12,944 results on '"Márk L"'
Search Results
2. Mapping bathymetry of inland water bodies on the North Slope of Alaska with Landsat using Random Forest
- Author
-
Carroll, Mark L., Wooten, Margaret R., Simpson, Claire E., Spradlin, Caleb S., Frost, Melanie J., Blanco-Rojas, Mariana, Williams, Zachary W., Caraballo-Vega, Jordan A., and Neigh, Christopher S. R.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The North Slope of Alaska is dominated by small waterbodies that provide critical ecosystem services for local population and wildlife. Detailed information on the depth of the waterbodies is scarce due to the challenges with collecting such information. In this work we have trained a machine learning (Random Forest Regressor) model to predict depth from multispectral Landsat data in waterbodies across the North Slope of Alaska. The greatest challenge is the scarcity of in situ data, which is expensive and difficult to obtain, to train the model. We overcame this challenge by using modeled depth predictions from a prior study as synthetic training data to provide a more diverse training data pool for the Random Forest. The final Random Forest model was more robust than models trained directly on the in situ data and when applied to 208 Landsat 8 scenes from 2016 to 2018 yielded a map with an overall $r^{2}$ value of 0.76 on validation. The final map has been made available through the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distribute Active Archive Center (ORNL-DAAC). This map represents a first of its kind regional assessment of waterbody depth with per pixel estimates of depth for the entire North Slope of Alaska., Comment: 24 Pages, 6 Figures, 1 Table. This article is a US Government work. Landsat data from the US Geological Survey Earth Explorer system: https://earthexplorer.usgs.gov. Sonar training measurements: https://doi.org/10.18739/A2JD4PP1H. Output maps from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Distribute Active Archive Center (ORNL-DAAC): https://daac.ornl.gov/cgi-bin/dsviewer.pl?ds_id=2243
- Published
- 2025
3. Values of Ducci Periods for Sequences on $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Let $D: \mathbb{Z}_m^n \to \mathbb{Z}_m^n$ be defined so that \[D(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \; \text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m).\] We call $D$ the Ducci function and the sequence $\{D^{\alpha}(\mathbf{u})\}_{\alpha=0}^{\infty}$ the Ducci sequence of $\mathbf{u}$ for $\mathbf{u} \in \mathbb{Z}_m^n$. Every Ducci sequence enters a cycle, so we can let $\text{Per}(\mathbf{u})$ be the number of tuples in the Ducci cycle of $\mathbf{u}$, or the period of $\mathbf{u}$. In this paper, we will look at what different possible values of $\text{Per}(\mathbf{u})$ we can have and some conditions that if $\mathbf{u}$ meets at least one of them, $\mathbf{u}$ will generate a period smaller than the maximum period.
- Published
- 2025
4. Examining $H$-Closed Ducci Sequences on $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Let $D$ be an endomorphism on $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ so that \[D(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \; \text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m).\] We call the sequence $\{D^{\alpha}(\mathbf{u})\}_{\alpha=0}^{\infty}$ the Ducci sequence of $\mathbf{u} \in \mathbb{Z}_m^n$, which always enters a cycle. Now let $H$ be an endomorphism on $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ such that \[H(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_2, x_3, ..., x_n, x_1).\] In this paper, we will talk about a few cases when $\mathbf{u}$ and $H^{\beta}(\mathbf{u})$ have the same Ducci cycle for $\beta > 0$, as well as prove a few cases of $n,m$ where this is guaranteed for every $\mathbf{u} \in \mathbb{Z}_m^n$.
