245,979 results on '"Casey, A."'
Search Results
2. Soft Checksums to Flag Untrustworthy Machine Learning Surrogate Predictions and Application to Atomic Physics Simulations
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Lauer, Casey, Blake, Robert C., and Freund, Jonathan B.
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
Trained neural networks (NN) are attractive as surrogate models to replace costly calculations in physical simulations, but are often unknowingly applied to states not adequately represented in the training dataset. We present the novel technique of soft checksums for scientific machine learning, a general-purpose method to differentiate between trustworthy predictions with small errors on in-distribution (ID) data points, and untrustworthy predictions with large errors on out-of-distribution (OOD) data points. By adding a check node to the existing output layer, we train the model to learn the chosen checksum function encoded within the NN predictions and show that violations of this function correlate with high prediction errors. As the checksum function depends only on the NN predictions, we can calculate the checksum error for any prediction with a single forward pass, incurring negligible time and memory costs. Additionally, we find that incorporating the checksum function into the loss function and exposing the NN to OOD data points during the training process improves separation between ID and OOD predictions. By applying soft checksums to a physically complex and high-dimensional non-local thermodynamic equilibrium atomic physics dataset, we show that a well-chosen threshold checksum error can effectively separate ID and OOD predictions., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures
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- 2024
3. A Bayesian Model of Underreporting for Sexual Assault on College Campuses
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Bradshaw, Casey and Blei, David M.
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Statistics - Applications - Abstract
In an effort to quantify and combat sexual assault, US colleges and universities are required to disclose the number of reported sexual assaults on their campuses each year. However, many instances of sexual assault are never reported to authorities, and consequently the number of reported assaults does not fully reflect the true total number of assaults that occurred; the reported values could arise from many combinations of reporting rate and true incidence. In this paper we estimate these underlying quantities via a hierarchical Bayesian model of the reported number of assaults. We use informative priors, based on national crime statistics, to act as a tiebreaker to help distinguish between reporting rates and incidence. We outline a Hamiltonian Monte Carlo (HMC) sampling scheme for posterior inference regarding reporting rates and assault incidence at each school, and apply this method to campus sexual assault data from 2014-2019. Results suggest an increasing trend in reporting rates for the overall college population during this time. However, the extent of underreporting varies widely across schools. That variation has implications for how individual schools should interpret their reported crime statistics.
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- 2024
4. Revisiting Absence withSymptoms that *T* Show up Decades Later to Recover Empty Categories
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Chen, Emily, Huang, Nicholas, Robinson, Casey, Xu, Kevin, Huang, Zihao, and Park, Jungyeul
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Computer Science - Computation and Language - Abstract
This paper explores null elements in English, Chinese, and Korean Penn treebanks. Null elements contain important syntactic and semantic information, yet they have typically been treated as entities to be removed during language processing tasks, particularly in constituency parsing. Thus, we work towards the removal and, in particular, the restoration of null elements in parse trees. We focus on expanding a rule-based approach utilizing linguistic context information to Chinese, as rule based approaches have historically only been applied to English. We also worked to conduct neural experiments with a language agnostic sequence-to-sequence model to recover null elements for English (PTB), Chinese (CTB) and Korean (KTB). To the best of the authors' knowledge, null elements in three different languages have been explored and compared for the first time. In expanding a rule based approach to Chinese, we achieved an overall F1 score of 80.00, which is comparable to past results in the CTB. In our neural experiments we achieved F1 scores up to 90.94, 85.38 and 88.79 for English, Chinese, and Korean respectively with functional labels., Comment: 10 pages
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- 2024
5. Euclid: Searches for strong gravitational lenses using convolutional neural nets in Early Release Observations of the Perseus field
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Pearce-Casey, R., Nagam, B. C., Wilde, J., Busillo, V., Ulivi, L., Andika, I. T., Manjón-García, A., Leuzzi, L., Matavulj, P., Serjeant, S., Walmsley, M., Barroso, J. A. Acevedo, O'Riordan, C. M., Clément, B., Tortora, C., Collett, T. E., Courbin, F., Gavazzi, R., Metcalf, R. B., Cabanac, R., Courtois, H. M., Crook-Mansour, J., Delchambre, L., Despali, G., Ecker, L. R., Franco, A., Holloway, P., Jahnke, K., Mahler, G., Marchetti, L., Melo, A., Meneghetti, M., Müller, O., Nucita, A. A., Pearson, J., Rojas, K., Scarlata, C., Schuldt, S., Sluse, D., Suyu, S. H., Vaccari, M., Vegetti, S., Verma, A., Vernardos, G., Bolzonella, M., Kluge, M., Saifollahi, T., Schirmer, M., Stone, C., Paulino-Afonso, A., Bazzanini, L., Hogg, N. B., Koopmans, L. V. E., Kruk, S., Mannucci, F., Bromley, J. M., Díaz-Sánchez, A., Dickinson, H. J., Powell, D. M., Bouy, H., Laureijs, R., Altieri, B., Amara, A., Andreon, S., Baccigalupi, C., Baldi, M., Balestra, A., Bardelli, S., Battaglia, P., Bonino, D., Branchini, E., Brescia, M., Brinchmann, J., Caillat, A., Camera, S., Capobianco, V., Carbone, C., Carretero, J., Casas, S., Castellano, M., Castignani, G., Cavuoti, S., Cimatti, A., Colodro-Conde, C., Congedo, G., Conselice, C. J., Conversi, L., Copin, Y., Cropper, M., Da Silva, A., Degaudenzi, H., De Lucia, G., Di Giorgio, A. M., Dinis, J., Dubath, F., Dupac, X., Dusini, S., Farina, M., Farrens, S., Faustini, F., Ferriol, S., Frailis, M., Franceschi, E., Galeotta, S., George, K., Gillard, W., Gillis, B., Giocoli, C., Gómez-Alvarez, P., Grazian, A., Grupp, F., Haugan, S. V. H., Holmes, W., Hook, I., Hormuth, F., Hornstrup, A., Hudelot, P., Jhabvala, M., Joachimi, B., Keihänen, E., Kermiche, S., Kiessling, A., Kilbinger, M., Kubik, B., Kümmel, M., Kunz, M., Kurki-Suonio, H., Mignant, D. Le, Ligori, S., Lilje, P. B., Lindholm, V., Lloro, I., Maiorano, E., Mansutti, O., Marggraf, O., Markovic, K., Martinelli, M., Martinet, N., Marulli, F., Massey, R., Medinaceli, E., Mei, S., Melchior, M., Mellier, Y., Merlin, E., Meylan, G., Moresco, M., Moscardini, L., Nakajima, R., Neissner, C., Nichol, R. C., Niemi, S. -M., Nightingale, J. W., Padilla, C., Paltani, S., Pasian, F., Pedersen, K., Percival, W. J., Pettorino, V., Pires, S., Polenta, G., Poncet, M., Popa, L. A., Pozzetti, L., Raison, F., Renzi, A., Rhodes, J., Riccio, G., Romelli, E., Roncarelli, M., Rossetti, E., Saglia, R., Sakr, Z., Sánchez, A. G., Sapone, D., Sartoris, B., Schneider, P., Schrabback, T., Secroun, A., Seidel, G., Serrano, S., Sirignano, C., Sirri, G., Skottfelt, J., Stanco, L., Steinwagner, J., Tallada-Crespí, P., Tereno, I., Toledo-Moreo, R., Torradeflot, F., Tutusaus, I., Valentijn, E. A., Valenziano, L., Vassallo, T., Kleijn, G. Verdoes, Veropalumbo, A., Wang, Y., Weller, J., Zamorani, G., Zucca, E., Burigana, C., Calabrese, M., Mora, A., Pöntinen, M., Scottez, V., Viel, M., and Margalef-Bentabol, B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Euclid Wide Survey (EWS) is predicted to find approximately 170 000 galaxy-galaxy strong lenses from its lifetime observation of 14 000 deg^2 of the sky. Detecting this many lenses by visual inspection with professional astronomers and citizen scientists alone is infeasible. Machine learning algorithms, particularly convolutional neural networks (CNNs), have been used as an automated method of detecting strong lenses, and have proven fruitful in finding galaxy-galaxy strong lens candidates. We identify the major challenge to be the automatic detection of galaxy-galaxy strong lenses while simultaneously maintaining a low false positive rate. One aim of this research is to have a quantified starting point on the achieved purity and completeness with our current version of CNN-based detection pipelines for the VIS images of EWS. We select all sources with VIS IE < 23 mag from the Euclid Early Release Observation imaging of the Perseus field. We apply a range of CNN architectures to detect strong lenses in these cutouts. All our networks perform extremely well on simulated data sets and their respective validation sets. However, when applied to real Euclid imaging, the highest lens purity is just 11%. Among all our networks, the false positives are typically identifiable by human volunteers as, for example, spiral galaxies, multiple sources, and artefacts, implying that improvements are still possible, perhaps via a second, more interpretable lens selection filtering stage. There is currently no alternative to human classification of CNN-selected lens candidates. Given the expected 10^5 lensing systems in Euclid, this implies 10^6 objects for human classification, which while very large is not in principle intractable and not without precedent., Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, Euclid consortium paper, A&A submitted
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- 2024
6. Can an increase in productivity cause a decrease in production? Insights from a model economy with AI automation
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Barkan, Casey O.
