., Ulaczyk, K., Iwanek, P., Wrona, M., Gromadzki, M., Mróz, M. J., Abe, F., Bando, K., Barry, R., Bennett, D. P., Bhattacharya, A., Bond, I. A., Fukui, A., Hamada, R., Hamada, S., Hamasaki, N., Hirao, Y., Silva, S. Ishitani, Itow, Y., Koshimoto, N., Matsubara, Y., Miyazaki, S., Muraki, Y., Nagai, T., Nunota, K., Olmschenk, G., Ranc, C., Rattenbury, N. J., Satoh, Y., Sumi, T., Suzuki, D., Tristram, P. J., Vandorou, A., and Yama, H.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Gravitational microlensing is a phenomenon that allows us to observe dark remnants of stellar evolution even if they no longer emit electromagnetic radiation. In particular, it can be useful to observe solitary neutron stars or stellar-mass black holes, providing a unique window through which to understand stellar evolution. Obtaining direct mass measurements with this technique requires precise observations of both the change in brightness and the position of the microlensed star. The European Space Agency's Gaia satellite can provide both. Using publicly available data from different surveys, we analysed events published in the Gaia Data Release 3 (Gaia DR3) microlensing catalogue. Here we describe our selection of candidate dark lenses, where we suspect the lens is a white dwarf (WD), a neutron star (NS), a black hole (BH), or a mass-gap object, with a mass in a range between the heaviest NS and the least massive BH. We estimated the mass of the lenses using information obtained from the best-fitting microlensing models, the source star, the Galactic model and the expected distribution of the parameters. We found eleven candidates for dark remnants: one WDs, three NS, three mass-gap objects, and four BHs., Comment: Accepted to Astronomy&Astrophysics, 20 pages, 4 figures, 6 tables
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- 2024
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37. MOA-2022-BLG-563Lb, KMT-2023-BLG-0469Lb, and KMT-2023-BLG-0735Lb: Three sub-Jovian-mass microlensing planets
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Han, Cheongho, Jung, Youn Kil, Bond, Ian A., Gould, Andrew, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Lee, Chung-Uk, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shin, In-Gu, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Yang, Hongjing, Yee, Jennifer C., Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyze the anomalies appearing in the light curves of the three microlensing events MOA-2022-BLG-563, KMT-2023-BLG-0469, and KMT-2023-BLG-0735. The anomalies exhibit common short-term dip features that appear near the peak. From the detailed analyses of the light curves, we find that the anomalies were produced by planets accompanied by the lenses of the events. For all three events, the estimated mass ratios between the planet and host are on the order of $10^{-4}$: $q\sim 8 \times 10^{-4}$ for MOA-2022-BLG-563L, $q\sim 2.5\times 10^{-4}$ for KMT-2023-BLG-0469L, and $q\sim 1.9\times 10^{-4}$ for KMT-2023-BLG-0735L. The interpretations of the anomalies are subject to a common inner-outer degeneracy, which causes ambiguity when estimating the projected planet-host separation. We estimated the planet mass, $M_{\rm p}$, host mass, $M_{\rm h}$, and distance, $D_{\rm L}$, to the planetary system by conducting Bayesian analyses using the observables of the events. The estimated physical parameters of the planetary systems are $(M_{\rm h}/M_\odot, M_{\rm p}/M_{\rm J}, D_{\rm L}/{\rm kpc}) = (0.48^{+0.36}_{-0.30}, 0.40^{+0.31}_{-0.25}, 6.53^{+1.12}_{-1.57})$ for MOA-2022-BLG-563L, $(0.47^{+0.35}_{-0.26}, 0.124^{+0.092}_{-0.067}, 7.07^{+1.03}_{-1.19})$ for KMT-2023-BLG-0469L, and $(0.62^{+0.34}_{-0.35}, 0.125^{+0.068}_{-0.070}, 6.26^{+1.27}_{-1.67})$ for KMT-2023-BLG-0735L. According to the estimated parameters, all planets are cold planets with projected separations that are greater than the snow lines of the planetary systems, they have masses that lie between the masses of Uranus and Jupiter of the Solar System, and the hosts of the planets are main-sequence stars that are less massive than the Sun., Comment: 11 pages, 7 tables, 10 figures
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- 2024
38. Systematic KMTNet Planetary Anomaly Search. XI. Complete Sample of 2016 Sub-Prime Field Planets
