10,947 results on '"Dupont, P"'
Search Results
2. Reconsidering Zeest’s 'Samian' and 'Protothasian' archaic lineages of transport amphoras
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
i. b. zeest’s “samian” & “protothasian” amphoras ,v. grace’s “samian” amphoras ,i. b. zeest’s “thasian circle” ,lab results ,archaic period ,determination of origin ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The duality of Zeest’s geographical attribution of her “Samian” and “Protothasian” archaic lineages of transport amphoras both to East‑Greek and North‑Aegean centres of manufacture is reassessed in the light of lab results
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Determination of origin of transport amphorae of Heraclean type: lab reassessment of their recent reallocation to Apollonia Pontica
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
apollonia pontica ,amphorae of heraclean type ,determination of origin ,xrf chemical analysis ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
XRF chemical results do not support the complete refutation of Balabanov’s proposal of reattribution to Apollonia put forward by Vladimir Katz and Natalia Pavlichenko
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Chios within the network of producers of Zeest’s 'Protothasian' lineage of transport amphorae
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
late archaic period ,east‑greek transport amphorae ,zeest’s “ protothasian” type ,chian variant ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Lab results suggest the existence, side by side with the canonical lineage of the archaic Chian transport amphoras, of a local variant of containers of Zeest’s “Protothasian” type
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Optimization via Quantum Preconditioning
- Author
-
Dupont, Maxime, Oberoi, Tina, and Sundar, Bhuvanesh
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
State-of-the-art classical optimization solvers set a high bar for quantum computers to deliver utility in this domain. Here, we introduce a quantum preconditioning approach based on the quantum approximate optimization algorithm. It transforms the input problem into a more suitable form for a solver with the level of preconditioning determined by the depth of the quantum circuit. We demonstrate that best-in-class classical heuristics such as simulated annealing and the Burer-Monteiro algorithm can converge more rapidly when given quantum preconditioned input for various problems, including Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glasses, random 3-regular graph maximum-cut problems, and a real-world grid energy problem. Accounting for the additional time taken for preconditioning, the benefit offered by shallow circuits translates into a practical quantum-inspired advantage for random 3-regular graph maximum-cut problems through quantum circuit emulations. We investigate why quantum preconditioning makes the problem easier and test an experimental implementation on a superconducting device. We identify challenges and discuss the prospects for a hardware-based quantum advantage in optimization via quantum preconditioning., Comment: 25 pages, 16 figures
- Published
- 2025
6. Miniaturized optical system for a chip based cold atom inertial sensor
- Author
-
Hello, S., Snijders, H., Wirtschafter, B., Boutin, A., Fulop, L., Sequineau, F., Westbrook, C. I., Brignon, A., and Dupont-Nivet, M.
- Subjects
Physics - Atomic Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
We miniaturized the complex optical system responsible for the cooling, pumping and imaging of an on-chip based cold atom inertial sensor. This optical bench uses bonded miniature optics and includes all the necessary optical functions. The bench has a volume of 35x25x5~cm$^3$. We developed a laser frequency lock adapted to the optical bench using saturated absorption in a rubidium cell. The entire laser source based on frequency doubling of 1.56~$\mu$m fiber lasers, including the control system and the saturated absorption module, fits in a $5U$-rack. Using the miniaturized bench, we realized two and three dimensional magneto optical traps for Rubidium 87 atoms., Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 2025
7. Neutron capture measurements for s-process nucleosynthesis; A review about CERN n_TOF developments and contributions
- Author
-
Domingo-Pardo, C., Aberle, O., Alcayne, V., Alpar, G., Halabi, M. Al, Amaducci, S., Babiano, V., Bacak, M., Balibrea-Correa, J., Bartolomé, J., Bernardes, A. P., Gameiro, B. Bernardino, Berthoumieux, E., Beyer, R., Birch, M., Boromiza, M., Bosnar, D., Brusasco, B., Caamaño, M., Cahuzac, A., Calviño, F., Calviani, M., Cano-Ott, D., Casanovas, A., Castelluccio, D. M., Catlett, D., Cerutti, F., Cescutti, G., Chiaveri, E., Claps, G., Colombetti, P., Colonna, N., Camprini, P. Console, Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Cristallo, S., D'Ottavi, A., Rosales, G. de la Fuente, Dellmann, S. F., Diakaki, M., Di Castro, M., Di Chicco, A., Dietz, M., Dupont, E., Durán, I., Eleme, Z., Eslami, M., Fargier, S., Fernández-Domínguez, B., Finocchiaro, P., Flanagan, W., Furman, V., Gandhi, A., García-Infantes, F., Gawlik-Ramiega, A., Gervino, G., Gilardoni, S., González-Romero, E., Goula, S., Griesmayer, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gustavino, C., Heyse, J., Hillman, W., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Junghans, A., Kadi, Y., Kaperoni, K., Kelly, I., Kokkoris, M., Kopatch, Y., Krtička, M., Kyritsis, N., Lederer-Woods, C., Lerendegui-Marco, J., Manna, A., Martínez, T., Martínez-Cañada, M., Masi, A., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Maugeri, E. A., Mazzone, A., Mendoza, E., Mengoni, A., Michalopoulou, V., Milazzo, P. M., Moldenhauer, J., Mucciola, R., González, E. Musacchio, Musumarra, A., Negret, A., Odusina, E., Papanikolaou, D., Patronis, N., Pavón-Rodríguez, J. A., Pellegriti, M. G., Pérez-Maroto, P., Fiol, A. Pérez de Rada, Perfetto, G., Perkowski, J., Petrone, C., Pieretti, N., Piersanti, L., Pirovano, E., Porras, I., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Reifarth, R., Rochman, D., Romanets, Y., Rooney, A., Rovira, G., Rubbia, C., Sánchez-Caballero, A., Sahoo, R. N., Scarpa, D., Schillebeeckx, P., Smith, A. G., Sosnin, N. V., Spelta, M., Stamati, M. E., Stasiak, K., Tagliente, G., Tarifeño-Saldivia, A., Tarrío, D., Torres-Sánchez, P., Tosi, S., Tsiledakis, G., Valenta, S., Vaz, P., Vecchio, G., Vescovi, D., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Weiss, C., Woods, P. J., Wright, T., Wu, R., Žugec, P., and Collaboration, The n\_TOF
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
This article presents a review about the main CERN n\_TOF contributions to the field of neutron-capture experiments of interest for $s$-process nucleosynthesis studies over the last 25 years, with special focus on the measurement of radioactive isotopes. A few recent capture experiments on stable isotopes of astrophysical interest are also discussed. Results on $s$-process branching nuclei are appropriate to illustrate how advances in detection systems and upgrades in the facility have enabled increasingly challenging experiments and, as a consequence, have led to a better understanding and modeling of the $s$-process mechanism of nucleosynthesis. New endeavors combining radioactive-ion beams from ISOLDE for the production of radioisotopically pure samples for activation experiments at the new NEAR facility at n\_TOF are briefly discussed. On the basis of these new exciting results, also current limitations of state-of-the-art TOF and activation techniques will be depicted, thereby showing the pressing need for further upgrades and enhancements on both facilities and detection systems. A brief account of the potential technique based on inverse kinematics for direct neutron-capture measurements is also presented., Comment: submitted to Eur. Phys. Jour. Topical Collection
- Published
- 2025
8. $^{18}$F-FDG brain PET hypometabolism in post-SARS-CoV-2 infection: substrate for persistent/delayed disorders?