- Published
- 2025
5. Neighborhoods, connectivity, and diameter of the nilpotent graph of a finite group
- Author
-
Delizia, Costantino, Gaeta, Michele, Lewis, Mark L., and Monetta, Carmine
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,Primary: 20D15 Secondary: 05C12, 05C25, 20D10 - Abstract
The nilpotent graph of a group $G$ is the simple and undirected graph whose vertices are the elements of $G$ and two distinct vertices are adjacent if they generate a nilpotent subgroup of $G$. Here we discuss some topological properties of the nilpotent graph of a finite group $G$. Indeed, we characterize finite solvable groups whose closed neighborhoods are nilpotent subgroups. Moreover, we study the connectivity of the graph $\Gamma(G)$ obtained removing all universal vertices from the nilpotent graph of $G$. Some upper bounds to the diameter of $\Gamma(G)$ are provided when $G$ belongs to some classes of groups., Comment: Added a reference to the paper by Burness, Lucchini, and Nemmi
- Published
- 2025
6. Semi-extraspecial $p$-groups with automorphisms of large order
- Author
-
Brenner, Sofia, Camina, Rachel D., and Lewis, Mark L.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D15 - Abstract
In this paper, we consider semi-extraspecial $p$-groups $G$ that have an automorphism of order $|G:G'| - 1$. We prove that these groups are isomorphic to Sylow $p$-subgroups of ${\rm SU}_3 (p^{2a})$ for some integer $a$. If $p$ is odd, this is equivalent to saying that $G$ is isomorphic to a Sylow $p$-subgroup of ${\rm SL}_3 (p^a)$.
- Published
- 2025
7. WALLABY Pilot Survey & ASymba: Comparing HI Detection Asymmetries to the SIMBA Simulation
- Author
-
Perron-Cormier, Mathieu, Deg, Nathan, Spekkens, Kristine, Richardson, Mark L. A., Glowacki, Marcin, Oman, Kyle A., Verheijen, Marc A. W., Hank, Nadine A. N., Blyth, Sarah, Dénes, Helga, Rhee, Jonghwan, Elagali, Ahmed, Shen, Austin Xiaofan, Raja, Wasim, Lee-Waddell, Karen, Cortese, Luca, Catinella, Barbara, and Westmeier, Tobias
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
An avenue for understanding cosmological galaxy formation is to compare morphometric parameters in observations and simulations of galaxy assembly. In this second paper of the ASymba: Asymmetries of HI in SIMBA Galaxies series, we measure atomic gas HI asymmetries in spatially-resolved detections from the untargetted WALLABY survey, and compare them to realizations of WALLABY-like mock samples from the SIMBA cosmological simulations. We develop a Scanline Tracing method to create mock galaxy HI datacubes which minimizes shot noise along the spectral dimension compared to particle-based methods, and therefore spurious asymmetry contributions. We compute 1D and 3D asymmetries for spatially-resolved WALLABY Pilot Survey detections, and find that the highest 3D asymmetries A3D>0.5 stem from interacting systems or detections with strong bridges or tails. We then construct a series of WALLABY-like mock realizations drawn from the SIMBA 50 Mpc simulation volume, and compare their asymmetry distributions. We find that the incidence of high A3D detections is higher in WALLABY than in the SIMBA mocks, but that difference is not statistically significant (p-value = 0.05). The statistical power of quantitative comparisons of asymmetries such as the one presented here will improve as the WALLABY survey progresses, and as simulation volumes and resolutions increase., Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Discovering Boundary Equations for Wave Breaking using Machine Learning
- Author
-
Tang, Tianning, Chen, Yuntian, Cao, Rui, Mostert, Wouter, Taylor, Paul H., McAllister, Mark L., Tai, Bing, Ma, Yuxiang, Callaghan, Adrian H., and Adcock, Thomas A. A.