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Economics - General Economics - Abstract
It is widely assumed that increases in economic productivity necessarily lead to economic growth. In this paper, it is shown that this is not always the case. An idealized model of an economy is presented in which a new technology allows capital to be utilized autonomously without labor input. This is motivated by the possibility that advances in artificial intelligence (AI) will give rise to AI agents that act autonomously in the economy. The economic model involves a single profit-maximizing firm which is a monopolist in the product market and a monopsonist in the labor market. The new automation technology causes the firm to replace labor with capital in such a way that its profit increases while total production decreases. The model is not intended to capture the structure of a real economy, but rather to illustrate how basic economic mechanisms can give rise to counterintuitive and undesirable outcomes., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures
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- 2024
7. Outer Solar System spacecraft without drag-free control to probe the $\mu$Hz gravitational wave frontier
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McQuinn, Matthew and McGrath, Casey
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
The microhertz frequency band of gravitational waves probes the merger of supermassive black holes as well as many other gravitational wave phenomena. However, space-interferometry methods that use test masses would require substantial development of test-mass isolation systems to detect anticipated astrophysical events. We propose an approach that avoids inertial test masses by situating spacecraft in the low-acceleration environment of the outer Solar System. We show that for Earth-spacecraft and inter-spacecraft distances of $\gtrsim 10$ AU, the accelerations on the spacecraft would be sufficiently small to potentially achieve sensitivities determined by stochastic gravitational wave backgrounds. We further argue, for arm lengths of $10-30$ AU and $10$ Watt transmissions, that stable phase locks should be achievable with 20 cm mirrors or 5 m radio dishes. We discuss designs that send both laser beams and radio waves between the spacecraft, finding that despite the $\sim10^4\times$ longer wavelengths, even a design with radio transmissions could reach stochastic background-limited sensitivities at $\lesssim 0.3\times 10^{-4}$ Hz. Operating in the radio significantly reduces many spacecraft design tolerances. Our baseline concept requires two arms to do interferometry. However, if one spacecraft carries a clock with Allan deviations at $10^4$ seconds of $10^{-17}$, a comparable sensitivity could be achieved with a single arm. Finally, we discuss the feasibility of achieving similar gravitational wave sensitivities in a `Doppler tracking' configuration where the single arm is anchored to Earth., Comment: 8 figures, 25 pages + appendix
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- 2024
8. The NANOGrav 15 year Data Set: Removing pulsars one by one from the pulsar timing array
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Agazie, Gabriella, Anumarlapudi, Akash, Archibald, Anne M., Arzoumanian, Zaven, Baier, Jeremy G., Baker, Paul T., Becsy, Bence, Blecha, Laura, Brazier, Adam, Brook, Paul R., Burke-Spolaor, Sarah, Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Charisi, Maria, Chatterjee, Shami, Cohen, Tyler, Cordes, James M., Cornish, Neil J., Crawford, Fronefield, Cromartie, H. Thankful, Crowter, Kathryn, DeCesar, Megan E., Demorest, Paul B., Deng, Heling, Dey, Lankeswar, Dolch, Timothy, Ferrara, Elizabeth C., Fiore, William, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Freedman, Gabriel E., Gardiner, Emiko C., Garver-Daniels, Nate, Gentile, Peter A., Gersbach, Kyle A., Glaser, Joseph, Good, Deborah C., Guertin, Lydia, Gultekin, Kayhan, Hazboun, Jeffrey S., Jennings, Ross J., Johnson, Aaron D., Jones, Megan L., Kaiser, Andrew R., Kaplan, David L., Kelley, Luke Zoltan, Kerr, Matthew, Key, Joey S., Laal, Nima, Lam, Michael T., Lamb, William G., Larsen, Bjorn, Lazio, T. Joseph W., Lewandowska, Natalia, Liu, Tingting, Lorimer, Duncan R., Luo, Jing, Lynch, Ryan S., Ma, Chung-Pei, Madison, Dustin R., McEwen, Alexander, McKee, James W., McLaughlin, Maura A., McMann, Natasha, Meyers, Bradley W., Meyers, Patrick M., Middleton, Hannah, Mingarelli, Chiara M. F., Mitridate, Andrea, Moore, Christopher J., Ng, Cherry, Nice, David J., Ocker, Stella Koch, Olum, Ken D., Pennucci, Timothy T., Perera, Benetge B. P., Pol, Nihan S., Radovan, Henri A., Ransom, Scott M., Ray, Paul S., Romano, Joseph D., Runnoe, Jessie C., Saffer, Alexander, Sardesai, Shashwat C., Schmiedekamp, Ann, Schmiedekamp, Carl, Schmitz, Kai, Shapiro-Albert, Brent J., Siemens, Xavier, Simon, Joseph, Siwek, Magdalena S., Fiscella, Sophia V. Sosa, Stairs, Ingrid H., Stinebring, Daniel R., Stovall, Kevin, Susobhanan, Abhimanyu, Swiggum, Joseph K., Taylor, Stephen R., Turner, Jacob E., Unal, Caner, Vallisneri, Michele, Vecchio, Alberto, Vigeland, Sarah J., Wahl, Haley M., Witt, Caitlin A., Wright, David, and Young, Olivia
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Evidence has emerged for a stochastic signal correlated among 67 pulsars within the 15-year pulsar-timing data set compiled by the NANOGrav collaboration. Similar signals have been found in data from the European, Indian, Parkes, and Chinese PTAs. This signal has been interpreted as indicative of the presence of a nanohertz stochastic gravitational wave background. To explore the internal consistency of this result we investigate how the recovered signal strength changes as we remove the pulsars one by one from the data set. We calculate the signal strength using the (noise-marginalized) optimal statistic, a frequentist metric designed to measure correlated excess power in the residuals of the arrival times of the radio pulses. We identify several features emerging from this analysis that were initially unexpected. The significance of these features, however, can only be assessed by comparing the real data to synthetic data sets. After conducting identical analyses on simulated data sets, we do not find anything inconsistent with the presence of a stochastic gravitational wave background in the NANOGrav 15-year data. The methodologies developed here can offer additional tools for application to future, more sensitive data sets. While this analysis provides an internal consistency check of the NANOGrav results, it does not eliminate the necessity for additional investigations that could identify potential systematics or uncover unmodeled physical phenomena in the data., Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables
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- 2024
9. The NANOGrav 15 yr Data Set: Harmonic Analysis of the Pulsar Angular Correlations
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Agazie, Gabriella, Baier, Jeremy G., Baker, Paul T., Becsy, Bence, Blecha, Laura, Boddy, Kimberly K., Brazier, Adam, Brook, Paul R., Burke-Spolaor, Sarah, Burnette, Rand, Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Charisi, Maria, Chatterjee, Shami, Cohen, Tyler, Cordes, James M., Cornish, Neil J., Crawford, Fronefield, Cromartie, H. Thankful, DeCesar, Megan E., Demorest, Paul B., Deng, Heling, Dey, Lankeswar, Dolch, Timothy, Ferrara, Elizabeth C., Fiore, William, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Freedman, Gabriel E., Gardiner, Emiko C., Gersbach, Kyle A., Glaser, Joseph, Good, Deborah C., Gultekin, Kayhan, Hazboun, Jeffrey S., Jennings, Ross J., Johnson, Aaron D., Kaplan, David L., Kelley, Luke Zoltan, Key, Joey S., Laal, Nima, Lam, Michael T., Lamb, William G., Larsen, Bjorn, Lazio, T. Joseph W., Lewandowska, Natalia, Liu, Tingting, Luo, Jing, Lynch, Ryan S., Ma, Chung-Pei, Madison, Dustin R., McEwen, Alexander, McKee, James W., McLaughlin, Maura A., Meyers, Patrick M., Mingarelli, Chiara M. F., Mitridate, Andrea, Nay, Jonathan, Nice, David J., Ocker, Stella Koch, Olum, Ken D., Pennucci, Timothy T., Petrov, Polina, Pol, Nihan S., Radovan, Henri A., Ransom, Scott M., Ray, Paul S., Runnoe, Jessie C., Saffer, Alexander, Sardesai, Shashwat C., Schmitz, Kai, Siemens, Xavier, Simon, Joseph, Siwek, Magdalena S., Smith, Tristan L., Fiscella, Sophia V. Sosa, Stairs, Ingrid H., Stinebring, Daniel R., Susobhanan, Abhimanyu, Swiggum, Joseph K., Taylor, Jacob, Taylor, Stephen R., Turner, Jacob E., Unal, Caner, Vallisneri, Michele, van Haasteren, Rutger, Verbiest, Joris, Vigeland, Sarah J., Witt, Caitlin A., Wright, David, and Young, Olivia
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
Pulsar timing array observations have found evidence for an isotropic gravitational wave background with the Hellings-Downs angular correlations, expected from general relativity. This interpretation hinges on the measured shape of the angular correlations, which is predominately quadrupolar under general relativity. Here we explore a more flexible parameterization: we expand the angular correlations into a sum of Legendre polynomials and use a Bayesian analysis to constrain their coefficients with the 15-year pulsar timing data set collected by the North American Nanohertz Observatory for Gravitational Waves (NANOGrav). When including Legendre polynomials with multipoles $\ell \geq 2$, we only find a significant signal in the quadrupole with an amplitude consistent with general relativity and non-zero at the $\sim 95\%$ confidence level and a Bayes factor of 200. When we include multipoles $\ell \leq 1$, the Bayes factor evidence for quadrupole correlations decreases by more than an order of magnitude due to evidence for a monopolar signal at approximately 4 nHz which has also been noted in previous analyses of the NANOGrav 15-year data. Further work needs to be done in order to better characterize the properties of this monopolar signal and its effect on the evidence for quadrupolar angular correlations., Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
10. Exploring the Nature of Little Red Dots: Constraints on AGN and Stellar Contributions from PRIMER MIRI Imaging
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Leung, Gene C. K., Finkelstein, Steven L., Pérez-González, Pablo G., Morales, Alexa M., Taylor, Anthony J., Barro, Guillermo, Kocevski, Dale D., Akins, Hollis B., Carnall, Adam C., Ortiz, Óscar A. Chávez, Cleri, Nikko J., Cullen, Fergus, Donnan, Callum T., Dunlop, James S., Ellis, Richard S., Grogin, Norman A., Hirschmann, Michaela, Koekemoer, Anton M., Kokorev, Vasily, Lucas, Ray A., McLeod, Derek J., Papovich, Casey, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
JWST has revealed a large population of compact, red galaxies at $z>4$ known as Little Red Dots (LRDs). We analyze the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of 95 LRDs from the JWST PRIMER survey with complete photometric coverage from $1-18\ \mu$m using NIRCam and MIRI imaging, representing the most extensive SED analysis on a large LRD sample with long-wavelength MIRI data. We examine SED models in which either galaxy or active galactic nucleus (AGN) emission dominates the rest-frame UV or optical continuum, extracting physical properties to explore each scenario's implications. In the galaxy-only model, we find massive, dusty stellar populations alongside unobscured, low-mass components, hinting at inhomogeneous obscuration. The AGN-only model indicates dusty, luminous AGNs with low hot dust fractions compared to typical quasars. A hybrid AGN and galaxy model suggests low-mass, unobscured galaxies in the UV, with stellar mass estimates spanning $\sim$2 dex across the different models, underscoring the need for caution in interpreting LRD stellar masses. With MIRI photometry, the galaxy-only model produces stellar masses within cosmological limits, but extremely high stellar mass densities are inferred. The hybrid model infers highly overmassive black holes exceeding those in recently reported high-redshift AGNs, hinting at a partial AGN contribution to the rest-optical continuum or widespread super-Eddington accretion. Our findings highlight the extreme conditions required for both AGN or galaxy dominated scenarios in LRDs, supporting a mixed contribution to the red continuum, or novel scenarios to explain the observed emission., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ. Machine-readable form of Table 2 available at: https://github.com/geneckleung/lrd_primer_miri
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- 2024
11. Testing for Intrinsic Type Ia Supernova Luminosity Evolution at z>2 with JWST
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Pierel, J. D. R., Coulter, D. A., Siebert, M. R., Akins, H. B., Engesser, M., Fox, O. D., Franco, M., Rest, A., Agrawal, A., Ajay, Y., Allen, N., Casey, C. M., Decoursey, C., Drakos, N. E., Egami, E., Faisst, A. L., Gezari, S., Gozaliasl, G., Ilbert, O., Jones, D. O., Karmen, M., Kartaltepe, J. S., Koekemoer, A. M., Lane, Z. G., Larson, R. L., Li, T., Liu, D., Moriya, T. J., McCracken, H. J., Paquereau, L., Quimby, R. M., Rich, R. M., Rhodes, J., Robertson, B. E., Sanders, D. B., Shahbandeh, M., Shuntov, M., Silverman, J. D., Strolger, L. G., Toft, S., and Zenati, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is opening new frontiers of transient discovery and follow-up at high-redshift. Here we present the discovery of a spectroscopically confirmed Type Ia supernova (SN Ia; SN 2023aeax) at z=2.15 with JWST, with cadenced NIRCam observations that enable multi-band light curve fitting. SN 2023aeax lands at the edge of traditional low-z cosmology color cuts because of its blue color (peak rest-frame B-V~-0.3), but we still apply a fiducial standardization approach with the BayeSN model and find that the SN 2023aeax luminosity distance measurement is in agreement (~0.1sigma) with LambdaCDM. SN 2023aeax is only the second spectroscopically confirmed SN Ia in the dark matter-dominated Universe at z>2 (the other is SN 2023adsy), giving it rare leverage to constrain any potential evolution in SN Ia standardized luminosities. Similar to SN 2023adsy (B-V~0.8), SN 2023aeax has a fairly extreme (but opposite) color, which may be due to the small sample size or a secondary factor, such as host galaxy properties. Nevertheless, the SN 2023aeax spectrum is well-represented by normal low-z SN Ia spectra and we find no definitive evolution in SN Ia standardization with redshift. Still, the first two spectroscopically confirmed z>2 SNe Ia have peculiar colors and combine for a ~1sigma distance slope relative to LambdaCDM, the implications of which require a larger sample and dedicated host galaxy observations to investigate., Comment: Submitted to ApJL. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2406.05089
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- 2024
12. COALAS III: The ATCA CO(1-0) look at the growth and death of H$\alpha$ emitters in the Spiderweb protocluster at z=2.16
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Pérez-Martínez, J. M., Dannerbauer, H., Emonts, B. H. C., Allison, J. R., Champagne, J. B., Indermuehle, B., Norris, R. P., Serra, P., Seymour, N., Thomson, A. P., Casey, C. M., Chen, Z., Daikuhara, K., De Breuck, C., D'Eugenio, C., Drouart, G., Hatch, N., Jin, S., Kodama, T., Koyama, Y., Lehnert, M. D., Macgregor, P., Miley, G., Naufal, A., Röttgering, H., Sánchez-Portal, M., Shimakawa, R., Zhang, Y., and Ziegler, B.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We obtain CO(1-0) molecular gas measurements with ATCA on a sample of 43 spectroscopically confirmed H$\alpha$ emitters in the Spiderweb protocluster at $z=2.16$ and investigate the relation between their star formation and cold gas reservoirs as a function of environment. We achieve a CO(1-0) detection rate of $\sim23\pm12\%$ with 10 dual CO(1-0) and H$\alpha$ detections at $10<\log M_{*}/M_\odot<11.5$. In addition, we obtain upper limits for the remaining sources. In terms of total gas fractions ($F_{gas}$), our sample is divided into two different regimes with a steep transition at $\log M_{*}/M_\odot\approx10.5$. Galaxies below that threshold have gas fractions that in some cases are close to unity, indicating that their gas reservoir has been replenished by inflows from the cosmic web. However, objects at $\log M_{*}/M_\odot>10.5$ display significantly lower gas fractions and are dominated by AGN (12 out of 20). Stacking results yield $F_{gas}\approx0.55$ for massive emitters excluding AGN, and $F_{gas}\approx0.35$ when examining only AGN candidates. Furthermore, depletion times show that most H$\alpha$ emitters may become passive by $1
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- 2024
13. Precision or Peril: Evaluating Code Quality from Quantized Large Language Models
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Melin, Eric L., Torek, Adam J., Eisty, Nasir U., and Kennington, Casey
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Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
When scaled to hundreds of billions of parameters, Large Language Models (LLMs) such as GPT-4 and LLaMA-405b have demonstrated remarkable capabilities in tasks such as code generation, code completion, and writing test cases. However, scaling up model sizes results in exponentially higher computational cost and energy consumption, leaving a large carbon footprint and making these models difficult to use by academic researchers and small businesses. Quantization has emerged as a way to mitigate the memory overhead of LLMs, allowing them to run on smaller hardware for lower prices. Quantization, however, may have detrimental effects on a model's output and it's effects on LLM generated code quality remains understudied and requires constant evaluation as LLMs are improved. This study aims to evaluate the current code generation capabilities of smaller LLMs using various metrics, exploring the impact of quantization on code quality, and identifying prevalent quality issues in the generated code. Method: We conducted a comprehensive evaluation of four smaller open-source LLMs across two benchmarks and code similarity scores. The impact of 8-bit and 4-bit quantization was analyzed, and a static analysis tool was utilized to scrutinize the generated code's quality. Our findings reveal that while the tested LLMs exhibit potential, these smaller LLMs produce code with subpar performance on established benchmarks. The effects of quantization on code quality are inconsistent, and the generated code frequently exhibits recurring quality and maintainability issues. This study underscores the necessity for careful scrutiny and validation of LLM-generated code before its adoption in software projects. While smaller LLMs can generate code, their output requires careful monitoring and validation by practitioners before integration into software projects.