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Shin, In-Gu, Yee, Jennifer C., Zang, Weicheng, Han, Cheongho, Yang, Hongjing, Gould, Andrew, Lee, Chung-Uk, Udalski, Andrzej, Sumi, Takahiro, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Hyoun-Woo, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Mróz, Przemek, Szymański, Michał K., Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radosław, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Abe, Fumio, Bando, Ken, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Bond, Ian A., Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hamada, Shunya, Hamasaki, Naoto, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Nagai, Tutumi, Nunota, Kansuke, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul . J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Following Shin et al. (2023b), which is a part of the Systematic KMTNet Planetary Anomaly Search series (i.e., a search for planets in the 2016 KMTNet prime fields), we conduct a systematic search of the 2016 KMTNet sub-prime fields using a semi-machine-based algorithm to identify hidden anomalous events missed by the conventional by-eye search. We find four new planets and seven planet candidates that were buried in the KMTNet archive. The new planets are OGLE-2016-BLG-1598Lb, OGLE-2016-BLG-1800Lb, MOA-2016-BLG-526Lb, and KMT-2016-BLG-2321Lb, which show typical properties of microlensing planets, i.e., giant planets orbit M dwarf host stars beyond their snow lines. For the planet candidates, we find planet/binary or 2L1S/1L2S degeneracies, which are an obstacle to firmly claiming planet detections. By combining the results of Shin et al. (2023b) and this work, we find a total of nine hidden planets, which is about half the number of planets discovered by eye in 2016. With this work, we have met the goal of the systematic search series for 2016, which is to build a complete microlensing planet sample. We also show that our systematic searches significantly contribute to completing the planet sample, especially for planet/host mass ratios smaller than $10^{-3}$, which were incomplete in previous by-eye searches of the KMTNet archive., Comment: 63 pages, 16 Tables, 19 Figures, Submitted in the AAS journal
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- 2024
39. Validity of Self-reported Participation in Cancer Screenings and Health Checkups in Japan
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Isao Muraki, Tomotaka Sobue, Kazumasa Yamagishi, Shoichiro Tsugane, Norie Sawada, and Hiroyasu Iso
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self-reported participation ,cancer screening ,health checkups ,validation study ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background: The participation rate for screening is regarded as a useful indicator for preventing cancer and cardio-metabolic disease. However, the validity of self-reported screening participation has not yet been thoroughly evaluated in Japan. We aimed to examine its validity using the municipal screening records among the Japanese population. Methods: We included 3,060 men and 3,860 women insured by the National Health Insurance for residents aged
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- 2025
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40. Impact of thermal denaturation on renal volume reduction after partial nephrectomy using soft coagulation hemostasis
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Ibuki Tsuru, Masashi Kusakabe, Taro Izumi, Akihiro Ono, Yasuko Muraki, Taro Teshima, Ryo Amakawa, Yasushi Inoue, Tadashi Yoshimatsu, Teppei Morikawa, Haruki Kume, Shuji Kameyama, Yoshiyuki Shiga, and Masaki Nakamura
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Renal volume ,Partial nephrectomy ,Soft coagulation ,Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Partial nephrectomy has become the gold standard treatment for small renal masses. This study aimed to assess the impact of soft coagulation hemostasis on parenchymal volume reduction of the operated kidney after an open partial nephrectomy. We retrospectively reviewed 94 patients with small renal tumors who underwent open partial nephrectomy with soft-coagulation hemostasis at our institution. We measured the preoperative and postoperative renal volumes by computed tomography (CT) and calculated the renal volume reduction ratio as postoperative volume/preoperative volume. We performed multivariate analysis to identify the predictors of renal volume reduction. The median renal volume ratio was 0.75, and the median renal volume reduction rate was − 2.49 cm3/month (IQR, − 3.33 to − 1.59). The RENAL score was inversely associated with ipsilateral renal volume reduction. In multivariate analysis, RENAL score, and tumor size were independent predictors of postoperative renal volume reduction. Soft coagulation hemostasis may influence the postoperative renal volume after partial nephrectomy, especially in patients with complex tumors.