- Author
-
Guedj, Eric, Million, Matthieu, Dudouet, Pierre, Tissot-Dupont, Hervé, Bregeon, Fabienne, Cammilleri, Serge, and Raoult, Didier
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
Purpose: Several brain complications of SARS-CoV-2 infection have been reported. It has been moreover speculated that this neurotropism could potentially cause a delayed outbreak of neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative diseases of neuroinflammatory origin. A propagation mechanism has been proposed across the cribriform plate of the ethmoid bone, from the nose to the olfactory epithelium, and possibly afterward to other limbic structures, and deeper parts of the brain including the brainstem. Methods: Review of clinical examination, and whole-brain voxel-based analysis of $^{18}$F-FDG PET metabolism in comparison with healthy subjects (p voxel<0.001, p-cluster<0.05, uncorrected), of two patients with confirmed diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2 explored at the post-viral stage of the disease. Results: Hypometabolism of the olfactory/rectus gyrus was found on the two patients, especially one with 4-week prolonged anosmia. Additional hypometabolisms were found within amygdala, hippocampus, parahippocampus, cingulate cortex, pre-/post-central gyrus, thalamus/hypothalamus, cerebellum, pons, and medulla in the other patient who complained of delayed onset of a painful syndrome. Conclusion: These preliminary findings reinforce the hypotheses of SARS-CoV-2 neurotropism through the olfactory bulb and the possible extension of this impairment to other brain structures. $^{18}$F-FDG PET hypometabolism could constitute a cerebral quantitative biomarker of this involvement. Post-viral cohort studies are required to specify the exact relationship between such hypometabolisms and the possible persistent disorders, especially involving cognitive or emotion disturbances, residual respiratory symptoms, or painful complaints.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Noise budget of a trapped on chip cold atom Rubidium 87 clock
- Author
-
Dupont-Nivet, M., Wirtschafter, B., Hello, S., and Westbrook, C. I.
- Subjects
Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
In this paper, we present a realisation of an on chip atomic clock using a cold cloud of Rubidium 87 atoms. This clock is based on a Ramsey interferometer with a Ramsey time around 600 ms. This is realized with large lab temperature drift during the measurement (few degrees per day) and without magnetic field shielding. We review the experimental implementation of this clock and give a full study of the known noises present in this atomic clock., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2025
10. Positive geometries and canonical forms via mixed Hodge theory
- Author
-
Brown, Francis and Dupont, Clément
- Subjects
Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,High Energy Physics - Theory ,Mathematical Physics - Abstract
''Positive geometries'' are a class of semi-algebraic domains which admit a unique ''canonical form'': a logarithmic form whose residues match the boundary structure of the domain. The study of such geometries is motivated by recent progress in particle physics, where the corresponding canonical forms are interpreted as the integrands of scattering amplitudes. We recast these concepts in the language of mixed Hodge theory, and identify ''genus zero pairs'' of complex algebraic varieties as a natural and general framework for the study of positive geometries and their canonical forms. In this framework, we prove some basic properties of canonical forms which have previously been proved or conjectured in the literature. We give many examples and study in detail the case of arrangements of hyperplanes and convex polytopes., Comment: 51 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2025
11. Lesbos wine: ΟΙΝΟΣ ΑΥΘΙΓΕΝΗΣ or regional vintage spread throughout the Lesbian sphere?
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
determination of origins ,archaic period ,lesbian amphoras ,lesbos wine ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Judging from chemical results obtained on some 68 samples of archaic Lesbian amphoras both from Lesbos itself (Mytilene, Methymna, Eressos et alii) and from overseas sites (viz. Abdera, Istros, Berezan, Nadlimanskoe and Olbia) and in comparing them with chemical pottery references of the Lyon Lab data bank for both Lesbos and Eastern Greece, it appears that less than ca. one third of them only – consisting of various grey ones only -were manufactured on the island, for most of them in the western part of it. The remaining part of ca. two thirds clearly originated from outside the island, mostly from the Troad / Hellespontus sphere, judging from comparisons with our available references for these areas. It is first of all the case for most the so-called Lesbian red jars, except one part of them from an unknown centre (distinct from Thasos as erroneously put forward by Clinkenbeard). Consequently, Lesbian wine-label would rather correspond to a single vine species or blend of various ones than to a strictly delimited vineyard
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. CAD-Recode: Reverse Engineering CAD Code from Point Clouds
- Author
-
Rukhovich, Danila, Dupont, Elona, Mallis, Dimitrios, Cherenkova, Kseniya, Kacem, Anis, and Aouada, Djamila
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Computer-Aided Design (CAD) models are typically constructed by sequentially drawing parametric sketches and applying CAD operations to obtain a 3D model. The problem of 3D CAD reverse engineering consists of reconstructing the sketch and CAD operation sequences from 3D representations such as point clouds. In this paper, we address this challenge through novel contributions across three levels: CAD sequence representation, network design, and dataset. In particular, we represent CAD sketch-extrude sequences as Python code. The proposed CAD-Recode translates a point cloud into Python code that, when executed, reconstructs the CAD model. Taking advantage of the exposure of pre-trained Large Language Models (LLMs) to Python code, we leverage a relatively small LLM as a decoder for CAD-Recode and combine it with a lightweight point cloud projector. CAD-Recode is trained solely on a proposed synthetic dataset of one million diverse CAD sequences. CAD-Recode significantly outperforms existing methods across three datasets while requiring fewer input points. Notably, it achieves 10 times lower mean Chamfer distance than state-of-the-art methods on DeepCAD and Fusion360 datasets. Furthermore, we show that our CAD Python code output is interpretable by off-the-shelf LLMs, enabling CAD editing and CAD-specific question answering from point clouds.
- Published
- 2024
13. Emergent poverty traps and inequality at multiple levels impedes social mobility
- Author
-
Dupont, Charles and Roy, Debraj
- Subjects
Economics - General Economics - Abstract
Eradicating extreme poverty and inequality are the key leverage points to achieve the seventeen Sustainable Development goals. Yet, the reduction in extreme poverty and inequality are vulnerable to shocks such as the pandemic and climate change. We find that that these vulnerabilities emerge from the interaction between individual and institutional mechanisms. Individual characteristics like risk aversion, attention, and saving propensity can lead to sub-optimal diversification and low capital accumulation. These individual drivers are reinforced by institutional mechanisms such as lack of financial inclusion, access to technology, and economic segregation, leading to persistent inequality and poverty traps. Our experiments demonstrate that addressing above factors yields 'double dividend' - reducing poverty and inequality within-and-between communities and create positive feedback that can withstand shocks.