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- 2024
14. EELG1002: A Record-Breaking [OIII]+H$\beta$ EW $\sim 3700$\AA~Galaxy at $z \sim 0.8$ -- Analog of Early Galaxies?
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Khostovan, Ali Ahmad, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Brinch, Malte, Casey, Caitlin, Faisst, Andreas, Harish, Santosh, Gozaliasl, Ghassem, Onodera, Masato, and Yabe, Kiyoto
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of EELG1002: a $z = 0.8275$ EELG identified within archival Gemini/GMOS spectroscopy as part of the COSMOS Spectroscopic Archive. Combining GMOS spectra and available multi-wavelength photometry, we find EELG1002 is a low-mass ($10^{7 - 8}$ M$_\odot$), compact ($\sim 530$ pc), and bursty star-forming galaxy with mass doubling timescales of $\sim 5 - 15$ Myr. EELG1002 has record-breaking rest-frame [OIII]+H$\beta$ EW of $\sim 2800 - 3700$\AA~which is $\sim 16 - 35 \times$ higher than typical $z \sim 0.8$ [OIII] emitters with similar stellar mass and even higher than typical $z > 5$ galaxies. We find no clear evidence of an AGN suggesting the emission lines are star formation driven. EELG1002 is chemically unevolved (direct $T_e$; $12+\log_{10} (\textrm{O/H}) \sim 7.5$ consistent with $z > 5$ galaxies at fixed stellar mass) and may be undergoing a first intense, bursty star formation phase analogous to conditions expected of galaxies in the early Universe. We find evidence for a highly energetic ISM ([OIII]/[OII] $\sim 11$) and hard ionizing radiation field (elevated [NeIII]/[OII] at fixed [OIII]/[OII]). Coupled with its compact, metal-poor, and actively star-forming nature, EELG1002 is found to efficiently produce ionizing photons with $\xi_{ion} \sim 10^{25.70 - 25.75}$ erg$^{-1}$ Hz and may have $\sim 10 - 20\%$ LyC escape fraction suggesting such sources may be important reionization-era analogs. We find dynamical mass of $\sim 10^9$ M$_\odot$ suggesting copious amounts of gas to support intense star-formation activity as also suggested by analogs identified in Illustris-TNG. EELG1002 may be an ideal low-$z$ laboratory of galaxies in the early Universe and demonstrates how archival datasets can support high-$z$ science and next-generation surveys planned with \textit{Euclid} and \textit{Roman}., Comment: 27 pages, 9 Figures, 8 Tables. Submitted to ApJ. Abstract is abridged. Comments are welcomed. All code can be accessed via our github repository (https://github.com/akhostov/EELG1002)
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- 2024
15. Deep Neural Emulation of the Supermassive Black-hole Binary Population
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Laal, Nima, Taylor, Stephen R., Kelley, Luke Zoltan, Simon, Joseph, Gultekin, Kayhan, Wright, David, Becsy, Bence, Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Chen, Siyuan, Cingoranelli, Alexander, D'Orazio, Daniel J., Gardiner, Emiko C., Lamb, William G., Matt, Cayenne, Siwek, Magdalena S., and Wachter, Jeremy M.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology - Abstract
While supermassive black-hole (SMBH)-binaries are not the only viable source for the low-frequency gravitational wave background (GWB) signal evidenced by the most recent pulsar timing array (PTA) data sets, they are expected to be the most likely. Thus, connecting the measured PTA GWB spectrum and the underlying physics governing the demographics and dynamics of SMBH-binaries is extremely important. Previously, Gaussian processes (GPs) and dense neural networks have been used to make such a connection by being built as conditional emulators; their input is some selected evolution or environmental SMBH-binary parameters and their output is the emulated mean and standard deviation of the GWB strain ensemble distribution over many Universes. In this paper, we use a normalizing flow (NF) emulator that is trained on the entirety of the GWB strain ensemble distribution, rather than only mean and standard deviation. As a result, we can predict strain distributions that mirror underlying simulations very closely while also capturing frequency covariances in the strain distributions as well as statistical complexities such as tails, non-Gaussianities, and multimodalities that are otherwise not learnable by existing techniques. In particular, we feature various comparisons between the NF-based emulator and the GP approach used extensively in past efforts. Our analyses conclude that the NF-based emulator not only outperforms GPs in the ease and computational cost of training but also outperforms in the fidelity of the emulated GWB strain ensemble distributions.
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- 2024
16. COSMOS2020: Disentangling the Role of Mass and Environment in Star Formation Activity of Galaxies at $0.4<z<4$
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Taamoli, Sina, Nezhad, Negin, Mobasher, Bahram, Manesh, Faezeh, Chartab, Nima, Weaver, John R., Capak, Peter L., Casey, Caitlin M., Gozaliasl, Ghassem, Heintz, Kasper E., Ilbert, Olivier, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., McCracken, Henry J., Sanders, David B., Scoville, Nicholas, Toft, Sune, and Watson, Darach
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The role of internal and environmental factors in the star formation activity of galaxies is still a matter of debate, particularly at higher redshifts. Leveraging the most recent release of the COSMOS catalog, COSMOS2020, and density measurements from our previous study we disentangle the impact of environment and stellar mass on the star formation rate (SFR), and specific SFR (sSFR) of a sample of $\sim 210,000$ galaxies within redshift range $0.4< z < 4$ and present our findings in three cosmic epochs: 1) out to $z\sim 1$, the average SFR and sSFR decline at extremely dense environments and high mass end of the distribution which is mostly due to the presence of the massive quiescent population; 2) at $1
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- 2024
17. Unveiling the Dark Side of UV/Optical Bright Galaxies: Optically Thick Dust Absorption
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Cheng, Yingjie, Giavalisco, Mauro, Backhaus, Bren E., Bhatawdekar, Rachana, Cleri, Nikko J., Costantin, Luca, Daddi, Emanuele, Dickinson, Mark, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hirschmann, Michaela, Holwerda, Benne W., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lucas, Ray A., Pacucci, Fabio, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Rodighiero, Giulia, Seillé, Lise-Marie, Whitaker, Katherine E., Yung, L. Y. Aaron, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Papovich, Casey, and Pirzkal, Nor
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Over the past decades, a population of galaxies invisible in optical/near-infrared, but bright at longer wavelengths, have been identified through color selections. These so-called optically faint/dark galaxies are considered to be massive quiescent galaxies or highly dust-attenuated galaxies. Having the entire galaxy obscured by dust, however, is likely an extreme case of the much more common occurrence of optically thin and thick absorption coexisting in the same system. With the power of JWST imaging, we are able to spatially resolve massive galaxies at z~3, accurately model their spectral energy distributions, and identify candidate optically thick substructures. We target galaxies with log(M*/Msun)>10.3 and 2.5
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- 2024
18. Detection and Characterisation of Giant Planets with Gaia Astrometry
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Wallace, A. L., Casey, A. R., Brown, A. G. A., and Castro-Ginard, A.
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Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Astrometric observations with Gaia are expected to play a valuable role in future exoplanet surveys. With current data from Gaia's third data release (DR3), we are sensitive to periods from less than 1 year to more than 4 years but, unlike radial velocity are not as restricted by the orbital inclination of a potential planet. The presence and potential properties of a companion affect the primary's renormalised unit weight error (RUWE) making this a valuable quantity in the search for exoplanets. Using this value and the fitted astrometric tracks from Gaia, we use Bayesian inference to constrain the mass and orbital parameters of companions in known systems. Combining this with radial velocity measurements, we show it is possible to independently measure mass and inclination and suggest HD 66141 b is a possible brown dwarf with maximum mass 23.9$^{+7.2}_{-6.4}$ M$_{\mathrm{J}}$. We show how this method may be applied to directly imaged planets in the future, using $\beta$-Pictoris c as an example but note that the host star is bright and active, making it difficult to draw clear conclusions. We show how the next Gaia data release, which will include epoch astrometry, will allow us to accurately constrain orbital parameters from astrometric data alone, revolutionising future searches for exoplanets. Combining predicted observational limits on planet mass with theoretical distributions, we estimate the probability that a star with a given RUWE will host a detectable planet, which will be highly valuable in planning future surveys., Comment: 11 pages, 15 figures, submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
19. Renaissance: Investigating the Pretraining of Vision-Language Encoders
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Fields, Clayton and Kennington, Casey
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
In the past several years there has been an explosion of available models for vision-language tasks. Unfortunately, the literature still leaves open a number of questions related to best practices in designing and training such models. In this paper we seek to answer several questions related to the pretraining of vision-language encoders through meta-analysis. In our first set of experiments, we show that we can save significant compute at no cost to downstream performance, by freezing large parts of vision-language models during pretraining. In our second set of experiments we examine the effect of basing a VL transformer on a vision model versus a text model. Additionally, we introduce a VL modeling platform called Renaissance that we use to conduct all of the experiments. This program offers a great deal of flexibility in creating, training and evaluating transformer encoders for VL modeling. The source code for Renaissance can be found at https://github.com/bsu-slim/renaissance.