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- 2025
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41. KMT-2023-BLG-1431Lb: A New $q < 10^{-4}$ Microlensing Planet from a Subtle Signature
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Bell, Aislyn, Zhang, Jiyuan, Jung, Youn Kil, Yee, Jennifer C., Yang, Hongjing, Sumi, Takahiro, Udalski, Andrzej, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Gould, Andrew, Han, Cheongho, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shin, In-Gu, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Chung-Uk, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Tang, Yunyi, McCormick, Jennie, Dong, Subo, Liu, Zhuokai, Mao, Shude, Maoz, Dan, Zhu, Wei, Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Bond, Ian A., Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Kondo, Iona, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Matsumoto, Sho, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Okamura, Arisa, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Suzuki, Daisuke, Toda, Taiga, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Mróz, Przemek, Skowron, Jan, Poleski, Radoslaw, Szymański, Michał K., Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Wrona, Marcin, and Gromadzki, Mariusz
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The current studies of microlensing planets are limited by small number statistics. Follow-up observations of high-magnification microlensing events can efficiently form a statistical planetary sample. Since 2020, the Korea Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet) and the Las Cumbres Observatory (LCO) global network have been conducting a follow-up program for high-magnification KMTNet events. Here, we report the detection and analysis of a microlensing planetary event, KMT-2023-BLG-1431, for which the subtle (0.05 magnitude) and short-lived (5 hours) planetary signature was characterized by the follow-up from KMTNet and LCO. A binary-lens single-source (2L1S) analysis reveals a planet/host mass ratio of $q = (0.72 \pm 0.07) \times 10^{-4}$, and the single-lens binary-source (1L2S) model is excluded by $\Delta\chi^2 = 80$. A Bayesian analysis using a Galactic model yields estimates of the host star mass of $M_{\rm host} = 0.57^{+0.33}_{-0.29}~M_\odot$, the planetary mass of $M_{\rm planet} = 13.5_{-6.8}^{+8.1}~M_{\oplus}$, and the lens distance of $D_{\rm L} = 6.9_{-1.7}^{+0.8}$ kpc. The projected planet-host separation of $a_\perp = 2.3_{-0.5}^{+0.5}$ au or $a_\perp = 3.2_{-0.8}^{+0.7}$, subject to the close/wide degeneracy. We also find that without the follow-up data, the survey-only data cannot break the degeneracy of central/resonant caustics and the degeneracy of 2L1S/1L2S models, showing the importance of follow-up observations for current microlensing surveys., Comment: PASP submitted. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2301.06779
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- 2023
42. Systematic Reanalysis of KMTNet microlensing events, Paper I: Updates of the Photometry Pipeline and a New Planet Candidate
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Yang, Hongjing, Yee, Jennifer C., Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Qian, Qiyue, Bond, Ian A., Gould, Andrew, Hu, Zhecheng, Zhang, Jiyuan, Mao, Shude, Zhu, Wei, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Han, Cheongho, Jung, Youn Kil, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shin, In-Gu, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Hyoun-Woo, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Chung-Uk, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Zang, Weicheng, Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Donachie, Martin, Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Hirao, Yuki, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Kondo, Iona, Koshimoto, Naoki, Li, Man Cheung Alex, Matsubara, Yutaka, Muraki, Yasushi, Miyazaki, Shota, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Shoji, Hikaru, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tanaka, Yuzuru, Tristram, Paul J., Yamawaki, Tsubasa, and Yonehara, Atsunori
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In this work, we update and develop algorithms for KMTNet tender-love care (TLC) photometry in order to create an new, mostly automated, TLC pipeline. We then start a project to systematically apply the new TLC pipeline to the historic KMTNet microlensing events, and search for buried planetary signals. We report the discovery of such a planet candidate in the microlensing event MOA-2019-BLG-421/KMT-2019-BLG-2991. The anomalous signal can be explained by either a planet around the lens star or the orbital motion of the source star. For the planetary interpretation, despite many degenerate solutions, the planet is most likely to be a Jovian planet orbiting an M or K dwarf, which is a typical microlensing planet. The discovery proves that the project can indeed increase the sensitivity of historic events and find previously undiscovered signals., Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, 7 tables. Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2023
43. Small-scale cosmic ray anisotropy observed by the GRAPES-3 experiment at TeV energies
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Chakraborty, M., Ahmad, S., Chandra, A., Dugad, S. R., Goswami, U. D., Gupta, S. K., Hariharan, B., Hayashi, Y., Jagadeesan, P., Jain, A., Jain, P., Kawakami, S., Koi, T., Kojima, H., Mahapatra, S., Mohanty, P. K., Moharana, R., Muraki, Y., Nayak, P. K., Nonaka, T., Nakamura, T., Oshima, A., Pant, B. P., Pattanaik, D., Paul, S., Pradhan, G. S., Rameez, M., Ramesh, K., Saha, S., Sahoo, R., Scaria, R., Shibata, S., Tabata, T., Takamaru, H., Tanaka, K., Varsi, F., Yamazaki, K., and Zuberi, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