- Published
- 2024
14. Radiative neutron capture cross section of $^{242}$Pu measured at n_TOF-EAR1 in the unresolved resonance region up to 600 keV
- Author
-
Lerendegui-Marco, J., Guerrero, C., Mendoza, E., Quesada, J. M., Eberhardt, K., Junghans, A. R., Alcayne, V., Babiano, V., Aberle, O., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Becares, V., Bacak, M., Balibrea-Correa, J., Barbagallo, M., Barros, S., Becvar, F., Beinrucker, C., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Bosnar, D., Brugger, M., Caamaño, M., Calviño, F., Calviani, M., Cano-Ott, D., Cardella, R., Casanovas, A., Castelluccio, D. M., Cerutti, F., Chen, Y. H., Chiaveri, E., Colonna, N., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Damone, L. A., Diakaki, M., Dietz, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Dupont, E., Durán, I., Fernández-Domínguez, B., Ferrari, A., Ferreira, P., Finocchiaro, P., Furman, V., Göbel, K., García, A. R., Gawlik, A., Glodariu, T., Goncalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Goverdovski, A., Griesmayer, E., Gunsing, F., Harada, H., Heftrich, T., Heinitz, S., Heyse, J., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Käppeler, F., Kadi, Y., Katabuchi, T., Kavrigin, P., Ketlerov, V., Khryachkov, V., Kimura, A., Kivel, N., Kokkoris, M., Krticka, M., Leal-Cidoncha, E., Lederer-Woods, C., Leeb, H., Meo, S. Lo, Lonsdale, S. J., Losito, R., Macina, D., Marganiec, J., Martínez, T., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Matteucci, F., Maugeri, E. A., Mengoni, A., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Mirea, M., Montesano, S., Musumarra, A., Nolte, R., Oprea, A., Patronis, N., Pavlik, A., Perkowski, J., Porras, J. I., Praena, J., Rajeev, K., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Riego-Perez, A., Rout, P. C., Rubbia, C., Ryan, J. A., Sabaté-Gilarte, M., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schmidt, S., Schumann, D., Sedyshev, P., Smith, A. G., Stamatopoulos, A., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Tarifeño-Saldivia, A., Tassan-Got, L., Tsinganis, A., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Warren, S., Weigand, M., Weiss, C., Wolf, C., Woods, P. J., Wright, T., Zugec, P., and Collaboration, the n_TOF
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The design of fast reactors burning MOX fuels requires accurate capture and fission cross sections. For the particular case of neutron capture on 242Pu, the NEA recommends that an accuracy of 8-12% should be achieved in the fast energy region (2 keV-500 keV) compared to their estimation of 35% for the current uncertainty. Integral irradiation experiments suggest that the evaluated cross section of the JEFF-3.1 library overestimates the 242Pu(n,{\gamma}) cross section by 14% in the range between 1 keV and 1 MeV. In addition, the last measurement at LANSCE reported a systematic reduction of 20-30% in the 1-40 keV range relative to the evaluated libraries and previous data sets. In the present work this cross section has been determined up to 600 keV in order to solve the mentioned discrepancies. A 242Pu target of 95(4) mg enriched to 99.959% was irradiated at the n TOF-EAR1 facility at CERN. The capture cross section of 242Pu has been obtained between 1 and 600 keV with a systematic uncertainty (dominated by background subtraction) between 8 and 12%, reducing the current uncertainties of 35% and achieving the accuracy requested by the NEA in a large energy range. The shape of the cross section has been analyzed in terms of average resonance parameters using the FITACS code as implemented in SAMMY, yielding results compatible with our recent analysis of the resolved resonance region.The results are in good agreement with the data of Wisshak and K\"appeler and on average 10-14% below JEFF-3.2 from 1 to 250 keV, which helps to achieve consistency between integral experiments and cross section data. At higher energies our results show a reasonable agreement within uncertainties with both ENDF/B-VII.1 and JEFF-3.2. Our results indicate that the last experiment from DANCE underestimates the capture cross section of 242Pu by as much as 40% above a few keV., Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. C
- Published
- 2024
15. Good, Cheap, and Fast: Overfitted Image Compression with Wasserstein Distortion
- Author
-
Ballé, Jona, Versari, Luca, Dupont, Emilien, Kim, Hyunjik, and Bauer, Matthias
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing - Abstract
Inspired by the success of generative image models, recent work on learned image compression increasingly focuses on better probabilistic models of the natural image distribution, leading to excellent image quality. This, however, comes at the expense of a computational complexity that is several orders of magnitude higher than today's commercial codecs, and thus prohibitive for most practical applications. With this paper, we demonstrate that by focusing on modeling visual perception rather than the data distribution, we can achieve a very good trade-off between visual quality and bit rate similar to "generative" compression models such as HiFiC, while requiring less than 1% of the multiply-accumulate operations (MACs) for decompression. We do this by optimizing C3, an overfitted image codec, for Wasserstein Distortion (WD), and evaluating the image reconstructions with a human rater study. The study also reveals that WD outperforms other perceptual quality metrics such as LPIPS, DISTS, and MS-SSIM, both as an optimization objective and as a predictor of human ratings, achieving over 94% Pearson correlation with Elo scores., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to CVPR 2025
- Published
- 2024
16. Towards a new generation of solid total-energy detectors for neutron-capture time-of-flight experiments with intense neutron beams
- Author
-
Balibrea-Correa, J., Babiano-Suarez, V., Lerendegui-Marco, J., Domingo-Pardo, C., Ladarescu, I., Tarifeño-Saldivia, A., de la Fuente-Rosales, G., Gameiro, B., Zaitseva, N., Alcayne, V., Cano-Ott, D., González-Romero, E., Martínez, T., Mendoza, E., de Rada, A. Pérez, del Olmo, J. Plaza, Sánchez-Caballero, A., Casanovas, A., Calviño, F., Valenta, S., Aberle, O., Altieri, S., Amaducci, S., Andrzejewski, J., Bacak, M., Beltrami, C., Bennett, S., Bernardes, A. P., Berthoumieux, E., Beyer, R., Boromiza, M., Bosnar, D., Caamaño, M., Calviani, M., Castelluccio, D. M., Cerutti, F., Cescutti, G., Chasapoglou, S., Chiaveri, E., Colombetti, P., Colonna, N., Camprini, P. Console, Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Cristallo, S., Dellmann, S., Di Castro, M., Di Maria, S., Diakaki, M., Dietz, M., Dressler, R., Dupont, E., Durán, I., Eleme, Z., Fargier, S., Fernández, B., Fernández-Domínguez, B., Finocchiaro, P., Fiore, S., Furman, V., García-Infantes, F., Gawlik-Ramikega, A., Gervino, G., Gilardoni, S., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Gustavino, C., Heyse, J., Hillman, W., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Junghans, A., Kadi, Y., Kaperoni, K., Kaur, G., Kimura, A., Knapová, I., Kokkoris, M., Kopatch, Y., Krtìvcka, M., Kyritsis, N., Lederer-Woods, C., Lerner, G., Manna, A., Masi, A., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Maugeri, E. A., Mazzone, A., Mengoni, A., Michalopoulou, V., Milazzo, P. M., Mucciola, R., Murtas, F., Musacchio-Gonzalez, E., Musumarra, A., Negret, A., Pérez-Maroto, P., Patronis, N., Pavón-Rodríguez, J. A., Pellegriti, M. G., Perkowski, J., Petrone, C., Pirovano, E., Pomp, S., Porras, I., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Reifarth, R., Rochman, D., Romanets, Y., Rubbia, C., Sabaté-Gilarte, M., Schillebeeckx, P., Schumann, D., Sekhar, A., Smith, A. G., Sosnin, N. V., Stamati, M. E., Sturniolo, A., Tagliente, G., Tarrío, D., Torres-Sánchez, P., Vagena, E., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Vecchio, G., Vescovi, D., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Woods, P. J., Wright, T., Zarrella, R., and Zugec, P.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Challenging neutron-capture cross-section measurements of small cross sections and samples with a very limited number of atoms require high-flux time-of-flight facilities. In turn, such facilities need innovative detection setups that are fast, have low sensitivity to neutrons, can quickly recover from the so-called $\gamma$-flash, and offer the highest possible detection sensitivity. In this paper, we present several steps toward such advanced systems. Specifically, we describe the performance of a high-sensitivity experimental setup at CERN n\_TOF EAR2. It consists of nine sTED detector modules in a compact cylindrical configuration, two conventional used large-volume C$_{6}$D$_{6}$ detectors, and one LaCl$_{3}$(Ce) detector. The performance of these detection systems is compared using $^{93}$Nb($n$,$\gamma$) data. We also developed a detailed \textsc{Geant4} Monte Carlo model of the experimental EAR2 setup, which allows for a better understanding of the detector features, including their efficiency determination. This Monte Carlo model has been used for further optimization, thus leading to a new conceptual design of a $\gamma$ detector array, STAR, based on a deuterated-stilbene crystal array. Finally, the suitability of deuterated-stilbene crystals for the future STAR array is investigaged experimentally utilizing a small stilbene-d12 prototype. The results suggest a similar or superior performance of STAR with respect to other setups based on liquid-scintillators, and allow for additional features such as neutron-gamma discrimination and a higher level of customization capability.