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- 2024
20. Galaxy Tomography with the Gravitational Wave Background from Supermassive Black Hole Binaries
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Chen, Yifan, Daniel, Matthias, D'Orazio, Daniel J., Mitridate, Andrea, Sagunski, Laura, Xue, Xiao, Agazie, Gabriella, Baier, Jeremy G., Baker, Paul T., Bécsy, Bence, Blecha, Laura, Brazier, Adam, Brook, Paul R., Burke-Spolaor, Sarah, Burnette, Rand, Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Charisi, Maria, Chatterjee, Shami, Cohen, Tyler, Cordes, James M., Cornish, Neil J., Crawford, Fronefield, Cromartie, H. Thankful, DeCesar, Megan E., Demorest, Paul B., Deng, Heling, Dey, Lankeswar, Dolch, Timothy, Ferrara, Elizabeth C., Fiore, William, Fonseca, Emmanuel, Freedman, Gabriel E., Gardiner, Emiko C., Gersbach, Kyle A., Glaser, Joseph, Good, Deborah C., Gültekin, Kayhan, Hazboun, Jeffrey S., Jennings, Ross J., Johnson, Aaron D., Kaplan, David L., Kelley, Luke Zoltan, Key, Joey S., Laal, Nima, Lam, Michael T., Lamb, William G., Larsen, Bjorn, Lazio, T. Joseph W., Lewandowska, Natalia, Liu, Tingting, Luo, Jing, Lynch, Ryan S., Ma, Chung-Pei, Madison, Dustin R., McEwen, Alexander, McKee, James W., McLaughlin, Maura A., Meyers, Patrick M., Mingarelli, Chiara M. F., Nice, David J., Ocker, Stella Koch, Olum, Ken D., Pennucci, Timothy T., Petrov, Polina, Pol, Nihan S., Radovan, Henri A., Ransom, Scott M., Ray, Paul S., Romano, Joseph D., Runnoe, Jessie C., Saffer, Alexander, Sardesai, Shashwat C., Schmitz, Kai, Siemens, Xavier, Simon, Joseph, Siwek, Magdalena S., Fiscella, Sophia V. Sosa, Stairs, Ingrid H., Stinebring, Daniel R., Susobhanan, Abhimanyu, Swiggum, Joseph K., Taylor, Jacob, Taylor, Stephen R., Turner, Jacob E., Unal, Caner, Vallisneri, Michele, van Haasteren, Rutger, Verbiest, Joris, Vigeland, Sarah J., Witt, Caitlin A., Wright, David, and Young, Olivia
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
The detection of a stochastic gravitational wave background by pulsar timing arrays suggests the presence of a supermassive black hole binary population. Although the observed spectrum generally aligns with predictions from orbital evolution driven by gravitational wave emission in circular orbits, there is a discernible preference for a turnover at the lowest observed frequencies. This turnover could indicate a significant hardening phase, transitioning from early environmental influences to later stages predominantly influenced by gravitational wave emission. In the vicinity of these binaries, the ejection of stars or dark matter particles through gravitational three-body slingshots efficiently extracts orbital energy, leading to a low-frequency turnover in the spectrum. By analyzing the NANOGrav 15-year data, we assess how the gravitational wave spectrum depends on the initial inner galactic profile prior to disruption by binary ejections, accounting for a range of initial binary eccentricities. Our findings suggest a parsec-scale galactic center density around $10^6\,M_\odot/\textrm{pc}^3$ across most of the parameter space, offering insights into the environmental effects on black hole evolution and combined matter density near galaxy centers., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures
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- 2024
21. Optimal Allocation of Pauli Measurements for Low-rank Quantum State Tomography
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Qin, Zhen, Jameson, Casey, Gong, Zhexuan, Wakin, Michael B., and Zhu, Zhihui
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Quantum Physics ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Mathematics - Optimization and Control - Abstract
The process of reconstructing quantum states from experimental measurements, accomplished through quantum state tomography (QST), plays a crucial role in verifying and benchmarking quantum devices. A key challenge of QST is to find out how the accuracy of the reconstruction depends on the number of state copies used in the measurements. When multiple measurement settings are used, the total number of state copies is determined by multiplying the number of measurement settings with the number of repeated measurements for each setting. Due to statistical noise intrinsic to quantum measurements, a large number of repeated measurements is often used in practice. However, recent studies have shown that even with single-sample measurements--where only one measurement sample is obtained for each measurement setting--high accuracy QST can still be achieved with a sufficiently large number of different measurement settings. In this paper, we establish a theoretical understanding of the trade-off between the number of measurement settings and the number of repeated measurements per setting in QST. Our focus is primarily on low-rank density matrix recovery using Pauli measurements. We delve into the global landscape underlying the low-rank QST problem and demonstrate that the joint consideration of measurement settings and repeated measurements ensures a bounded recovery error for all second-order critical points, to which optimization algorithms tend to converge. This finding suggests the advantage of minimizing the number of repeated measurements per setting when the total number of state copies is held fixed. Additionally, we prove that the Wirtinger gradient descent algorithm can converge to the region of second-order critical points with a linear convergence rate. We have also performed numerical experiments to support our theoretical findings.
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- 2024
22. The FENIKS Survey: Stellar-Halo Mass Relationship of Central and Satellite Galaxies in UDS and COSMOS at 0.2 < z < 4.5
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Zaidi, Kumail, Wake, David A., Marchesini, Danilo, Iyer, Kartheik, Muzzin, Adam, Papovich, Casey, Antwi-Danso, Jacqueline, Glazebrook, Karl, and Labbé, Ivo
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a comprehensive analysis of the observed Stellar-to-Halo mass relationship (SHMR) spanning redshifts from 0.2 to 4.5. This was enabled through galaxy clustering and abundance measurements from two large (effective area ~ 1.61 deg^2) and homogeneously prepared photometric catalogs - UltraVISTA ultra-deep stripes DR3 (COSMOS) and FENIKS v1 (UDS). To translate these measurements into the SHMR, we introduce a novel halo occupation distribution (HOD) fitting approach (``smooth-$z$'') whereby HOD parameters between neighboring z-bins are connected via physically motivated continuity (smoothing) priors. As a result, the high constraining power at z <~ 2, due to a much wider dynamical range in stellar mass (~ 3 dex), helps constrain the SHMR at z >~ 2, where that range shrinks down to <~ 1 dex. We find that the halo mass is tightly coupled to star formation: the halo mass with peak integrated star-forming efficiency (SFE), M_h^peak remains constant within ~ 10^12.2 - 10^12.4 Msolar throughout the redshifts probed. Furthermore, we show that if we had relied on COSMOS alone (as opposed to COSMOS+UDS), as has been done by many preceding studies, M_h^peak would be systematically lower by up to ~0.15 dex at z < 1.5, highlighting the importance of mitigating cosmic variance. Finally, for the first time, we show how the SFE evolves with redshift as halos grow in mass along their progenitor merger trees, instead of at fixed halo masses., Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 36 pages, 18 figures. Comments welcome
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- 2024
23. MAUVE: An Ultraviolet Astrophysics Probe Mission Concept
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Balakrishnan, Mayura, Bowens, Rory, Aguirre, Fernando Cruz, Hughes, Kaeli, Jayaraman, Rahul, Kuhn, Emily, Louden, Emma, Louie, Dana R., McBride, Keith, McGrath, Casey, Payne, Jacob, Presser, Tyler, Reding, Joshua S., Rickman, Emily, Scrandis, Rachel, Symons, Teresa, Wiser, Lindsey, Jahoda, Keith, Kataria, Tiffany, Nash, Alfred, and X, Team
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the mission concept "Mission to Analyze the UltraViolet universE" (MAUVE), a wide-field spectrometer and imager conceived during the inaugural NASA Astrophysics Mission Design School. MAUVE responds to the 2023 Announcement of Opportunity for Probe-class missions, with a budget cap of \$1 billion, and would hypothetically launch in 2031. However, the formulation of MAUVE was an educational exercise and the mission is not being developed further. The Principal Investigator-led science of MAUVE aligns with the priorities outlined in the 2020 Astrophysics Decadal Survey, enabling new characterizations of exoplanet atmospheres, the early-time light curves of some of the universe's most explosive transients, and the poorly-understood extragalactic background light. Because the Principal Investigator science occupies 30% of the observing time available during the mission's 5 yr lifespan, we provide an observing plan that would allow for 70% of the observing time to be used for General Observer programs, with community-solicited proposals. The onboard detector (THISTLE) claims significant heritage from the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on Hubble, but extends its wavelength range down to the extreme UV. We note that MAUVE would be the first satellite in decades with the ability to access this regime of the electromagnetic spectrum. MAUVE has a field of view of 900" x 900" a photometric sensitivity extending to $m_{UV}\leq 24$, and a resolving power of $R\sim1000$. This paper provides full science and mission traceability matrices for this concept, and also outlines cost and scheduling timelines aimed at enabling a within-budget mission and an on-time launch., Comment: 21 pages, 15 figures. Published by the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
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- 2024
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24. ALMA detection of [OIII] 88um at z=12.33: Exploring the Nature and Evolution of GHZ2 as a Massive Compact Stellar System
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Zavala, Jorge A., Bakx, Tom, Mitsuhashi, Ikki, Castellano, Marco, Calabro, Antonello, Akins, Hollis, Buat, Veronique, Casey, Caitlin M., Fernandez-Arenas, David, Franco, Maximilien, Fontana, Adriano, Hatsukade, Bunyo, Ho, Luis C., Ikeda, Ryota, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan, Koekemoer, Anton M., McKinney, Jed, Napolitano, Lorenzo, Perez-Gonzalez, Pablo G., Santini, Paola, Serjeant, Stephen, Terlevich, Elena, Terlevich, Roberto, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present ALMA observations on the high-redshift galaxy GHZ2 and report a successful detection of the rest-frame 88um atomic transition from doubly-ionized Oxygen at z=12.3327+/-0.0005. Based on these observations, combined with additional constraints on the [OIII] 52um line luminosity and previous JWST data, we argue that GHZ2 is likely powered by compact and young star formation, and show that it follows well-established relationships found for giant HII regions and metal-poor star-forming dwarf galaxies that are known to host bright super star clusters. Additionally, these observations provide new constraints on the Oxygen electron density (100 < n_e[cm^-3] < 4,000) and dynamical mass (M_dyn=3-8x10^8M_sun). The existence of these massive starburst systems 13.3Gyr ago might explain the origin of today's globular clusters, a long-standing question in astronomy. To test this, we present observational probes to investigate whether sources like GHZ2 are linked to the formation of today's globular clusters or other more massive compact stellar systems., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2024
25. Self-Care Practices in the Context of Older Adults Living Independently
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Casey, Bridget, Marston, Greg, and Vyas, Dhaval
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Supporting practices around self-care is crucial for enabling older adults to continue living in their own homes and ageing in place. While existing assistive technology and research concerning self-care practices have been centered on a medicalized viewpoint, it neglects a holistic perspective of older adults' preferences in self-care. This paper presents a study involving 12 older adults aged 65 and above in a semi-structured interview study, where we aimed to understand participants' practices around self-care. Our findings show that self-care in such cases involves activities across the physical, emotional and psychological, social, leisure and spiritual domains. This paper provides a comprehensive understanding of the daily self-care practices of older adults including an updated self-care framework identifying key aspects, and a set of design implications for self-care assistive technologies.