GRAPES-3 is a mid-altitude (2200 m) and near equatorial ($11.4^{\circ}$ North) air shower array, overlapping in its field of view for cosmic ray observations with experiments that are located in Northern and Southern hemispheres. We analyze a sample of $3.7\times10^9$ cosmic ray events collected by the GRAPES-3 experiment between 1 January 2013 and 31 December 2016 with a median energy of $\sim16$ TeV for study of small-scale ($<60^{\circ}$) angular scale anisotropies. We observed two structures labeled as A and B, deviate from the expected isotropic distribution of cosmic rays in a statistically significant manner. Structure `A' spans $50^{\circ}$ to $80^{\circ}$ in the right ascension and $-15^{\circ}$ to $30^{\circ}$ in the declination coordinate. The relative excess observed in the structure A is at the level of $(6.5\pm1.3)\times10^{-4}$ with a statistical significance of 6.8 standard deviations. Structure `B' is observed in the right ascension range of $110^{\circ}$ to $140^{\circ}$. The relative excess observed in this region is at the level of $(4.9\pm1.4)\times10^{-4}$ with a statistical significance of 4.7 standard deviations. These structures are consistent with those reported by Milagro, ARGO-YBJ, and HAWC. These observations could provide a better understanding of the cosmic ray sources, propagation and the magnetic structures in our Galaxy.
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- 2023
44. OGLE-2014-BLG-0221Lb: A Jupiter Mass Ratio Companion Orbiting either a Late-Type Star or a Stellar Remnant
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Kirikawa, Rintaro, Sumi, Takahiro, Bennett, David P., Suzuki, Daisuke, Koshimoto, Naoki, Miyazaki, Shota, Bond, Ian A., Udalski, Andrzej, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Matsubara, Yutaka, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Satoh, Yuki K., Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul . J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Mróz, Przemek, Poleski, Radosław, Skowron, Jan, Szymański, Michał K., Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, and Ulaczyk, Krzysztof
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of microlensing event OGLE-2014-BLG-0221, a planetary candidate event discovered in 2014. The photometric light curve is best described by a binary-lens single-source model. Our light curve modeling finds two degenerate models, with event timescales of $t_\mathrm{E}\sim70$ days and $\sim110$ days. These timescales are relatively long, indicating that the discovered system would possess a substantial mass. The two models are similar in their planetary parameters with a Jupiter mass ratio of $q \sim 10^{-3}$ and a separation of $s \sim 1.1$. While the shorter timescale model shows marginal detection of a microlensing parallax signal, the longer timescale model requires a higher order effect of microlensing parallax, lens orbital motion or xallarap to explain the deviation in the light curve. However, the modeling shows significant correlation between the higher order effects and suffers the ecliptic degeneracy that results in a failure to determine the parallax parameters. Bayesian inference is used to estimate the physical parameters of the lens, revealing the lens to be either a late-type star supported by the shorter timescale model or a stellar remnant supported by the longer timescale model. If the lens is a remnant, this would be the second planet found by microlensing around a stellar remnant. Since the models predict different values for relative proper motion and source flux, future high angular resolution follow-up observations (e.g. Keck adaptive optics) are required to rule out either of the models., Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to the AAS journals
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- 2023
45. ASO Visual Abstract: Comparison of Ampullary and Pancreatic Adenocarcinomas—Smaller Invasion, Common Adenomatous Components, Resectability, and Histology are Factors for Improved Survival for Patients with Ampullary Adenocarcinoma
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Memis, Bahar, Saka, Burcu, Pehlivanoglu, Burcin, Kim, Grace, Balci, Serdar, Tajiri, Takuma, Ohike, Nobuyuki, Bagci, Pelin, Akar, Kadriye Ebru, Muraki, Takashi, Jang, Kee-Taek, Maithel, Shishir K., Sarmiento, Juan, Kooby, David A., Esmer, Rohat, Tarcan, Zeynep Cagla, Goodman, Michael, Xue, Yue, Krasinskas, Alyssa, Reid, Michelle, Basturk, Olca, and Adsay, Volkan
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- 2025
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46. Prevalence of and Risk Factors for Post--COVID-19 Condition during Omicron BA.5-Dominant Wave, Japan
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Iba, Arisa, Hosozawa, Mariko, Hori, Miyuki, Muto, Yoko, Muraki, Isao, Masuda, Rie, Tamiya, Nanako, and Iso, Hiroyasu
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Japan -- Health aspects ,Statistics ,Complications and side effects ,Risk factors ,Health aspects ,Causes of ,SARS-CoV-2 variants -- Health aspects ,Long COVID -- Statistics -- Risk factors ,COVID-19 -- Causes of -- Complications and side effects - Abstract
COVID-19 has caused a significant global disease burden since it was first identified in December 2019; as of May 2024, [greater than or equal to]750 million cases had been confirmed, [...]