- Published
- 2024
17. Improved order selection method for hidden Markov models: a case study with movement data
- Author
-
Dupont, Fanny, Marcoux, Marianne, Hussey, Nigel, and Auger-Méthé, Marie
- Subjects
Statistics - Methodology ,Statistics - Applications - Abstract
Hidden Markov models (HMMs) are a versatile statistical framework commonly used in ecology to characterize behavioural patterns from animal movement data. In HMMs, the observed data depend on a finite number of underlying hidden states, generally interpreted as the animal's unobserved behaviour. The number of states is a crucial parameter, controlling the trade-off between ecological interpretability of behaviours (fewer states) and the goodness of fit of the model (more states). Selecting the number of states, commonly referred to as order selection, is notoriously challenging. Common model selection metrics, such as AIC and BIC, often perform poorly in determining the number of states, particularly when models are misspecified. Building on existing methods for HMMs and mixture models, we propose a double penalized likelihood maximum estimate (DPMLE) for the simultaneous estimation of the number of states and parameters of non-stationary HMMs. The DPMLE differs from traditional information criteria by using two penalty functions on the stationary probabilities and state-dependent parameters. For non-stationary HMMs, forward and backward probabilities are used to approximate stationary probabilities. Using a simulation study that includes scenarios with additional complexity in the data, we compare the performance of our method with that of AIC and BIC. We also illustrate how the DPMLE differs from AIC and BIC using narwhal (Monodon monoceros) movement data. The proposed method outperformed AIC and BIC in identifying the correct number of states under model misspecification. Furthermore, its capacity to handle non-stationary dynamics allowed for more realistic modeling of complex movement data, offering deeper insights into narwhal behaviour. Our method is a powerful tool for order selection in non-stationary HMMs, with potential applications extending beyond the field of ecology., Comment: Double-spaced, 35 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2024
18. A fast plastic scintillator for low intensity proton beam monitoring
- Author
-
André, Adélie, Hoarau, Christophe, Boursier, Yannick, Cherni, Afef, Dupont, Mathieu, Martel, Laurent Gallin, Martel, Marie-Laure Gallin, Garnier, Alicia, Hérault, Joel, Hofverberg, Johan-Petter, Kavrigin, Pavel, Morel, Christian, Muraz, Jean-François, Pinson, Maxime, Tripodo, Giovanni, Maneval, Daniel, and Marcatili, Sara
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Physics - Medical Physics - Abstract
In the context of particle therapy monitoring, we are developing a gamma-ray detector to determine the ion range in vivo from the measurement of particle time-of-flight. For this application, a beam monitor capable to tag in time the incident ion with a time resolution below 235 ps FWHM (100 ps rms) is required to provide a start signal for the acquisition. We have therefore developed a dedicated detector based on a fast organic scintillator (EJ-204) of 25x25x1 mm3 coupled to four SiPM strips that allow measuring the particle incident position by scintillation light sharing. The prototype was characterised with single protons of energies between 63 and 225 MeV at the MEDICYC and ProteusONE facilities of the Antoine Lacassagne proton therapy centre in Nice. We obtained a time resolution of 120 ps FWHM at 63 MeV, and a spatial resolution of ~2 mm rms for single particles. Two identical detectors also allowed to measure the MEDICYC proton energy with 0.3% accuracy.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Optimizing information transmission in neural induction constrains cell surface contacts of ascidian embryos
- Author
-
Bettoni, Rossana, Dupont, Geneviéve, Walczak, Aleksandra M., and de Buyl, Sophie
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Tissues and Organs - Abstract
The onset of neural induction in the anterior ectoderm of ascidian embryos is regulated at the extracellular level by FGF signaling molecules, which control the acquisition of neural fate through the activation of the ERK pathway. Among the anterior ectoderm cells exposed to FGF, only a fraction will acquire neural fate. The selection of neural precursors depends on the quasi-invariant geometry of the embryo, which imposes upon each ectoderm cell a precise area of cell surface contact with underlying FGF-expressing (mesendoderm) cells. Here, we investigate information transmission between FGF and activated ERK and how this depends on the geometry of the system. Optimizing information transmission with the constraint that the total FGF-emitting surface area is restricted, as in the embryo, we find that the surface contacts with FGF that maximize information transmission are close to those observed experimentally. This information optimal solution is compatible with the anterior ectoderm cells having different areas of cell surface exposure to FGF, allowing the embryo to use cell surface areas as a regulatory mechanism for differentiating the outcome of cells that sense a constant FGF concentration.
- Published
- 2024
20. Magnetic Ball Chain Robots for Cardiac Arrhythmia Treatment
- Author
-
Pittiglio, Giovanni, Leuenberger, Fabio, Mencattelli, Margherita, McCandless, Max, O'Leary, Edward, and Dupont, Pierre E.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Robotics ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
This paper introduces a novel magnetic navigation system for cardiac ablation. The system is formed from two key elements: a magnetic ablation catheter consisting of a chain of spherical permanent magnets; and an actuation system comprised of two cart-mounted permanent magnets undergoing pure rotation. The catheter design enables a large magnetic content with the goal of minimizing the footprint of the actuation system for easier integration with the clinical workflow. We present a quasi-static model of the catheter, the design of the actuation units, and their control modalities. Experimental validation shows that we can use small rotating magnets (119mm diameter) to reach cardiac ablation targets while generating clinically-relevant forces. Catheter control using a joystick is compared with manual catheter control. blue While total task completion time is similar, smoother navigation is observed using the proposed robotic system. We also demonstrate that the ball chain can ablate heart tissue and generate lesions comparable to the current clinical ablation catheters., Comment: in IEEE Transactions on Medical Robotics and Bionics, 2024
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Continuum Robot Shape Estimation Using Magnetic Ball Chains
- Author
-
Pittiglio, Giovanni, Donder, Abdulhamit, and Dupont, Pierre E.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Robotics ,Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Systems and Control - Abstract
Shape sensing of medical continuum robots is important both for closed-loop control as well as for enabling the clinician to visualize the robot inside the body. There is a need for inexpensive, but accurate shape sensing technologies. This paper proposes the use of magnetic ball chains as a means of generating shape-specific magnetic fields that can be detected by an external array of Hall effect sensors. Such a ball chain, encased in a flexible polymer sleeve, could be inserted inside the lumen of any continuum robot to provide real-time shape feedback. The sleeve could be removed, as needed, during the procedure to enable use of the entire lumen. To investigate this approach, a shape-sensing model for a steerable catheter tip is derived and an observability and sensitivity analysis are presented. Experiments show maximum estimation errors of 7.1% and mean of 2.9% of the tip position with respect to total length.
- Published
- 2024
22. Kerch style: towards a local branch evidenced at Apollonia Pontica?
- Author
-
Dupont, P., Baralis, A., Nedev, D., Panayotova, K., and Bogdanova, T.
- Subjects
bulgaria ,apollonia pontica ,kerch style ,4th century bc ,red-figured greek pottery ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The first chemical results already obtained on representative finds of red-figured vases from Apollonia decorated in the Kerch style have revealed a non-Attic chemical pattern, thus clearly pointing to the fact that Athens had no monopoly in the manufacture of these somewhat “ kitsch” wares smothered in gilt and added colours. Even if most of our samples belonging to the Kerch style are falling together with other black-glazed wares into a geochemical group differing from the local one of common wares, it might well be only for technological requirements. Further lab investigations will now try to determine whether we are faced with another local group or with imports from some other Pontic centre of manufacture, Panticapeum / present-day Kerch coming a priori to mind high up among the possible candidates
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Transports d’argiles, potiers itinérants et émigration de potiers dans le monde grec antique
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
itinerant potters ,ancient greek world ,potter’s craft ,clay transfers ,migrant potters ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The aim of this paper is focused on the distinction between itinerant and migrant ceramists across the ancient Greek world, as well as, for both of them, the eventuality of clay transfers which has been often put forward, requiring an assessment
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Note sur les moyens d’éclairage domestique des colons grecs du Pont-Nord
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
northern black-sea ,greek colonization ,berezan ,house lighting ,tallow candlesticks ,naphtha use as lamp fuel ,greek period ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Several specimens of tallow candlesticks dating back to the Greek period are evidenced among the ceramic finds from Berezan, whereas the use of naphtha flowing out from Kerch and Taman outcrops might well have been in use as lighting fuel as far back as the Greek period
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Length of hospital and intensive care unit stay in patients with invasive candidiasis and/or candidemia treated with rezafungin: a pooled analysis of two randomised controlled trials.