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- 2024
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26. A Fast, Analytic Empirical Model of the Gaia Data Release 3 Astrometric Orbit Catalog Selection Function
- Author
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Lam, Casey Y., El-Badry, Kareem, and Simon, Joshua D.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
In June 2022, the Gaia mission released a catalog of astrometric orbital solutions for 168,065 binary systems, by far the largest such catalog to date. Unlike previous binary stars catalogs, which were heterogeneous collections of orbits from different surveys and instruments, these orbits were derived using Gaia data alone. Despite this homogeneity, the selection function is difficult to characterize because of choices made in the construction of the catalog. Understanding the catalog's selection function is required to model and interpret its contents. We use a combination of analytic and empirical prescriptions to construct a function that computes the probability that a binary with a given set of properties would have been published in the Gaia Data Release 3 astrometric orbit catalog. We also construct a binary population synthesis model based on Moe & Di Stefano (2017) to validate our characterization of the selection function, finding good agreement with the actual Gaia NSS catalog, with the exception of the orbital eccentricity distribution. The NSS catalog suggests high-eccentricity orbits are relatively uncommon at intermediate periods $100 \lesssim P_{orb} \lesssim 1000$ days. As an example application of the selection function, we estimate the Gaia DR3 detection probabilities of the star + BH binaries Gaia BH1, BH2, and BH3. We also estimate the population of Sun-like star + BH binaries in the Galaxy to be $\sim 5000$ for $100 < P_{orb} < 400$ day, $\lesssim 2,000$ for $400 < P_{orb} < 1000$ day, and $ \lesssim 20,000$ for $1000 < P_{orb} < 2000$ days., Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 2 appendices. Submitted to ApJ, comments welcome. Selection function code will be available here: https://github.com/caseylam/dr3_nss_ast_orbits_selection
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- 2024
27. Cross-Correlating the Universe: The Gravitational Wave Background and Large-Scale Structure
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Semenzato, Federico, Casey-Clyde, J. Andrew, Mingarelli, Chiara M. F., Raccanelli, Alvise, Bellomo, Nicola, Bartolo, Nicola, and Bertacca, Daniele
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The nature of the gravitational wave background (GWB) is a key question in modern astrophysics and cosmology, with significant implications for understanding of the structure and evolution of the Universe. We demonstrate how cross-correlating large-scale structure (LSS) tracers with the GWB spatial anisotropies can extract a clear astrophysical imprint from the GWB signal. Focusing on the unresolved population of supermassive black hole binaries (SMBHBs) as the primary source for the GWB at nanohertz frequencies, we construct full-sky maps of galaxy distributions and characteristic strain of the GWB to explore the relationship between GWB anisotropies and the LSS. We find that at current pulsar timing array (PTA) sensitivities, very few loud SMBHBs act as Poisson-like noise. This results in anisotropies dominated by a small number of sources, making GWB maps where SMBHBs trace the LSS indistinguishable from a GWBs from a uniform distribution of SMBHBs. In contrast, we find that the bulk of the unresolved SMBHBs produce anisotropies which mirror the spatial distribution of galaxies, and thus trace the LSS. Importantly, we show that cross-correlations are required to retrieve a clear LSS imprint in the GWB. Specifically, we find this LSS signature can me measured at a $3\sigma$ level in near-future PTA experiments that probe angular scales of $\ell_{\text{max}} \geq 42$, and $5\sigma$ for $\ell_{\text{max}} \geq 72$. Our approach opens new avenues to employ the GWB as an LSS tracer, providing unique insights into SMBHB population models and the nature of the GWB itself. Our results motivate further exploration of potential synergies between next-generation PTA experiments and cosmological tracers of the LSS., Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Submitted
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- 2024
28. A generative model for Gaia astrometric orbit catalogs: selection functions for binary stars, giant planets, and compact object companions
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El-Badry, Kareem, Lam, Casey, Holl, Berry, Halbwachs, Jean-Louis, Rix, Hans-Walter, Mazeh, Tsevi, and Shahaf, Sahar
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Astrometry from Gaia DR3 has produced a sample of $\sim$170,000 Keplerian orbital solutions, with many more anticipated in the next few years. These data have enormous potential to constrain the population of binary stars, giant planets, and compact objects in the Solar neighborhood. But in order to use the published orbit catalogs for statistical inference, it is necessary to understand their selection function: what is the probability that a binary with a given set of properties ends up in a catalog? We show that such a selection function for the Gaia DR3 astrometric binary catalog can be forward-modeled from the Gaia scanning law, including individual 1D astrometric measurements, the fitting of a cascade of astrometric models, and quality cuts applied in post-processing. We populate a synthetic Milky Way model with binary stars and generate a mock catalog of astrometric orbits. The mock catalog is quite similar to the DR3 astrometric binary sample, suggesting that our selection function is a sensible approximation of reality. Our fitting also produces a sample of spurious astrometric orbits similar to those found in DR3; these are mainly the result of scan angle-dependent astrometric biases in marginally resolved wide binaries. We show that Gaia's sensitivity to astrometric binaries falls off rapidly at high eccentricities, but only weakly at high inclinations. We predict that DR4 will yield $\sim 1$ million astrometric orbits, mostly for bright ($G \lesssim 15$) systems with long periods ($P_{\rm orb} \gtrsim 1000$ d). We provide code to simulate and fit realistic Gaia epoch astrometry for any data release and determine whether any hypothetical binary would receive a cataloged orbital solution., Comment: 22 pages, 17 figures, accepted to OJAp. Code at https://github.com/kareemelbadry/gaiamock
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- 2024
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29. CEERS: Forging the First Dust -- Transition from Stellar to ISM Grain Growth in the Early Universe
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Burgarella, Denis, Buat, Véronique, Theulé, Patrice, Zavala, Jorge, Haro, Pablo Arrabal, Bagley, Micaela B., Boquien, Médéric, Cleri, Nikko, Dewachter, Tim, Dickinson, Mark, Ferguson, Henry C., Fernández, Vital, Finkelstein, Steven L., Fontana, Adriano, Gawiser, Eric, Grazian, Andrea, Grogin, Norman, Holwerda, Benne W., Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Kewley, Lisa, Kirkpatrick, Allison, Kocevski, Dale, Koekemoer, Anton M., Long, Arianna, Lotz, Jennifer, Lucas, Ray A., Mobasher, Bahram, Papovich, Casey, Pérez-González, Pablo G., Pirzkal, Nor, Ravindranath, Swara, Rodighiero, Giulia, Roehlly, Yannick, Rose, Caitlin, Seillé, Lise-Marie, Somerville, Rachel, Wilkins, Steve, Yang, Guang, and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the coevolution of metals and dust for 173 galaxies at 4.0
10 by JWST. Besides, we observe that the metallicity of galaxies at z>8 presents a metal-to-stellar mass ratio larger than a few 10^-3, above a floor. This suggests a very fast rise of metals at high redshift, impacting the tentative detections of population III objects., Comment: This paper is submitted. It contains a main paper with 5 figures and 2 tables, plus supplementary materials - Published
- 2024
30. ECDQC: Efficient Compilation for Distributed Quantum Computing with Linear Layout
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Liu, Kecheng, Zhou, Yidong, Luo, Haochen, Xiong, Lingjun, Zhu, Yuchen, Casey, Eilis, Cheng, Jinglei, Chen, Samuel Yen-Chi, and Liang, Zhiding
- Subjects
Quantum Physics ,Computer Science - Distributed, Parallel, and Cluster Computing - Abstract
In this paper, we propose an efficient compilation method for distributed quantum computing (DQC) using the Linear Nearest Neighbor (LNN) architecture. By exploiting the LNN topology's symmetry, we optimize quantum circuit compilation for High Local Connectivity, Sparse Full Connectivity (HLC-SFC) algorithms like Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) and Quantum Fourier Transform (QFT). We also utilize dangling qubits to minimize non-local interactions and reduce SWAP gates. Our approach significantly decreases compilation time, gate count, and circuit depth, improving scalability and robustness for large-scale quantum computations.
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- 2024
31. Advancing Free-Space Optical Communication System Architecture: Performance Analysis of Varied Optical Ground Station Network Configurations
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Rotherham, Eugene, Casey, Connor, Rodriguez, Eva Fernandez, Torrez, Karen Wendy Vidaurre, Mashor, Maren, and Pike, Isaac
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Computer Science - Information Theory ,Computer Science - Networking and Internet Architecture - Abstract
This study discusses the current state of FSO technology, as well as global trends and developments in the industrial ecosystem to identify obstacles to the full realization of optical space-to-ground communication networks. Additionally, link performance and network availability trade-off studies are presented, comparing overall system performance between portable and large OGS networks in conjunction with a constellation of small low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites. The paper provides an up-to-date overview and critical analysis of the FSO industry and assesses the feasibility of low-cost portable terminals as an alternative to larger high-capacity OGS systems. This initiative aims to better inform optical communications stakeholders, including governments, academic institutions, satellite operators, manufacturers, and communication service providers, Comment: 24 pages, 15 figures, Published at IAC '24 & the code is available at https://github.com/connor-a-casey/fso-simulation
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- 2024
32. NGDEEP: The Star Formation and Ionization Properties of Galaxies at $1.7 < z < 3.4$
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Shen, Lu, Papovich, Casey, Matharu, Jasleen, Pirzkal, Nor, Hu, Weida, Berg, Danielle A., Bagley, Micaela B., Backhaus, Bren E., Cleri, Nikko J., Dickinson, Mark, Finkelstein, Steven L., Hathi, Nimish P., Huertas-Company, Marc, Hutchison, Taylor A., Giavalisco, Mauro, Grogin, Norman A., Jaskot, Anne E., Jung, Intae, Kartaltepe, Jeyhan S., Koekemoer, Anton M., Lotz, Jennifer M., Pérez-González, Pablo G., Rothberg, Barry, Simons, Raymond C., Vanderhoof, Brittany N., and Yung, L. Y. Aaron
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use JWST/NIRISS slitless spectroscopy from the Next Generation Deep Extragalactic Exploratory Public (NGDEEP) Survey to investigate the physical condition of star-forming galaxies at $1.7 < z < 3.4$. At these redshifts, the deep NGDEEP NIRISS slitless spectroscopy covers the [O II]$\lambda\lambda$3726,3729, [O III]$\lambda\lambda$4959,5007, H$\beta$ and H$\alpha$ emission features for galaxies with stellar masses $\log(\mathrm{M_\ast/M_\odot}) \gtrsim 7$, nearly a factor of a hundred lower than previous studies. We focus on the [O III]/[O II] (O$_{32}$) ratio which is primarily sensitive to the ionization state and with a secondary dependence on the gas-phase metallicity of the interstellar medium. We find significant ($\gtrsim5\sigma$) correlations between the O$_{32}$ ratio and galaxy properties as O$_{32}$ increases with decreasing stellar mass, decreasing star formation rate (SFR), increasing specific SFR (sSFR$\equiv \mathrm{SFR}/M_*$), and increasing equivalent width (EW) of H$\beta$ and H$\alpha$. These trends suggest a tight connection between the ionization parameter and these galaxy properties. Galaxies at $z\sim2-3$ exhibit a higher O$_{32}$ than local normal galaxies with the same stellar masses and SFRs, indicating that they have a higher ionization parameter and lower metallicity than local normal galaxies. In addition, we observe an evolutionary trend in the O$_{32}$ -- EW(H$\beta$) relation from $z\sim0$ and $z\gtrsim5$, such that higher redshift galaxies have higher EW(H$\beta$) and higher O$_{32}$ at fixed EW. We argue that both the enhanced recent star formation activity and the higher star formation surface density may contribute to the increase in O$_{32}$ and the ionization parameter., Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures
- Published
- 2024
33. The realm of Aurora. Density distribution of metal-poor giants in the heart of the Galaxy
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Kurbatov, Evgeny P., Belokurov, Vasily, Koposov, Sergey, Kravtsov, Andrey, Davies, Elliot Y., Brown, Anthony G. A., Cantat-Gaudin, Tristan, Castro-Ginard, Alfred, Casey, Andrew R., Drimmel, Ronald, Fouesneau, Morgan, Khanna, Shourya, Rix, Hans-Walter, and Wallace, Alex
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The innermost portions of the Milky Way's stellar halo have avoided scrutiny until recently. The lack of wide-area survey data, made it difficult to reconstruct an uninterrupted view of the density distribution of the metal-poor stars inside the Solar radius. In this study, we utilize red giant branch (RGB) stars from Gaia, with metallicities estimated using spectro-photometry from Gaia Data Release 3. Accounting for Gaia's selection function, we examine the spatial distribution of metal-poor ([M/H]<-1.3) RGB stars, from the Galactic centre (r~1 kpc) out to beyond the Solar radius (r~18 kpc). Our best-fitting single-component cored power-law model shows a vertical flattening of ~0.5 and a slope -3.4, consistent with previous studies. Motivated by the mounting evidence for two distinct stellar populations in the inner halo, we additionally test a range of two-component models. One of the components models the tidal debris from the Gaia Sausage/Enceladus merger, while the other captures the Aurora population -- stars that predate the Galactic disk formation. Our best-fit two-component model suggests that both populations contribute equally around the Solar radius, but Aurora dominates the inner halo with a steeper power-law index of -4.5, in agreement with the nitrogen-rich star distribution measured by Horta et al. (2021)., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
34. GaiaUnlimited: The old stellar disc of the Milky Way as traced by the Red Clump
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Khanna, Shourya, Yu, Jie, Drimmel, Ronald, Poggio, Eloisa, Cantat-Gaudin, Tristan, Castro-Ginard, Alfred, Kurbatov, Evgeny, Belokurov, Vasily, Brown, Anthony, Fouesneau, Morgan, Casey, Andrew, and Rix, Hans-Walter
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an exploration of the Milky Way's structural parameters using an all-sky sample of RC giants to map the stellar density from the inner to the outer parts of the Galactic disc. These evolved giants are considered to be standard candles due to their low intrinsic variance in their absolute luminosities, allowing us to estimate their distances with reasonable confidence. We exploit all-sky photometry from the AllWISE mid-infrared survey and the Gaia survey, along with astrometry from Gaia Data Release 3 and recent 3D extinction maps, to develop a probabilistic scheme in order to select with high confidence \rc{}-like stars. Our curated catalogue contains about 10 million sources, for which we estimate photometric distances based on the WISE $W1$ photometry. We then derive the selection function for our sample, which is the combined selection function of sources with both \gaia{} and \allwise{} photometry. Using the distances and accounting for the full selection function of our observables, we are able to fit a two-disc, multi-parameter model to constrain the scale height (\hz{}), scale-length (\rd{}), flaring, and the relative mass ratios of the two disc components. We illustrate and verify our methodology using mock catalogues of \rc{} stars. We find that the \rc{} population is best described by a flared thin disc with scale length \rd{}=$3.56\pm0.32$ kpc and scale height at the Sun of \hzsun{}=$0.17\pm0.01$ kpc, and a shorter and thicker disc with \rd{}=$2.59\pm0.11$ kpc, \hzsun{}=$0.45\pm0.11$ kpc, with no flare. The thicker disc constitutes 64\% of the \rc{} stellar mass beyond 3 kpc, while the thin disk shows evidence of being warped beyond 9 kpc from the Galactic center. The residuals between the predicted number density of RC stars from our axisymmetric model and the measured counts show possible evidence of a two-armed spiral perturbation in the disc of the Milky Way., Comment: 27 pages, submitted to A&A
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- 2024
35. GPT-4o System Card
- Author
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OpenAI, Hurst, Aaron, Lerer, Adam, Goucher, Adam P., Perelman, Adam, Ramesh, Aditya, Clark, Aidan, Ostrow, AJ, Welihinda, Akila, Hayes, Alan, Radford, Alec, Mądry, Aleksander, Baker-Whitcomb, Alex, Beutel, Alex, Borzunov, Alex, Carney, Alex, Chow, Alex, Kirillov, Alex, Nichol, Alex, Paino, Alex, Renzin, Alex, Passos, Alex Tachard, Kirillov, Alexander, Christakis, Alexi, Conneau, Alexis, Kamali, Ali, Jabri, Allan, Moyer, Allison, Tam, Allison, Crookes, Amadou, Tootoochian, Amin, Tootoonchian, Amin, Kumar, Ananya, Vallone, Andrea, Karpathy, Andrej, Braunstein, Andrew, Cann, Andrew, Codispoti, Andrew, Galu, Andrew, Kondrich, Andrew, Tulloch, Andrew, Mishchenko, Andrey, Baek, Angela, Jiang, Angela, Pelisse, Antoine, Woodford, Antonia, Gosalia, Anuj, Dhar, Arka, Pantuliano, Ashley, Nayak, Avi, Oliver, Avital, Zoph, Barret, Ghorbani, Behrooz, Leimberger, Ben, Rossen, Ben, Sokolowsky, Ben, Wang, Ben, Zweig, Benjamin, Hoover, Beth, Samic, Blake, McGrew, Bob, Spero, Bobby, Giertler, Bogo, Cheng, Bowen, Lightcap, Brad, Walkin, Brandon, Quinn, Brendan, Guarraci, Brian, Hsu, Brian, Kellogg, Bright, Eastman, Brydon, Lugaresi, Camillo, Wainwright, Carroll, Bassin, Cary, Hudson, Cary, Chu, Casey, Nelson, Chad, Li, Chak, Shern, Chan Jun, Conger, Channing, Barette, Charlotte, Voss, Chelsea, Ding, Chen, Lu, Cheng, Zhang, Chong, Beaumont, Chris, Hallacy, Chris, Koch, Chris, Gibson, Christian, Kim, Christina, Choi, Christine, McLeavey, Christine, Hesse, Christopher, Fischer, Claudia, Winter, Clemens, Czarnecki, Coley, Jarvis, Colin, Wei, Colin, Koumouzelis, Constantin, Sherburn, Dane, Kappler, Daniel, Levin, Daniel, Levy, Daniel, Carr, David, Farhi, David, Mely, David, Robinson, David, Sasaki, David, Jin, Denny, Valladares, Dev, Tsipras, Dimitris, Li, Doug, Nguyen, Duc Phong, Findlay, Duncan, Oiwoh, Edede, Wong, Edmund, Asdar, Ehsan, Proehl, Elizabeth, Yang, Elizabeth, Antonow, Eric, Kramer, Eric, Peterson, Eric, Sigler, Eric, Wallace, Eric, Brevdo, Eugene, Mays, Evan, Khorasani, Farzad, Such, Felipe Petroski, Raso, Filippo, Zhang, Francis, von Lohmann, Fred, Sulit, Freddie, Goh, Gabriel, Oden, Gene, Salmon, Geoff, Starace, Giulio, Brockman, Greg, Salman, Hadi, Bao, Haiming, Hu, Haitang, Wong, Hannah, Wang, Haoyu, Schmidt, Heather, Whitney, Heather, Jun, Heewoo, Kirchner, Hendrik, Pinto, Henrique Ponde de Oliveira, Ren, Hongyu, Chang, Huiwen, Chung, Hyung Won, Kivlichan, Ian, O'Connell, Ian, Osband, Ian, Silber, Ian, Sohl, Ian, Okuyucu, Ibrahim, Lan, Ikai, Kostrikov, Ilya, Sutskever, Ilya, Kanitscheider, Ingmar, Gulrajani, Ishaan, Coxon, Jacob, Menick, Jacob, Pachocki, Jakub, Aung, James, Betker, James, Crooks, James, Lennon, James, Kiros, Jamie, Leike, Jan, Park, Jane, Kwon, Jason, Phang, Jason, Teplitz, Jason, Wei, Jason, Wolfe, Jason, Chen, Jay, Harris, Jeff, Varavva, Jenia, Lee, Jessica Gan, Shieh, Jessica, Lin, Ji, Yu, Jiahui, Weng, Jiayi, Tang, Jie, Yu, Jieqi, Jang, Joanne, Candela, Joaquin Quinonero, Beutler, Joe, Landers, Joe, Parish, Joel, Heidecke, Johannes, Schulman, John, Lachman, Jonathan, McKay, Jonathan, Uesato, Jonathan, Ward, Jonathan, Kim, Jong Wook, Huizinga, Joost, Sitkin, Jordan, Kraaijeveld, Jos, Gross, Josh, Kaplan, Josh, Snyder, Josh, Achiam, Joshua, Jiao, Joy, Lee, Joyce, Zhuang, Juntang, Harriman, Justyn, Fricke, Kai, Hayashi, Kai, Singhal, Karan, Shi, Katy, Karthik, Kavin, Wood, Kayla, Rimbach, Kendra, Hsu, Kenny, Nguyen, Kenny, Gu-Lemberg, Keren, Button, Kevin, Liu, Kevin, Howe, Kiel, Muthukumar, Krithika, Luther, Kyle, Ahmad, Lama, Kai, Larry, Itow, Lauren, Workman, Lauren, Pathak, Leher, Chen, Leo, Jing, Li, Guy, Lia, Fedus, Liam, Zhou, Liang, Mamitsuka, Lien, Weng, Lilian, McCallum, Lindsay, Held, Lindsey, Ouyang, Long, Feuvrier, Louis, Zhang, Lu, Kondraciuk, Lukas, Kaiser, Lukasz, Hewitt, Luke, Metz, Luke, Doshi, Lyric, Aflak, Mada, Simens, Maddie, Boyd, Madelaine, Thompson, Madeleine, Dukhan, Marat, Chen, Mark, Gray, Mark, Hudnall, Mark, Zhang, Marvin, Aljubeh, Marwan, Litwin, Mateusz, Zeng, Matthew, Johnson, Max, Shetty, Maya, Gupta, Mayank, Shah, Meghan, Yatbaz, Mehmet, Yang, Meng Jia, Zhong, Mengchao, Glaese, Mia, Chen, Mianna, Janner, Michael, Lampe, Michael, Petrov, Michael, Wu, Michael, Wang, Michele, Fradin, Michelle, Pokrass, Michelle, Castro, Miguel, de Castro, Miguel Oom Temudo, Pavlov, Mikhail, Brundage, Miles, Wang, Miles, Khan, Minal, Murati, Mira, Bavarian, Mo, Lin, Molly, Yesildal, Murat, Soto, Nacho, Gimelshein, Natalia, Cone, Natalie, Staudacher, Natalie, Summers, Natalie, LaFontaine, Natan, Chowdhury, Neil, Ryder, Nick, Stathas, Nick, Turley, Nick, Tezak, Nik, Felix, Niko, Kudige, Nithanth, Keskar, Nitish, Deutsch, Noah, Bundick, Noel, Puckett, Nora, Nachum, Ofir, Okelola, Ola, Boiko, Oleg, Murk, Oleg, Jaffe, Oliver, Watkins, Olivia, Godement, Olivier, Campbell-Moore, Owen, Chao, Patrick, McMillan, Paul, Belov, Pavel, Su, Peng, Bak, Peter, Bakkum, Peter, Deng, Peter, Dolan, Peter, Hoeschele, Peter, Welinder, Peter, Tillet, Phil, Pronin, Philip, Tillet, Philippe, Dhariwal, Prafulla, Yuan, Qiming, Dias, Rachel, Lim, Rachel, Arora, Rahul, Troll, Rajan, Lin, Randall, Lopes, Rapha Gontijo, Puri, Raul, Miyara, Reah, Leike, Reimar, Gaubert, Renaud, Zamani, Reza, Wang, Ricky, Donnelly, Rob, Honsby, Rob, Smith, Rocky, Sahai, Rohan, Ramchandani, Rohit, Huet, Romain, Carmichael, Rory, Zellers, Rowan, Chen, Roy, Chen, Ruby, Nigmatullin, Ruslan, Cheu, Ryan, Jain, Saachi, Altman, Sam, Schoenholz, Sam, Toizer, Sam, Miserendino, Samuel, Agarwal, Sandhini, Culver, Sara, Ethersmith, Scott, Gray, Scott, Grove, Sean, Metzger, Sean, Hermani, Shamez, Jain, Shantanu, Zhao, Shengjia, Wu, Sherwin, Jomoto, Shino, Wu, Shirong, Shuaiqi, Xia, Phene, Sonia, Papay, Spencer, Narayanan, Srinivas, Coffey, Steve, Lee, Steve, Hall, Stewart, Balaji, Suchir, Broda, Tal, Stramer, Tal, Xu, Tao, Gogineni, Tarun, Christianson, Taya, Sanders, Ted, Patwardhan, Tejal, Cunninghman, Thomas, Degry, Thomas, Dimson, Thomas, Raoux, Thomas, Shadwell, Thomas, Zheng, Tianhao, Underwood, Todd, Markov, Todor, Sherbakov, Toki, Rubin, Tom, Stasi, Tom, Kaftan, Tomer, Heywood, Tristan, Peterson, Troy, Walters, Tyce, Eloundou, Tyna, Qi, Valerie, Moeller, Veit, Monaco, Vinnie, Kuo, Vishal, Fomenko, Vlad, Chang, Wayne, Zheng, Weiyi, Zhou, Wenda, Manassra, Wesam, Sheu, Will, Zaremba, Wojciech, Patil, Yash, Qian, Yilei, Kim, Yongjik, Cheng, Youlong, Zhang, Yu, He, Yuchen, Zhang, Yuchen, Jin, Yujia, Dai, Yunxing, and Malkov, Yury
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computation and Language ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Computers and Society ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Sound ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Audio and Speech Processing - Abstract
GPT-4o is an autoregressive omni model that accepts as input any combination of text, audio, image, and video, and generates any combination of text, audio, and image outputs. It's trained end-to-end across text, vision, and audio, meaning all inputs and outputs are processed by the same neural network. GPT-4o can respond to audio inputs in as little as 232 milliseconds, with an average of 320 milliseconds, which is similar to human response time in conversation. It matches GPT-4 Turbo performance on text in English and code, with significant improvement on text in non-English languages, while also being much faster and 50\% cheaper in the API. GPT-4o is especially better at vision and audio understanding compared to existing models. In line with our commitment to building AI safely and consistent with our voluntary commitments to the White House, we are sharing the GPT-4o System Card, which includes our Preparedness Framework evaluations. In this System Card, we provide a detailed look at GPT-4o's capabilities, limitations, and safety evaluations across multiple categories, focusing on speech-to-speech while also evaluating text and image capabilities, and measures we've implemented to ensure the model is safe and aligned. We also include third-party assessments on dangerous capabilities, as well as discussion of potential societal impacts of GPT-4o's text and vision capabilities.