- Subjects
Physics - Fluid Dynamics - Abstract
Many supervised machine learning methods have revolutionised the empirical modelling of complex systems. These empirical models, however, are usually "black boxes" and provide only limited physical explanations about the underlying systems. Instead, so-called "knowledge discovery" methods can be used to explore the governing equations that describe observed phenomena. This paper focuses on how we can use such methods to explore underlying physics and also model a commonly observed yet not fully understood phenomenon - the breaking of ocean waves. In our work, we use symbolic regression to explore the equation that describes wave-breaking evolution from a dataset of in silico waves generated using expensive numerical methods. Our work discovers a new boundary equation that provides a reduced-order description of how the surface elevation (i.e., the water-air interface) evolves forward in time, including the instances when the wave breaks - a problem that has defied traditional approaches. Compared to the existing empirical models, the unique equation-based nature of our model allows further mathematical interpretation, which provides an opportunity to explore the fundamentals of breaking waves. Further expert-AI collaborative research reveals the physical meaning of each term of the discovered equation, which suggests a new characteristic of breaking waves in deep water - a decoupling between the water-air interface and the fluid velocities. This novel reduced-order model also hints at computationally efficient ways to simulate breaking waves for engineering applications., Comment: \keywords{Symbolic Regression, Wave Breaking, Knowledge Discovery, Symbolic Classification}
- Published
- 2024
9. Highly efficient, tunable, electro-optic metasurfaces based on quasi-bound states in the continuum
- Author
-
Damgaard-Carstensen, Christopher, Yezekyan, Torgom, Brongersma, Mark L., and Bozhevolnyi, Sergey I.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Ultrafast and highly efficient dynamic optical metasurfaces enabling truly spatiotemporal control over optical radiation are poised to revolutionize modern optics and photonics, but their practical realization remains elusive. In this work, we demonstrate highly efficient electro-optic metasurfaces based on quasi-bound states in the continuum (qBIC) operating in reflection that are amenable for ultrafast operation and thereby spatiotemporal control over reflected optical fields. The material configuration consists of a lithium niobate thin film sandwiched between an optically thick gold back-reflector and a grating of gold nanoridges also functioning as control electrodes. Metasurfaces for optical free-space intensity modulation are designed by utilizing the electro-optic Pockels effect in combination with an ultra-narrow qBIC resonance, whose wavelength can be finely tuned by varying the angle of light incidence. The fabricated electro-optic metasurfaces operate at telecom wavelengths with the modulation depth reaching 95 % (modulating thereby 35 % of the total incident power) for a bias voltage of +/-30 V within the electrical bandwidth of 125 MHz. Leveraging the highly angle-dependent qBIC resonance realized, we demonstrate electrically tunable phase contrast imaging using the fabricated metasurface. Moreover, given the potential bandwidth of 39 GHz estimated for the metasurface pixel size of 22 $\mu$m, the demonstrated electro-optic metasurfaces promise successful realization of unique optical functions, such as harmonic beam steering and spatiotemporal shaping as well as nonreciprocal operation.
- Published
- 2024
10. On non self-normalizing subgroups
- Author
-
Bianchi, Mariagrazia, Camina, Rachel D., Lewis, Mark L., Pacifici, Emanuele, and Sanus, Lucia
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory - Abstract
Let $n$ be a non negative integer, and define $D_n$ to be the family of all finite groups having precisely $n$ conjugacy classes of nontrivial subgroups that are not self-normalizing. We are interested in studying the behavior of $D_n$ and its interplay with solvability and nilpotency. We first show that if $G$ belongs to $D_n$ with $n \le 3$, then $G$ is solvable of derived length at most 2. We also show that $A_5$ is the unique nonsolvable group in $D_4$, and that $SL_2(3)$ is the unique solvable group in $D_4$ whose derived length is larger than 2. For a group $G$, we define $D(G)$ to be the number of conjugacy classes of nontrivial subgroups that are not self-normalizing. We determine the relationship between $D(H \times K)$ and $D(H)$ and $D(K)$. We show that if $G$ is nilpotent and lies in $D_n$, then $G$ has nilpotency class at most $n/2$ and its derived length is at most $\log_2 (n/2) + 1$. We consider $D_n$ for several classes of Frobenius groups, and we use this classification to classify the groups in $D_0$, $D_1$, $D_2$, and $D_3$. Finally, we show that if $G$ is solvable and lies in $D_n$ with $n \ge 3$, then $G$ has derived length at most the minimum of $n-1$ and $3 \log_2 (n+1) + 9$.