- Author
-
Honoré, Patrick, Bassetti, Matteo, Cornely, Oliver, Dupont, Herve, Fortún, Jesús, Kollef, Marin, Pappas, Peter, Pullman, John, Vazquez, Jose, Bielicka, Inga, Dickerson, Sara, Manamley, Nick, Sandison, Taylor, and Thompson, George
- Subjects
Candidemia ,Caspofungin ,Echinocandins ,Invasive candidiasis ,Length of ICU stay ,Length of hospital stay ,Rezafungin ,Humans ,Length of Stay ,Intensive Care Units ,Echinocandins ,Antifungal Agents ,Male ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Candidiasis ,Invasive ,Candidemia ,Aged ,Caspofungin ,Adult ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Invasive candidiasis/candidemia (IC/C) is associated with a substantial health economic burden driven primarily by prolonged hospital stay. The once-weekly IV echinocandin, rezafungin acetate, has demonstrated non-inferiority to caspofungin in the treatment of IC/C. This paper reports a post hoc pooled exploratory analysis of length of stay (LoS) for hospital and intensive care unit (ICU) stays in two previously published clinical trials (ReSTORE [NCT03667690] and STRIVE [NCT02734862], that compared rezafungin with daily IV caspofungin (stable patients in the caspofungin group who met relevant criteria could step down to fluconazole after 3 days or more). METHODS: LoS outcomes were analysed descriptively in the pooled modified intention to treat (mITT) population (all patients who had a documented Candida infection in line with trial requirements and received at least one dose of study drug). In addition, to adjust for an imbalance between treatment groups in the proportion receiving mechanical ventilation at baseline, a generalised linear model with mechanical ventilation as a binary covariate was applied. Responses to an exploratory question in the phase 3 trial on possible earlier discharge with weekly rezafungin are also reported. RESULTS: 294 patients were included (rezafungin 139, caspofungin 155), of whom 126 (43%) had ICU admission. Patients treated with rezafungin had a numerically shorter LoS than with caspofungin in all analyses. Mean total LoS was 25.2 days, vs 28.3 days with caspofungin, and mean ICU LoS was 16.1 vs 21.6 days for rezafungin and caspofungin, respectively. After adjustment for mechanical ventilation status the difference in ICU LoS was 4.1 days, a relative difference of 24% (95% CI -11%, 72%). Physicians would have considered earlier discharge for 16% of patients (30/187) with weekly rezafungin, an average of 5-6 days earlier. CONCLUSIONS: Rezafungin may enable shorter hospital and ICU LoS in IC/C compared with daily IV caspofungin, with accompanying savings in resource use. Further research is needed to confirm this in the real-world setting. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT03667690 (ReSTORE; September 12, 2018); NCT02734862 (STRIVE; April 12, 2016).
- Published
- 2024
26. LARP1 haploinsufficiency is associated with an autosomal dominant neurodevelopmental disorder.
- Author
-
Chettle, James, Louie, Raymond, Larner, Olivia, Best, Robert, Chen, Kevin, Morris, Josephine, Dedeic, Zinaida, Childers, Anna, Rogers, R, DuPont, Barbara, Skinner, Cindy, Küry, Sébastien, Uguen, Kevin, Planes, Marc, Monteil, Danielle, Li, Megan, Eliyahu, Aviva, Greenbaum, Lior, Mor, Nofar, Besnard, Thomas, Isidor, Bertrand, Cogné, Benjamin, Blesson, Alyssa, Comi, Anne, Wentzensen, Ingrid, Vuocolo, Blake, Lalani, Seema, Sierra, Roberta, Berry, Lori, Carter, Kent, Sanders, Stephan, and Blagden, Sarah
- Subjects
ASD ,LARP1 ,NDD ,RBP ,RNA binding protein ,autism ,metabolism ,neurodevelopmental ,plasticity ,proband ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Autism Spectrum Disorder ,Haploinsufficiency ,Neurodevelopmental Disorders ,Ribonucleoproteins ,RNA Recognition Motif Proteins - Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder (NDD) that affects approximately 4% of males and 1% of females in the United States. While causes of ASD are multi-factorial, single rare genetic variants contribute to around 20% of cases. Here, we report a case series of seven unrelated probands (6 males, 1 female) with ASD or another variable NDD phenotype attributed to de novo heterozygous loss of function or missense variants in the gene LARP1 (La ribonucleoprotein 1). LARP1 encodes an RNA-binding protein that post-transcriptionally regulates the stability and translation of thousands of mRNAs, including those regulating cellular metabolism and metabolic plasticity. Using lymphocytes collected and immortalized from an index proband who carries a truncating variant in one allele of LARP1, we demonstrated that lower cellular levels of LARP1 protein cause reduced rates of aerobic respiration and glycolysis. As expression of LARP1 increases during neurodevelopment, with higher levels in neurons and astrocytes, we propose that LARP1 haploinsufficiency contributes to ASD or related NDDs through attenuated metabolic activity in the developing fetal brain.
- Published
- 2024
27. Experimental online quantum dots charge autotuning using neural networks
- Author
-
Yon, Victor, Galaup, Bastien, Rohrbacher, Claude, Rivard, Joffrey, Morel, Alexis, Leclerc, Dominic, Godfrin, Clement, Li, Ruoyu, Kubicek, Stefan, De Greve, Kristiaan, Dupont-Ferrier, Eva, Beilliard, Yann, Melko, Roger G., and Drouin, Dominique
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Quantum Physics ,81V65 (Primary), 68T37 (Secondary) ,I.2.8 ,I.5.1 - Abstract
Spin-based semiconductor qubits hold promise for scalable quantum computing, yet they require reliable autonomous calibration procedures. This study presents an experimental demonstration of online single-dot charge autotuning using a convolutional neural network integrated into a closed-loop calibration system. The autotuning algorithm explores the gates' voltage space to localize charge transition lines, thereby isolating the one-electron regime without human intervention. This exploration leverages the model's uncertainty estimation to find the appropriate gate configuration with minimal measurements while reducing the risk of failures. In 20 experimental runs, our method achieved a success rate of 95% in locating the target electron regime, highlighting the robustness of this approach against noise and distribution shifts from the offline training set. Each tuning run lasted an average of 2 hours and 9 minutes, primarily due to the limited speed of the current measurement. This work validates the feasibility of machine learning-driven real-time charge autotuning for quantum dot devices, advancing the development toward the control of large qubit arrays., Comment: 7 pages (main) + 6 pages (supplementary)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Raney Transducers and the Lowest Point of the $p$-Lagrange spectrum
- Author
-
Dong, Brandon, Dupont, Soren, O'Dorney, Evan M., and Waitkus, W. Theo
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory - Abstract
It is well known that the golden ratio $\phi$ is the ''most irrational'' number in the sense that its best rational approximations $s/t$ have error $\sim 1/(\sqrt{5} t^2)$ and this constant $\sqrt{5}$ is as low as possible. Given a prime $p$, how can we characterize the reals $x$ such that $x$ and $p x$ are both ''very irrational''? This is tantamount to finding the lowest point of the $p$-Lagrange spectrum $\mathcal{L}_p$ as previously defined by the third author. We describe an algorithm using Raney transducers that computes $\min \mathcal{L}_p$ if it terminates, which we conjecture it always does. We verify that $\min \mathcal{L}_p$ is the square root of a rational number for primes $p < 2000$. Mysteriously, the highest values of $\min \mathcal{L}_p$ occur for the Heegner primes $67$, $3$, and $163$, and for all $p$, the continued fractions of the corresponding very irrational numbers $x$ and $p x$ are in one of three symmetric relations.