- Published
- 2024
36. Quantitative control on the Carleson $\varepsilon$-function determines regularity
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Casey, Emily
- Subjects
Mathematics - Classical Analysis and ODEs - Abstract
Carleson's $\varepsilon^2$-conjecture states that for Jordan domains in $\mathbb{R}^2$, points on the boundary where tangents exist can be characterized in terms of the behavior of the $\varepsilon$-function. This conjecture, which was fully resolved by Jaye, Tolsa, and Villa in 2021, established that qualitative control on the rate of decay of the Carleson $\varepsilon$-function implies the existence of tangents, up to a set of measure zero. We prove that quantitative control on the rate of decay of this function gives quantitative information on the regularity of the boundary., Comment: Updated references, typos corrected, proof of Lemma 2 edited for clarity; 25 pages, 16 figures
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- 2024
37. The GALAH Survey: Stellar parameters and abundances for 800,000 Gaia RVS spectra using GALAH DR4 and The Cannon
- Author
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Das, Pradosh Barun, Zucker, Daniel B., De Silva, Gayandhi M., Borsato, Nicholas W., Mura-Guzmán, Aldo, Buder, Sven, Ness, Melissa, Nordlander, Thomas, Casey, Andrew R., Martell, Sarah L., Bland-Hawthorn, Joss, de Grijs, Richard, Freeman, Ken C., Kos, Janez, Stello, Dennis, Lewis, Geraint F., Hayden, Michael R., and Sharma, Sanjib
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Analysing stellar parameters and abundances from nearly one million Gaia DR3 Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) spectra poses challenges due to the limited spectral coverage (restricted to the infrared Ca II triplet) and variable signal-to-noise ratios of the data. To address this, we use The Cannon, a data-driven method, to transfer stellar parameters and abundances from the GALAH Data Release 4 (DR4; R ~ 28,000) catalogue to the lower resolution Gaia DR3 RVS spectra (R ~ 11,500). Our model, trained on 14,484 common targets, predicts parameters such as Teff, log g, and [Fe/H], along with several other elements across approximately 800,000 Gaia RVS spectra. We utilise stars from open and globular clusters present in the Gaia RVS catalogue to validate our predicted mean [Fe/H] with high precision (~0.02-0.10 dex). Additionally, we recover the bimodal distribution of [Ti/Fe] versus [Fe/H], reflecting the high and low alpha-components of Milky Way disk stars, demonstrating The Cannon's capability for accurate stellar abundance determination from medium-resolution Gaia RVS spectra. The methodologies and resultant catalogue presented in this work highlight the remarkable potential of the RVS dataset, which by the end of the Gaia mission will comprise spectra of over 200 million stars., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS, 16 pages, 15 figures
- Published
- 2024
38. General Constrained Matrix Optimization
- Author
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Garner, Casey, Lerman, Gilad, and Zhang, Shuzhong
- Subjects
Mathematics - Optimization and Control ,90C26, 90C52, 65K10, 68W40 - Abstract
This paper presents and analyzes the first matrix optimization model which allows general coordinate and spectral constraints. The breadth of problems our model covers is exemplified by a lengthy list of examples from the literature, including semidefinite programming, matrix completion, and quadratically constrained quadratic programs (QCQPs), and we demonstrate our model enables completely novel formulations of numerous problems. Our solution methodology leverages matrix factorization and constrained manifold optimization to develop an equivalent reformulation of our general matrix optimization model for which we design a feasible, first-order algorithm. We prove our algorithm converges to $(\epsilon,\epsilon)$-approximate first-order KKT points of our reformulation in $\mathcal{O}(1/\epsilon^2)$ iterations. The method we developed applies to a special class of constrained manifold optimization problems and is one of the first which generates a sequence of feasible points which converges to a KKT point. We validate our model and method through numerical experimentation. Our first experiment presents a generalized version of semidefinite programming which allows novel eigenvalue constraints, and our second numerical experiment compares our method to the classical semidefinite relaxation approach for solving QCQPs. For the QCQP numerical experiments, we demonstrate our method is able to dominate the classical state-of-the-art approach, solving more than ten times as many problems compared to the standard solution procedure., Comment: 56 pages, 2 figures
- Published
- 2024
39. RUBIES: JWST/NIRSpec resolves evolutionary phases of dusty star-forming galaxies at $z\sim2$
- Author
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Cooper, Olivia R., Brammer, Gabriel, Heintz, Kasper E., Toft, Sune, Casey, Caitlin M., Setton, David J., de Graaff, Anna, Boogaard, Leindert, Cleri, Nikko J., Gillman, Steven, Gottumukkala, Rashmi, Greene, Jenny E., Gullberg, Bitten, Hirschmann, Michaela, Hviding, Raphael E., Lambrides, Erini, Leja, Joel, Long, Arianna S., Manning, Sinclaire M., Maseda, Michael V., McConachie, Ian, McKinney, Jed, Narayanan, Desika, Price, Sedona H., Strait, Victoria, Weibel, Andrea, and Williams, Christina C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The dearth of high quality spectroscopy of dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) -- the main drivers of the assembly of dust and stellar mass at the peak of activity in the Universe -- greatly hinders our ability to interpret their physical processes and evolutionary pathways. We present JWST/NIRSpec observations from RUBIES of four submillimeter-selected, ALMA-detected DSFGs at cosmic noon, $z\sim2.3-2.7$. While photometry uniformly suggests vigorous ongoing star formation for the entire sample in line with canonical DSFGs, the spectra differ: one source has spectroscopic evidence of an evolved stellar population, indicating a recent transition to a post-starburst phase, while the remainder show strong spectroscopic signatures of ongoing starbursts. All four galaxies are infrared-luminous (log$_{10}$$L_{\rm{IR}}$/L$_{\rm \odot}$ $>12.4$), massive (log$_{10}\,M_\star$/M$_{\rm \odot}$ $>11$), and very dust-obscured ($A_V\sim3-4$ ABmag). Leveraging detections of multiple Balmer and Paschen lines, we derive an optical attenuation curve consistent with Calzetti overall, yet an optical extinction ratio $R_V\sim2.5$, potentially indicating smaller dust grains or differences in star-dust geometry. This case study provides some of the first detailed spectroscopic evidence that the DSFGs encompass a heterogeneous sample spanning a range of star formation properties and evolutionary stages, and illustrates the advantages of synergistic JWST and ALMA analysis of DSFGs., Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures; submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2024
40. COSMOS-Web: stellar mass assembly in relation to dark matter halos across $0.2<z<12$ of cosmic history
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Shuntov, M., Ilbert, O., Toft, S., Arango-Toro, R. C., Akins, H. B., Casey, C. M., Franco, M., Harish, S., Kartaltepe, J. S., Koekemoer, A. M., McCracken, H. J., Paquereau, L., Laigle, C., Bethermin, M., Dubois, Y., Drakos, N. E., Faisst, A., Gozaliasl, G., Gillman, S., Hayward, C. C., Hirschmann, M., Huertas-Company, M., Jespersen, C. K., Jin, S., Kokorev, V., Lambrides, E., Borgne, D. Le, Liu, D., Magdis, G., Massey, R., McPartland, C. J. R., Mercier, W., McCleary, J. E., McKinney, J., Oesch, P. A., Rhodes, J. D., Rich, R. M., Robertson, B. E., Sanders, D., Trebitsch, M., Tresse, L., Valentino, F., Vijayan, A. P., Weaver, J. R., Weibel, A., and Wilkins, S. M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the stellar mass function (SMF) and the co-evolution with dark matter halos via abundance matching in the largest redshift range to date $0.2
5$, we find increased abundances of massive (log$\, M_{\star}/M_{\odot}>10.5$) implying integrated star formation efficiencies (SFE) $\epsilon_{\star}\equiv M_{\star}\, f_{\rm b}^{-1} M_{\rm halo}^{-1} \gtrsim 0.5$. We find a flattening of the SMF at the high-mass end that is better described by a double power law at $z>5.5$. At $z \lesssim 5.5$ it transitions to a Schechter law which coincides with the emergence of the first massive quiescent galaxies in the Universe. We trace the cosmic stellar mass density (SMD) and infer the star formation rate density (SFRD), which at $z>7.5$ agrees remarkably with recent \JWST{} UV luminosity function-derived estimates. However, at $z \lesssim 3.5$, we find significant tension ($\sim 0.3$ dex) with the cosmic star formation (SF) history from instantaneous SF measures, the causes of which remain poorly understood. We infer the stellar-to-halo mass relation (SHMR) and the SFE from abundance matching out to $z=12$, finding a non-monotonic evolution. The SFE has the characteristic strong dependence with mass in the range of $0.02 - 0.2$, and mildly decreases at the low mass end out to $z\sim3.5$. At $z\sim3.5$ the SFE increases sharply from $\sim 0.1$ to approach high SFE of $0.8-1$ by $z\sim 10$ for log$(M_{\rm h}/M_{\odot})\approx11.5$, albeit with large uncertainties. Finally, we use the SHMR to track the SFE and stellar mass growth throughout the halo history and find that they do not grow at the same rate -- from the earliest times up until $z\sim3.5$ the halo growth rate outpaces galaxy assembly, but at $z>3.5$ halo growth stagnates and accumulated gas reservoirs keep the SF going and galaxies outpace halos. - Published
- 2024
41. On hypergraph Tur\'an problems with bounded matching number
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Gerbner, Dániel, Tompkins, Casey, and Zhou, Junpeng
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Mathematics - Combinatorics - Abstract
Very recently, Alon and Frankl, and Gerbner studied the maximum number of edges in $n$-vertex $F$-free graphs with bounded matching number, respectively. We consider the analogous Tur\'{a}n problems on hypergraphs with bounded matching number, and we obtain some exact results.
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- 2024
42. Large Language Models in Qualitative Research: Can We Do the Data Justice?
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Schroeder, Hope, Quéré, Marianne Aubin Le, Randazzo, Casey, Mimno, David, and Schoenebeck, Sarita
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Qualitative researchers use tools to collect, sort, and analyze their data. Should qualitative researchers use large language models (LLMs) as part of their practice? LLMs could augment qualitative research, but it is unclear if their use is appropriate, ethical, or aligned with qualitative researchers' goals and values. We interviewed twenty qualitative researchers to investigate these tensions. Many participants see LLMs as promising interlocutors with attractive use cases across the stages of research, but wrestle with their performance and appropriateness. Participants surface concerns regarding the use of LLMs while protecting participant interests, and call attention to an urgent lack of norms and tooling to guide the ethical use of LLMs in research. Given the importance of qualitative methods to human-computer interaction, we use the tensions surfaced by our participants to outline guidelines for researchers considering using LLMs in qualitative research and design principles for LLM-assisted qualitative data analysis tools.
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- 2024
43. Directionally asymmetric nonlinear optics in planar chiral MnTiO$_3$
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Zhang, Xinshu, Carbin, Tyler, Du, Kai, Li, Bingqing, Wang, Kefeng, Li, Casey, Qian, Tiema, Ni, Ni, Cheong, Sang-Wook, and Kogar, Anshul
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Condensed Matter - Strongly Correlated Electrons - Abstract
Planar chiral structures possess a two dimensional handedness that is associated with broken mirror symmetry. Such motifs span vast length scales; examples include certain pinwheel molecules, nautilus shells, cyclone wind patterns and spiral galaxies. Although pervasive in nature, it has only recently been found that condensed matter systems can exhibit a form of planar chirality through toroidal arrangements of electric dipoles, known as ferro-rotational (FR) order. A key characteristic of such order is that enantiomorph conversion occurs when the solid is flipped by 180 degrees about an in-plane axis. Consequently, ferro-rotationally ordered materials may exhibit directionally asymmetric response functions, even while preserving inversion and time-reversal symmetry. Such an effect, however, has yet to be observed. Using second harmonic interferometry, we show here that when circularly polarized light is incident on MnTiO$_3$, the generated nonlinear signal exhibits directional asymmetry. Depending on whether the incident light is parallel or anti-parallel to the FR axis, we observe a different conversion efficiency of two right (left) circularly polarized photons into a frequency-doubled left (right) circularly polarized photon. Our work uncovers a fundamentally new optical effect in ordered solids and opens up the possibility for developing novel nonlinear and directionally asymmetric optical devices.