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- 2024
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47. Association of depressive symptoms with incident fractures: the Japan Public Health Center-based Prospective Study for the Next Generation (JPHC-NEXT)
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Funakoshi, Yayoi, Maruyama, Koutatsu, Kato, Tadahiro, Saito, Isao, Takanashi, Nobuyuki, Tanno, Kozo, Yamagishi, Kazumasa, Muraki, Isao, Yasuda, Nobufumi, Arima, Kazuhiko, Nakashima, Hiroki, Yamaji, Taiki, Iwasaki, Motoki, Inoue, Manami, Tsugane, Shoichiro, and Sawada, Norie
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- 2024
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48. KMT-2021-BLG-1547Lb: Giant microlensing planet detected through a signal deformed by source binarity
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Han, Cheongho, Zang, Weicheng, Jung, Youn Kil, Bond, Ian A., Chung, Sun-Ju, Albrow, Michael D., Gould, Andrew, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shin, In-Gu, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Yang, Hongjing, Yee, Jennifer C., Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Doeon, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Chung-Uk, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Monard, L. A. G., Qian, Qiyue, Liu, Zhuokai, Maoz, Dan, Penny, Matthew T., Zhu, Wei, Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bennett, David P., Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosame, Fukui, Akihiko, Hamada, Ryusei, Hirao, Yuki, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Kondo, Iona, Koshimoto, Naoki, Matsubara, Yutaka, Miyazaki, Shota, Muraki, Yasushi, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Satoh, Yuki, Sumi, Takahiro, Suzuki, Daisuke, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, and Yamashita, Kansuke
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the previous microlensing data collected by the KMTNet survey in search of anomalous events for which no precise interpretations of the anomalies have been suggested. From this investigation, we find that the anomaly in the lensing light curve of the event KMT-2021-BLG-1547 is approximately described by a binary-lens (2L1S) model with a lens possessing a giant planet, but the model leaves unexplained residuals. We investigate the origin of the residuals by testing more sophisticated models that include either an extra lens component (3L1S model) or an extra source star (2L2S model) to the 2L1S configuration of the lens system. From these analyses, we find that the residuals from the 2L1S model originate from the existence of a faint companion to the source. The 2L2S solution substantially reduces the residuals and improves the model fit by $\Delta\chi^2=67.1$ with respect to the 2L1S solution. The 3L1S solution also improves the fit, but its fit is worse than that of the 2L2S solution by $\Delta\chi^2=24.7$. According to the 2L2S solution, the lens of the event is a planetary system with planet and host masses $(M_{\rm p}/M_{\rm J}, M_{\rm h}/M_\odot)=\left( 1.47^{+0.64}_{-0.77}, 0.72^{+0.32}_{-0.38}\right)$ lying at a distance $\D_{\rm L} =5.07^{+0.98}_{-1.50}$~kpc, and the source is a binary composed of a subgiant primary of a late G or an early K spectral type and a main-sequence companion of a K spectral type. The event demonstrates the need of sophisticated modeling for unexplained anomalies for the construction of a complete microlensing planet sample., Comment: 9 pages, 4 tables, 7 figures
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- 2023
49. Tunable tunnel coupling in a double quantum antidot with cotunneling via localized state
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Hata, Tokuro, Sada, Kazuhiro, Uchino, Tomoki, Endo, Daisuke, Akiho, Takafumi, Muraki, Koji, and Fujisawa, Toshimasa
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