- Published
- 2024
29. Windows Agent Arena: Evaluating Multi-Modal OS Agents at Scale
- Author
-
Bonatti, Rogerio, Zhao, Dan, Bonacci, Francesco, Dupont, Dillon, Abdali, Sara, Li, Yinheng, Lu, Yadong, Wagle, Justin, Koishida, Kazuhito, Bucker, Arthur, Jang, Lawrence, and Hui, Zack
- Subjects
Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
Large language models (LLMs) show remarkable potential to act as computer agents, enhancing human productivity and software accessibility in multi-modal tasks that require planning and reasoning. However, measuring agent performance in realistic environments remains a challenge since: (i) most benchmarks are limited to specific modalities or domains (e.g. text-only, web navigation, Q&A, coding) and (ii) full benchmark evaluations are slow (on order of magnitude of days) given the multi-step sequential nature of tasks. To address these challenges, we introduce the Windows Agent Arena: a reproducible, general environment focusing exclusively on the Windows operating system (OS) where agents can operate freely within a real Windows OS and use the same wide range of applications, tools, and web browsers available to human users when solving tasks. We adapt the OSWorld framework (Xie et al., 2024) to create 150+ diverse Windows tasks across representative domains that require agent abilities in planning, screen understanding, and tool usage. Our benchmark is scalable and can be seamlessly parallelized in Azure for a full benchmark evaluation in as little as 20 minutes. To demonstrate Windows Agent Arena's capabilities, we also introduce a new multi-modal agent, Navi. Our agent achieves a success rate of 19.5% in the Windows domain, compared to 74.5% performance of an unassisted human. Navi also demonstrates strong performance on another popular web-based benchmark, Mind2Web. We offer extensive quantitative and qualitative analysis of Navi's performance, and provide insights into the opportunities for future research in agent development and data generation using Windows Agent Arena. Webpage: https://microsoft.github.io/WindowsAgentArena Code: https://github.com/microsoft/WindowsAgentArena
- Published
- 2024
30. Individual or collective treatments: how to target antimicrobial use to limit the spread of respiratory pathogens among beef cattle?
- Author
-
Sorin-Dupont, Baptiste, Poyard, Antoine, Assie, Sebastien, Picault, Sebastien, and Ezanno, Pauline
- Subjects
Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution - Abstract
The overuse of antibiotics has become a major global concern due to its role in diminishing treatment effectiveness and positively selecting antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains. This issue is particularly important in the beef cattle sector, where Bovine Respiratory Diseases (BRD) impose significant economic and welfare burdens. BRD are complex, multifactorial conditions primarily affecting young calves and feedlot cattle, caused by a combination of viral and bacterial pathogens, environmental factors, and stressors. Despite efforts to reduce antimicrobial use (AMU), the cattle production system remains heavily reliant on antibiotics to control BRD, often through the implementation of collective treatments to prevent outbreaks. This study aimed at evaluating the impact of various treatment practices on the spread of BRD, specifically focusing on criteria for implementing collective treatments. Using a mechanistic stochastic model, we simulated the spread of \textit{Mannheimia haemolytica} in a multi-pen fattening operation under sixteen different scenarios, considering pen composition, individual risk levels, and treatment strategies. Our findings suggest that an alternative criterion for collective treatments based on the speed of the disease spread, could reduce BRD incidence and AMU more effectively than conventional methods. This research highlights the importance of responsible treatment practices and the potential benefits of novel criteria for collective treatment strategies in improving animal health. Moreover, it emphasizes the need for transparency on the exposure to risk factors along the production chain., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures
- Published
- 2024
31. Logarithmic morphisms, tangential basepoints, and little disks
- Author
-
Dupont, Clément, Panzer, Erik, and Pym, Brent
- Subjects
Mathematics - Algebraic Geometry ,Mathematics - Algebraic Topology ,Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Quantum Algebra ,14Fxx, 14A21, 14H10, 18M60, 18M75, 55P48, 55P62 - Abstract
We develop the theory of ``virtual morphisms'' in logarithmic algebraic geometry, introduced by Howell. It allows one to give algebro-geometric meaning to various useful maps of topological spaces that do not correspond to morphisms of (log) schemes in the classical sense, while retaining functoriality of key constructions. In particular, we explain how virtual morphisms provide a natural categorical home for Deligne's theory of tangential basepoints: the latter are simply the virtual morphisms from a point. We also extend Howell's results on the functoriality of Betti and de Rham cohomology. Using this framework, we lift the topological operad of little $2$-disks to an operad in log schemes over the integers, whose virtual points are isomorphism classes of stable marked curves of genus zero equipped with a tangential basepoint. The gluing of such curves along marked points is performed using virtual morphisms that transport tangential basepoints around the curves. This builds on Vaintrob's analogous construction for framed little disks, for which the classical notion of morphism in logarithmic geometry sufficed. In this way, we obtain a direct algebro-geometric proof of the formality of the little disks operad, following the strategy envisioned by Beilinson. Furthermore, Bar-Natan's parenthesized braids naturally appear as the fundamental groupoids of our moduli spaces, with all virtual basepoints defined over the integers., Comment: 55 pages, 4 figures, comments welcome
- Published
- 2024
32. A Multilevel Approach For Solving Large-Scale QUBO Problems With Noisy Hybrid Quantum Approximate Optimization
- Author
-
Maciejewski, Filip B., Bach, Bao Gia, Dupont, Maxime, Lott, P. Aaron, Sundar, Bhuvanesh, Neira, David E. Bernal, Safro, Ilya, and Venturelli, Davide
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum approximate optimization is one of the promising candidates for useful quantum computation, particularly in the context of finding approximate solutions to Quadratic Unconstrained Binary Optimization (QUBO) problems. However, the existing quantum processing units (QPUs) are relatively small, and canonical mappings of QUBO via the Ising model require one qubit per variable, rendering direct large-scale optimization infeasible. In classical optimization, a general strategy for addressing many large-scale problems is via multilevel/multigrid methods, where the large target problem is iteratively coarsened, and the global solution is constructed from multiple small-scale optimization runs. In this work, we experimentally test how existing QPUs perform as a sub-solver within such a multilevel strategy. We combine and extend (via additional classical processing) the recent Noise-Directed Adaptive Remapping (NDAR) and Quantum Relax $\&$ Round (QRR) algorithms. We first demonstrate the effectiveness of our heuristic extensions on Rigetti's transmon device Ankaa-2. We find approximate solutions to $10$ instances of fully connected $82$-qubit Sherrington-Kirkpatrick graphs with random integer-valued coefficients obtaining normalized approximation ratios (ARs) in the range $\sim 0.98-1.0$, and the same class with real-valued coefficients (ARs $\sim 0.94-1.0$). Then, we implement the extended NDAR and QRR algorithms as subsolvers in the multilevel algorithm for $6$ large-scale graphs with at most $\sim 27,000$ variables. The QPU (with classical post-processing steps) is used to find approximate solutions to dozens of problems, at most $82$-qubit, which are iteratively used to construct the global solution. We observe that quantum optimization results are competitive regarding the quality of solutions compared to classical heuristics used as subsolvers within the multilevel approach., Comment: 7+3 pages; 6+0 figures; 2+0 tables; comments and suggestions are welcome!