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- 2024
44. A history of galaxy migrations over the Stellar Mass - SFR plane from the COSMOS-Web survey
- Author
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Arango-Toro, R. C., Ilbert, O., Ciesla, L., Shuntov, M., Aufort, G., Mercier, W., Laigle, C., Franco, M., Bethermin, M., Borgne, D. Le, Dubois, Y., McCracken, H. J., Paquereau, L., Huertas-Company, M., Kartaltepe, J., Casey, C. M., Akins, H., Allen, N., Andika, I., Brinch, M., Drakos, N. E., Faisst, A., Gozaliasl, G., Harish, S., Kaminsky, A., Koekemoer, A., Kokorev, V., Liu, D., Magdis, G., Martin, C. L., Moutard, T., Rhodes, J., Rich, R. M., Robertson, B., Sanders, D. B., Sheth, K., Talia, M., Toft, S., Tresse, L., Valentino, F., Vijayan, A., and Weaver, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The stellar mass-star formation rate (M$_\star$ - SFR) plane is essential for distinguishing galaxy populations, but how galaxies move within this plane over cosmic time remains unclear. This study aims to describe galaxy migrations in the M$_\star$ - SFR plane by reconstructing star formation histories (SFHs) for a sample of galaxies out to redshift $z < 4$. This provides insights into the physical processes driving star formation. We use data from the COSMOS field, selecting 299131 galaxies at $z < 4$ with COSMOS-Web NIRCam data (m$_\mathrm{F444W} < 27$) over 0.54 deg$^2$. Using the SED modeling code CIGALE with non-parametric SFHs, we derive physical properties and migration vectors for these galaxies. These vectors describe the direction and velocity of evolutionary paths across the M$_\star$ - SFR plane. To assess the accuracy of these vectors, we compare them to results from the Horizon-AGN simulation. Galaxies within the main sequence show low migration amplitudes and dispersed movement directions, indicating oscillation within the main sequence. Most progenitors were already on the main sequence a billion years earlier. Starburst galaxies assembled half their mass in the last 350 Myr and originated from the main sequence. Passive galaxies show uniformly declining SFHs and include massive galaxies already in the passive region at $z = 3.5-4$, with increasing density over time. Using reconstructed SFHs up to $z < 4$, we propose a coherent picture of how galaxies migrate over cosmic time in the M$_\star$ - SFR plane, highlighting the connection between major phases in the star-formation history.
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- 2024
45. Building Solidarity Amid Hostility: Experiences of Fat People in Online Communities
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Payne, Blakeley H., Taylor, Jordan, Spiel, Katta, and Fiesler, Casey
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Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
Online communities are important spaces for members of marginalized groups to organize and support one another. To better understand the experiences of fat people -- a group whose marginalization often goes unrecognized -- in online communities, we conducted 12 semi-structured interviews with fat people. Our participants leveraged online communities to engage in consciousness raising around fat identity, learning to locate "the problem of being fat" not within themselves or their own bodies but rather in the oppressive design of the society around them. Participants were then able to use these communities to mitigate everyday experiences of anti-fatness, such as navigating hostile healthcare systems. However, to access these benefits, our participants had to navigate myriad sociotechnical harms, ranging from harassment to discriminatory algorithms. In light of these findings, we suggest that researchers and designers of online communities support selective fat visibility, consider fat people in the design of content moderation systems, and investigate algorithmic discrimination toward fat people. More broadly, we call on researchers and designers to contend with the social and material realities of fat experience, as opposed to the prevailing paradigm of treating fat people as problems to be solved in-and-of-themselves. This requires recognizing fat people as a marginalized social group and actively confronting anti-fatness as it is embedded in the design of technology.
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- 2024
46. A Large-Scale Exploit Instrumentation Study of AI/ML Supply Chain Attacks in Hugging Face Models
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Casey, Beatrice, Santos, Joanna C. S., and Mirakhorli, Mehdi
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
The development of machine learning (ML) techniques has led to ample opportunities for developers to develop and deploy their own models. Hugging Face serves as an open source platform where developers can share and download other models in an effort to make ML development more collaborative. In order for models to be shared, they first need to be serialized. Certain Python serialization methods are considered unsafe, as they are vulnerable to object injection. This paper investigates the pervasiveness of these unsafe serialization methods across Hugging Face, and demonstrates through an exploitation approach, that models using unsafe serialization methods can be exploited and shared, creating an unsafe environment for ML developers. We investigate to what extent Hugging Face is able to flag repositories and files using unsafe serialization methods, and develop a technique to detect malicious models. Our results show that Hugging Face is home to a wide range of potentially vulnerable models.
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- 2024
47. UFLUX v2.0: A Process-Informed Machine Learning Framework for Efficient and Explainable Modelling of Terrestrial Carbon Uptake
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Dong, Wenquan, Zhu, Songyan, Xu, Jian, Ryan, Casey M., Chen, Man, Zeng, Jingya, Yu, Hao, Cao, Congfeng, and Shi, Jiancheng
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Physics - Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics ,Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods - Abstract
Gross Primary Productivity (GPP), the amount of carbon plants fixed by photosynthesis, is pivotal for understanding the global carbon cycle and ecosystem functioning. Process-based models built on the knowledge of ecological processes are susceptible to biases stemming from their assumptions and approximations. These limitations potentially result in considerable uncertainties in global GPP estimation, which may pose significant challenges to our Net Zero goals. This study presents UFLUX v2.0, a process-informed model that integrates state-of-art ecological knowledge and advanced machine learning techniques to reduce uncertainties in GPP estimation by learning the biases between process-based models and eddy covariance (EC) measurements. In our findings, UFLUX v2.0 demonstrated a substantial improvement in model accuracy, achieving an R^2 of 0.79 with a reduced RMSE of 1.60 g C m^-2 d^-1, compared to the process-based model's R^2 of 0.51 and RMSE of 3.09 g C m^-2 d^-1. Our global GPP distribution analysis indicates that while UFLUX v2.0 and the process-based model achieved similar global total GPP (137.47 Pg C and 132.23 Pg C, respectively), they exhibited large differences in spatial distribution, particularly in latitudinal gradients. These differences are very likely due to systematic biases in the process-based model and differing sensitivities to climate and environmental conditions. This study offers improved adaptability for GPP modelling across diverse ecosystems, and further enhances our understanding of global carbon cycles and its responses to environmental changes.
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- 2024
48. Sample-Optimal Quantum State Tomography for Structured Quantum States in One Dimension
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Qin, Zhen, Jameson, Casey, Goldar, Alireza, Wakin, Michael B., Gong, Zhexuan, and Zhu, Zhihui
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Quantum Physics ,Computer Science - Information Theory ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Signal Processing ,Mathematics - Optimization and Control - Abstract
Quantum state tomography (QST) remains the gold standard for benchmarking and verifying quantum devices. A recent study has proved that, with Haar random projective measurements, only a $O(n^3)$ number of state copies is required to guarantee bounded recovery error of an matrix product operator (MPO) state of qubits $n$. While this result provides a formal evidence that quantum states with an efficient classical representation can be reconstructed with an efficient number of state copies, the number of state copies required is still significantly larger than the number of independent parameters in the classical representation. In this paper, we attempt to narrow this gap and study whether the number of state copies can saturate the information theoretic bound (i.e., $O(n)$, the number of parameters in the MPOs) using physical quantum measurements. We answer this question affirmatively by using a class of Informationally Complete Positive Operator-Valued Measures (IC-POVMs), including symmetric IC-POVMs (SIC-POVMs) and spherical $t$-designs. For SIC-POVMs and (approximate) spherical 2-designs, we show that the number of state copies to guarantee bounded recovery error of an MPO state with a constrained least-squares estimator depends on the probability distribution of the MPO under the POVM but scales only linearly with $n$ when the distribution is approximately uniform. For spherical $t$-designs with $t\ge3$, we prove that only a number of state copies proportional to the number of independent parameters in the MPO is needed for a guaranteed recovery of any state represented by an MPO. Moreover, we propose a projected gradient descent (PGD) algorithm to solve the constrained least-squares problem and show that it can efficiently find an estimate with bounded recovery error when appropriately initialized.
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- 2024
49. The formation histories of massive and quiescent galaxies in the 3 < z < 4.5 Universe
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Nanayakkara, Themiya, Glazebrook, Karl, Schreiber, Corentin, Chittenden, Harry, Brammer, Gabriel, Esdaile, James, Jacobs, Colin, Kacprzak, Glenn G., Kawinwanichakij, Lalitwadee, Kimmig, Lucas C., Labbe, Ivo, Lagos, Claudia, Marchesini, Danilo, Martìnez-Marìn, M., Marsan, Z. Cemile, Oesch, Pascal A., Papovich, Casey, Remus, Rhea-Silvia, and Tran, Kim-Vy H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present the formation histories of 19 massive ($\gtrsim3\times10^{10}\text{M}_\odot$) quiescent galaxy candidates at $z\sim3.0-4.5$ observed using JWST/NIRSpec. This completes the spectroscopic confirmation of the 24 $K$-selected quiescent galaxy sample from the ZFOURGE and 3DHST surveys \citep{Schreiber2018}. Utilizing Prism $1-5\mu$m spectroscopy, we confirm that all 12 sources that eluded confirmation by ground-based spectroscopy lie at $z>3$, resulting in a spectroscopically confirmed number density of $\sim1.4\times10^{-5}\text{Mpc}^{-3}$ between $z\sim3-4$. Rest-frame $U-V$ vs $V-J$ color selections show high effectiveness in identifying quiescent galaxies, with a purity of $\sim90\%$. Our analysis shows that parametric star-formation histories (SFHs) from FAST++ and binned SFHs from Prospector on average yield consistent results, revealing diverse formation and quenching times. The oldest galaxy formed $\sim6\times10^{10}\text{M}_\odot$ by $z\sim10$ and has been quiescent for over 1 Gyr at $z\sim3.2$. We detect two galaxies with ongoing star formation and six with active galactic nuclei (AGN). We demonstrate that the choice of stellar population models, stellar libraries, wavelength range, and nebular or AGN contributions does not significantly affect the derived average SFHs of the galaxies. The assumed SFH prior, however, influences the star formation rate at early times, where spectral diagnostic power is limited. Simulated $z\sim3$ quiescent galaxies from IllustrisTNG, SHARK, and Magneticum broadly match the average SFHs of the observed sample but struggle to capture the full diversity, particularly at early stages. Our results emphasize the need for mechanisms that rapidly build stellar mass and quench star formation within the first billion years of the Universe., Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Comments welcome
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- 2024
50. Strong rest-UV emission lines in a 'little red dot' AGN at $z=7$: Early SMBH growth alongside compact massive star formation?
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Akins, Hollis B., Casey, Caitlin M., Berg, Danielle A., Chisholm, John, Franco, Maximilien, Finkelstein, Steven L., Fujimoto, Seiji, Kokorev, Vasily, Lambrides, Erini, Robertson, Brant E., Taylor, Anthony J., Coulter, David A., Fox, Ori, and Karmen, Mitchell
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
JWST has now revealed a population of broad-line AGN at $z>4$ characterized by a distinctive SED shape, with very red rest-frame optical and very blue rest-frame UV continuum. While the optical continuum is thought to originate from the accretion disk, the origin of the UV continuum has been largely unclear. We report the detection of the strong rest-frame UV emission lines of CIII]$\lambda\lambda$1907,1909 and CIV$\lambda\lambda$1549,1551 in a "little red dot" AGN, COS-66964. Spectroscopically confirmed at $z=7.0371$, COS-66964 exhibits broad H$\alpha$ emission (FWHM $\sim 2000$ km s$^{-1}$), and weak broad H$\beta$, implying significant dust attenuation to the BLR ($A_V = 3.9^{+1.7}_{-0.9}$). The H$\alpha$ line width implies a central SMBH mass of $M_{\rm BH} = \left(1.9^{+1.6}_{-0.7}\right)\times10^{7}$ M$_\odot$, and an Eddington ratio $\lambda\sim0.3$-$0.5$. While marginal HeII$\lambda4687$ and [FeX]$\lambda6376$ detections further indicate that the AGN dominates in the rest-frame optical, the non-detection of HeII$\lambda1640$ in the UV despite high EW CIII] and CIV ($\sim 35$ {\AA}) is more consistent with photoionization by massive stars. The non-detection of MgII$\lambda\lambda$2800 is similarly inconsistent with an AGN scattered light interpretation. Assuming the rest-frame UV is dominated by stellar light, we derive a stellar mass of $\log M_\star/M_\odot\sim8.5$, implying an elevated $M_{\rm BH}/M_\star$ ratio $\sim2$ orders of magnitude above the local relation, but consistent with other high-$z$ AGN discovered by JWST. The source is unresolved in all bands, implying a very compact size $\lesssim200$ pc in the UV. This suggests that the simultaneous buildup of compact stellar populations (i.e., galaxy bulges) and the central SMBH is ongoing even at $z>7$., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures; submitted to ApJL
- Published
- 2024
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