Controlling tunnel coupling between quantum antidots (QADs) in the quantum Hall (QH) regime is problematic. We propose and demonstrate a scheme for tunable tunnel coupling between two QADs by utilizing a cotunneling process via a localized state as a third QAD. The effective tunnel coupling can be tuned by changing the localized level even with constant nearest-neighbor tunnel couplings. We systematically study the variation of transport characteristics in the effectively triple QAD system at the Landau level filling factor $\nu =2$. The tunable tunnel coupling is clarified by analyzing the anti-crossing of Coulomb blockade peaks in the charge stability diagram, in agreement with numerical simulations based on the master equation. The scheme is attractive for studying coherence and interaction in QH systems., Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures
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- 2023
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50. OGLE-2019-BLG-0825: Constraints on the Source System and Effect on Binary-lens Parameters arising from a Five Day Xallarap Effect in a Candidate Planetary Microlensing Event
- Author
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Satoh, Yuki K., Koshimoto, Naoki, Bennett, David P., Sumi, Takahiro, Rattenbury, Nicholas J., Suzuki, Daisuke, Miyazaki, Shota, Bond, Ian A., Udalski, Andrzej, Gould, Andrew, Bozza, Valerio, Dominik, Martin, Hirao, Yuki, Kondo, Iona, Kirikawa, Rintaro, Hamada, Ryusei, Abe, Fumio, Barry, Richard, Bhattacharya, Aparna, Fujii, Hirosane, Fukui, Akihiko, Fujita, Katsuki, Ikeno, Tomoya, Silva, Stela Ishitani, Itow, Yoshitaka, Matsubara, Yutaka, Matsumoto, Sho, Muraki, Yasushi, Niwa, Kosuke, Okamura, Arisa, Olmschenk, Greg, Ranc, Clément, Toda, Taiga, Tomoyoshi, Mio, Tristram, Paul J., Vandorou, Aikaterini, Yama, Hibiki, Yamashita, Kansuke, Mróz, Przemek, Poleski, Radosław, Skowron, Jan, Szymański, Michał K., Poleski, Radek, Soszyński, Igor, Pietrukowicz, Paweł, Kozłowski, Szymon, Ulaczyk, Krzysztof, Rybicki, Krzysztof A., Iwanek, Patryk, Wrona, Marcin, Gromadzki, Mariusz, Albrow, Michael D., Chung, Sun-Ju, Han, Cheongho, Hwang, Kyu-Ha, Kim, Doeon, Jung, Youn Kil, Kim, Hyoun Woo, Ryu, Yoon-Hyun, Shin, In-Gu, Shvartzvald, Yossi, Yang, Hongjing, Yee, Jennifer C., Zang, Weicheng, Cha, Sang-Mok, Kim, Dong-Jin, Kim, Seung-Lee, Lee, Chung-Uk, Lee, Dong-Joo, Lee, Yongseok, Park, Byeong-Gon, Pogge, Richard W., Jørgensen, Uffe G., Longa-Peña, Penélope, Sajadian, Sedighe, Skottfelt, Jesper, Snodgrass, Colin, Tregloan-Reed, Jeremy, Bach-Møller, Nanna, Burgdorf, Martin, D'Ago, Giuseppe, Haikala, Lauri, Hitchcock, James, Hundertmark, Markus, Khalouei, Elahe, Peixinho, Nuno, Rahvar, Sohrab, Southworth, John, and Spyratos, Petros
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of microlensing event OGLE-2019-BLG-0825. This event was identified as a planetary candidate by preliminary modeling. We find that significant residuals from the best-fit static binary-lens model exist and a xallarap effect can fit the residuals very well and significantly improves $\chi^2$ values. On the other hand, by including the xallarap effect in our models, we find that binary-lens parameters like mass-ratio, $q$, and separation, $s$, cannot be constrained well. However, we also find that the parameters for the source system like the orbital period and semi major axis are consistent between all the models we analyzed. We therefore constrain the properties of the source system better than the properties of the lens system. The source system comprises a G-type main-sequence star orbited by a brown dwarf with a period of $P\sim5$ days. This analysis is the first to demonstrate that the xallarap effect does affect binary-lens parameters in planetary events. It would not be common for the presence or absence of the xallarap effect to affect lens parameters in events with long orbital periods of the source system or events with transits to caustics, but in other cases, such as this event, the xallarap effect can affect binary-lens parameters., Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables. Accepted by AJ
- Published
- 2023
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