- Published
- 2024
33. Qubit-efficient quantum combinatorial optimization solver
- Author
-
Sundar, Bhuvanesh and Dupont, Maxime
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
Quantum optimization solvers typically rely on one-variable-to-one-qubit mapping. However, the low qubit count on current quantum computers is a major obstacle in competing against classical methods. Here, we develop a qubit-efficient algorithm that overcomes this limitation by mapping a candidate bit string solution to an entangled wave function of fewer qubits. We propose a variational quantum circuit generalizing the quantum approximate optimization ansatz (QAOA). Extremizing the ansatz for Sherrington-Kirkpatrick spin glass problems, we show valuable properties such as the concentration of ansatz parameters and derive performance guarantees. This approach could benefit near-term intermediate-scale and future fault-tolerant small-scale quantum devices., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures + 8 pages of supplementary material
- Published
- 2024
34. TransCAD: A Hierarchical Transformer for CAD Sequence Inference from Point Clouds
- Author
-
Dupont, Elona, Cherenkova, Kseniya, Mallis, Dimitrios, Gusev, Gleb, Kacem, Anis, and Aouada, Djamila
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence - Abstract
3D reverse engineering, in which a CAD model is inferred given a 3D scan of a physical object, is a research direction that offers many promising practical applications. This paper proposes TransCAD, an end-to-end transformer-based architecture that predicts the CAD sequence from a point cloud. TransCAD leverages the structure of CAD sequences by using a hierarchical learning strategy. A loop refiner is also introduced to regress sketch primitive parameters. Rigorous experimentation on the DeepCAD and Fusion360 datasets show that TransCAD achieves state-of-the-art results. The result analysis is supported with a proposed metric for CAD sequence, the mean Average Precision of CAD Sequence, that addresses the limitations of existing metrics.
- Published
- 2024
35. Measurement and analysis of the $^{246}$Cm and $^{248}$Cm neutron capture cross-sections at the EAR2 of the n TOF facility
- Author
-
Alcayne, V., Kimura, A., Mendoza, E., Cano-Ott, D., Aberle, O., Álvarez-Velarde, F., Amaducci, S., Andrzejewski, J., Audouin, L., Bécares, V., Babiano-Suarez, V., Bacak, M., Barbagallo, M., Bečvář, F., Bellia, G., Berthoumieux, E., Billowes, J., Bosnar, D., Brown, A., Busso, M., Caamaño, M., Caballero-Ontanaya, L., Calviño, F., Calviani, M., Casanovas, A., Cerutti, F., Chen, Y. H., Chiaveri, E., Colonna, N., Cortés, G., Cortés-Giraldo, M. A., Cosentino, L., Cristallo, S., Damone, L. A., Diakaki, M., Dietz, M., Domingo-Pardo, C., Dressler, R., Dupont, E., Durán, I., Eleme, Z., Fernández-Domınguez, B., Ferrari, A., Finocchiaro, P., Furman, V., Göbel, K., Garg, R., Gawlik-Ramiega, A., Gilardoni, S., Glodariu, T., Gonçalves, I. F., González-Romero, E., Guerrero, C., Gunsing, F., Harada, H., Heinitz, S., Heyse, J., Jenkins, D. G., Jericha, E., Käppeler, F., Kadi, Y., Kivel, N., Kokkoris, M., Kopatch, Y., Krtička, M., Kurtulgil, D., Ladarescu, I., Lederer-Woods, C., Leeb, H., Lerendegui-Marco, J., Meo, S. Lo, Lonsdale, S. J., Macina, D., Manna, A., Martınez, T., Masi, A., Massimi, C., Mastinu, P., Mastromarco, M., Matteucci, F., Maugeri, E. A., Mazzone, A., Mengoni, A., Michalopoulou, V., Milazzo, P. M., Mingrone, F., Musumarra, A., Negret, A., Nolte, R., Ogállar, F., Oprea, A., Patronis, N., Pavlik, A., de Rada, A. Pérez, Perkowski, J., Persanti, L., Porras, I., Praena, J., Quesada, J. M., Radeck, D., Ramos-Doval, D., Rauscher, T., Reifarth, R., Rochman, D., Romanets, Y., Rubbia, C., Sabaté-Gilarte, M., Saxena, A., Schillebeeckx, P., Schumann, D., Smith, A. G., Sosnin, N. V., Stamatopoulos, A., Tagliente, G., Tain, J. L., Talip, T., Tarifeño-Saldivia, A., Tassan-Got, L., Torres-Sánchez, P., Tsinganis, A., Ulrich, J., Urlass, S., Valenta, S., Vannini, G., Variale, V., Vaz, P., Ventura, A., Vlachoudis, V., Vlastou, R., Wallner, A., Woods, P. J., Wright, T., and Žugec, P.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The $^{246}$Cm(n,$\gamma$) and $^{248}$Cm(n,$\gamma$) cross-sections have been measured at the Experimental Area 2 (EAR2) of the n_TOF facility at CERN with three C$_6$D$_6$ detectors. This measurement is part of a collective effort to improve the capture cross-section data for Minor Actinides (MAs), which are required to estimate the production and transmutation rates of these isotopes in light water reactors and innovative reactor systems. In particular, the neutron capture in $^{246}$Cm and $^{248}$Cm open the path for the formation of other Cm isotopes and heavier elements such as Bk and Cf and the knowledge of (n,$\gamma$) cross-sections of these Cm isotopes plays an important role in the transport, transmutation and storage of the spent nuclear fuel. The reactions $^{246}$Cm(n,$\gamma$) and $^{248}$Cm(n,$\gamma$) have been the two first capture measurements analyzed at n_TOF EAR2. Until this experiment and two recent measurements performed at J-PARC, there was only one set of data of the capture cross-sections of $^{246}$Cm and $^{248}$Cm, that was obtained in 1969 in an underground nuclear explosion experiment. In the measurement at n_TOF a total of 13 resonances of $^{246}$Cm between 4 and 400 eV and 5 of $^{248}$Cm between 7 and 100 eV have been identified and fitted. The radiative kernels obtained for $^{246}$Cm are compatible with JENDL-5, but some of them are not with JENDL-4, which has been adopted by JEFF-3.3 and ENDF/B-VIII.0. The radiative kernels obtained for the first three $^{248}$Cm resonances are compatible with JENDL-5, however, the other two are not compatible with any other evaluation and are 20% and 60% larger than JENDL-5.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Universal Scaling Laws for a Generic Swimmer Model
- Author
-
Ventéjou, Bruno, Métivet, Thibaut, Dupont, Aurélie, and Peyla, Philippe
- Subjects
Physics - Biological Physics ,Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
We have developed a minimal model of a swimmer without body deformation based on force and torque dipoles which allows accurate 3D Navier-Stokes calculations. Our model can reproduce swimmer propulsion for a large range of Reynolds numbers, and generate wake vortices in the inertial regime, reminiscent of the flow generated by the flapping tails of real fish. We performed a numerical exploration of the model from low to high Reynolds numbers and obtained universal laws using scaling arguments. We collected data from a wide variety of micro-organisms, thereby extending the experimental data presented in (M. Gazzola et al., Nature Physics 10, 758, 2014). Our theoretical scaling laws compare very well with experimental data across the different regimes, from Stokes to turbulent flows. We believe that this model, due to its relatively simple design, will be very useful for obtaining numerical simulations of collective effects within fish schools composed of hundreds of individuals.
- Published
- 2024
37. Fibropapillomatosis Dynamics, Severity and Demographic Effect in Caribbean Green Turtles: Fibropapillomatosis Dynamics, Severity and Demographic Effect...
- Author
-
Lelong, Pierre, Besnard, Aurélien, Girondot, Marc, Habold, Caroline, Priam, Fabienne, Giraudeau, Mathieu, Le Loc’h, Guillaume, Le Loc’h, Aurélie, Fournier, Pascal, Fournier-Chambrillon, Christine, Fort, Jérôme, Bustamante, Paco, Dupont, Sophie M., Vincze, Orsolya, Page, Annie, Perrault, Justin R., De Thoisy, Benoît, Gros-Desormeaux, Jean-Raphaël, Martin, Jordan, Bourgeois, Ouvéa, Lepori, Muriel, Régis, Sidney, Lecerf, Nicolas, Lefebvre, Fabien, Aubert, Nathalie, Frouin, Cédric, Flora, Frédéric, Pimentel, Esteban, Passalboni, Anne-Sophie, Jeantet, Lorène, Hielard, Gaëlle, Louis-Jean, Laurent, Brador, Aude, Giannasi, Paul, Etienne, Denis, Lecerf, Nathaël, Chevallier, Pascale, Chevallier, Tao, Meslier, Stéphane, Landreau, Anthony, Desnos, Anaïs, Maceno, Myriane, Larcher, Eugène, Le Maho, Yvon, and Chevallier, Damien
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Chronic exposure to tebuconazole alters thyroid hormones and plumage quality in house sparrows (Passer domesticus)
- Author
-
Bellot, Pauline, Brischoux, François, Budzinski, Hélène, Dupont, Sophie M., Fritsch, Clémentine, Hope, Sydney F., Michaud, Bruno, Pallud, Marie, Parenteau, Charline, Prouteau, Louise, Rocchi, Steffi, and Angelier, Frédéric
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Detection of MB and BSA with Au–Ag nanostar-coated microspheres
- Author
-
Ramírez, Josué I. García, Castillo, Marlen D. Méndez, Santiago, Erick O. Santos, Torres, Julián Hernández, Rodríguez, Adriana Báez, Aguilar, Enrique Juárez, Hernández, Irma Y. Izaguirre, Dupont, Pablo Thomas, and Peredo, Luis Zamora
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Intestinal neutrophil extracellular traps promote gut barrier damage exacerbating endotoxaemia, systemic inflammation and progression of diabetic retinopathy in type 2 diabetes
- Author
-
Floyd, Jason L., Prasad, Ram, Dupont, Mariana D., Adu-Rutledge, Yvonne, Anshumali, Shambhavi, Paul, Sarbodeep, Li Calzi, Sergio, Qi, Xiaoping, Malepati, Akanksha, Johnson, Emory, Jumbo-Lucioni, Patricia, Crosson, Jason N., Mason, III, John O., Boulton, Michael E., Welner, Robert S., and Grant, Maria B.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Passive broadband Faraday isolator for hybrid integration to photonic circuits without lens and external magnet
- Author
-
Lapointe, Jerome, Coia, Cedrik, Dupont, Albert, and Vallée, Réal
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cardiac adaptations in young triathletes: a 9-month longitudinal study during the peak height velocity period
- Author
-
Birat, Anthony, Ratel, Sébastien, Garnier, Yoann M., Dupuy, Alexis, Dodu, Alexandre, Grossoeuvre, Claire, Dupont, Anne-Charlotte, Rance, Mélanie, Morel, Claire, and Nottin, Stéphane
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Scientist engagement and the knowledge–action gap
- Author
-
Dupont, Léonard, Jacob, Staffan, and Philippe, Hervé
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. MR imaging signs of shoulder adhesive capsulitis: analysis of potential differentials and improved diagnostic criteria
- Author
-
Dupont, Thibault, Idir, Malik Ait, Hossu, Gabriela, Sirveaux, François, Gillet, Romain, Blum, Alain, and Teixeira, Pedro Augusto Gondim
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Fate of biomass inorganic elements during hydrothermal carbonization: an experimental study on agro-food waste
- Author
-
Michel, Julie, Rivas-Arrieta, María J., Borén, Eleonora, Simonin, Loïc, Kennedy, Maria, and Dupont, Capucine
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Systematic characterization of faecal sludge from various sources for its use as a solid fuel
- Author
-
Sharma, Niharika, Lolkema, Berend, Mawioo, Peter, Hooijmans, Christine Maria, and Dupont, Capucine
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Céramiques anatoliennes du littoral nord du Pont-Euxin archaïque. Problèmes en suspens
- Author
-
Dupont, P.
- Subjects
berezan ,olbia ,istros ,panticapaeum ,anatolian pottery imports ,determination of origin ,delivery route ,6th century bc ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
The recent discoveries of some Anatolian pots, both of «Late Phrygian » and Lydian types, scattered between NW (Istros, Olbia, Berezan) and NE (Panticapaeum) Pontic Greek settlements, invite to wonder about both their respective centres of manufacture and routes of delivery from the Anatolian hinterland. It is argued that the «Late Phrygian » ones brought to light at Panticapaeum might well have followed the same western coastal sea route from the Bosporus mouth northwards as their Anatolian counterparts excavated in Istros and Berezan‐ Olbia
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Robust quantum dots charge autotuning using neural network uncertainty
- Author
-
Yon, Victor, Galaup, Bastien, Rohrbacher, Claude, Rivard, Joffrey, Godfrin, Clément, Li, Ruoyu, Kubicek, Stefan, De Greve, Kristiaan, Gaudreau, Louis, Dupont-Ferrier, Eva, Beilliard, Yann, Melko, Roger G., and Drouin, Dominique
- Subjects
Quantum Physics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Computer Science - Machine Learning ,68T37 (Primary), 81V65 (Secondary) ,I.2.8 ,I.5.1 - Abstract
This study presents a machine-learning-based procedure to automate the charge tuning of semiconductor spin qubits with minimal human intervention, addressing one of the significant challenges in scaling up quantum dot technologies. This method exploits artificial neural networks to identify noisy transition lines in stability diagrams, guiding a robust exploration strategy leveraging neural networks' uncertainty estimations. Tested across three distinct offline experimental datasets representing different single quantum dot technologies, the approach achieves over 99% tuning success rate in optimal cases, where more than 10% of the success is directly attributable to uncertainty exploitation. The challenging constraints of small training sets containing high diagram-to-diagram variability allowed us to evaluate the capabilities and limits of the proposed procedure., Comment: 12 pages (main) + 14 pages (supplementary)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Did Binary Neutron Star Merger GW170817 Leave Behind A Long-lived Neutron Star?
- Author
-
DuPont, Marcus and MacFadyen, Andrew
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We consider the observational implications of the binary neutron star (BNS) merger GW170817 leaving behind a rapidly rotating massive neutron star that launches a relativistic, equatorial outflow as well as a jet. We show that if the equatorial outflow (ring) is highly beamed in the equatorial plane, its luminosity can be "hidden" from view until late times, even if carrying a significant fraction of the spin-down energy of the merger remnant. This hidden ring reveals itself as a re-brightening in the light curve once it slows down enough for Earth to be within the ring's relativistic beaming solid angle. We compute semi-analytic light curves using this model and find they are in agreement with the observations thus far, and we provide predictions for the ensuing afterglow.
- Published
- 2024
50. Enhanced Creativity and Ideation through Stable Video Synthesis
- Author
-
Miller, Elijah, Dupont, Thomas, and Wang, Mingming
- Subjects
Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction - Abstract
This paper explores the innovative application of Stable Video Diffusion (SVD), a diffusion model that revolutionizes the creation of dynamic video content from static images. As digital media and design industries accelerate, SVD emerges as a powerful generative tool that enhances productivity and introduces novel creative possibilities. The paper examines the technical underpinnings of diffusion models, their practical effectiveness, and potential future developments, particularly in the context of video generation. SVD operates on a probabilistic framework, employing a gradual denoising process to transform random noise into coherent video frames. It addresses the challenges of visual consistency, natural movement, and stylistic reflection in generated videos, showcasing high generalization capabilities. The integration of SVD in design tasks promises enhanced creativity, rapid prototyping, and significant time and cost efficiencies. It is particularly impactful in areas requiring frame-to-frame consistency, natural motion capture, and creative diversity, such as animation, visual effects, advertising, and educational content creation. The paper concludes that SVD is a catalyst for design innovation, offering a wide array of applications and a promising avenue for future research and development in the field of digital media and design., Comment: short version (working in progress)
- Published
- 2024
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.