- Published
- 2024
11. High-throughput antibody screening with high-quality factor nanophotonics and bioprinting
- Author
-
Abdollahramezani, Sajjad, Omo-Lamai, Darrell, Bosman, Gerlof, Hemmatyar, Omid, Dagli, Sahil, Dolia, Varun, Chang, Kai, Gusken, Nicholas A., Delgado, Hamish C., Boons, Geert-Jan, Brongersma, Mark L., Safir, Fareeha, Khuri-Yakub, Butrus T., Moradifar, Parivash, and Dionne, Jennifer A.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Physics - Biological Physics - Abstract
Empirical investigation of the quintillion-scale, functionally diverse antibody repertoires that can be generated synthetically or naturally is critical for identifying potential biotherapeutic leads, yet remains burdensome. We present high-throughput nanophotonics- and bioprinter-enabled screening (HT-NaBS), a multiplexed assay for large-scale, sample-efficient, and rapid characterization of antibody libraries. Our platform is built upon independently addressable pixelated nanoantennas exhibiting wavelength-scale mode volumes, high-quality factors (high-Q) exceeding 5000, and pattern densities exceeding one million sensors per square centimeter. Our custom-built acoustic bioprinter enables individual sensor functionalization via the deposition of picoliter droplets from a library of capture antigens at rates up to 25,000 droplets per second. We detect subtle differentiation in the target binding signature through spatially-resolved spectral imaging of hundreds of resonators simultaneously, elucidating antigen-antibody binding kinetic rates, affinity constant, and specificity. We demonstrate HT-NaBS on a panel of antibodies targeting SARS-CoV-2, Influenza A, and Influenza B antigens, with a sub-picomolar limit of detection within 30 minutes. Furthermore, through epitope binning analysis, we demonstrate the competence and diversity of a library of native antibodies targeting functional epitopes on a priority pathogen (H5N1 bird flu) and on glycosylated therapeutic Cetuximab antibodies against epidermal growth factor receptor. With a roadmap to image tens of thousands of sensors simultaneously, this high-throughput, resource-efficient, and label-free platform can rapidly screen for high-affinity and broad epitope coverage, accelerating biotherapeutic discovery and de novo protein design.
- Published
- 2024
12. SatVision-TOA: A Geospatial Foundation Model for Coarse-Resolution All-Sky Remote Sensing Imagery
- Author
-
Spradlin, Caleb S., Caraballo-Vega, Jordan A., Li, Jian, Carroll, Mark L., Gong, Jie, and Montesano, Paul M.
- Subjects
Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Foundation models have the potential to transform the landscape of remote sensing (RS) data analysis by enabling large computer vision models to be pre-trained on vast amounts of remote sensing data. These models can then be fine-tuned with small amounts of labeled training and applied to a variety of applications. Most existing foundation models are designed for high spatial resolution, cloud-free satellite imagery or photos, limiting their applicability in scenarios that require frequent temporal monitoring or broad spectral profiles. As a result, foundation models trained solely on cloud-free images have limited utility for applications that involve atmospheric variables or require atmospheric corrections. We introduce SatVision-TOA, a novel foundation model pre-trained on 14-band MODIS L1B Top-Of-Atmosphere (TOA) radiance imagery, addressing the need for models pre-trained to handle moderate- and coarse-resolution all-sky remote sensing data. The SatVision-TOA model is pre-trained using a Masked-Image-Modeling (MIM) framework and the SwinV2 architecture, and learns detailed contextual representations through self-supervised learning without the need for labels. It is a 3 billion parameter model that is trained on 100 million images. To our knowledge this is the largest foundation model trained solely on satellite RS imagery. Results show that SatVision-TOA achieves superior performance over baseline methods on downstream tasks such as 3D cloud retrieval. Notably, the model achieves a mean intersection over union (mIOU) of 0.46, a substantial improvement over the baseline mIOU of 0.22. Additionally, the rate of false negative results in the fine-tuning task were reduced by over 50% compared to the baseline. Our work advances pre-trained vision modeling for multispectral RS by learning from a variety of atmospheric and aerosol conditions to improve cloud and land surface monitoring., Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2024
13. Local Clustering Decoder: a fast and adaptive hardware decoder for the surface code
- Author
-
Ziad, Abbas B., Zalawadiya, Ankit, Topal, Canberk, Camps, Joan, Gehér, György P., Stafford, Matthew P., and Turner, Mark L.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
To avoid prohibitive overheads in performing fault-tolerant quantum computation, the decoding problem needs to be solved accurately and at speeds sufficient for fast feedback. Existing decoding systems fail to satisfy both of these requirements, meaning they either slow down the quantum computer or reduce the number of operations that can be performed before the quantum information is corrupted. We introduce the Local Clustering Decoder as a solution that simultaneously achieves the accuracy and speed requirements of a real-time decoding system. Our decoder is implemented on FPGAs and exploits hardware parallelism to keep pace with the fastest qubit types. Further, it comprises an adaptivity engine that allows the decoder to update itself in real-time in response to control signals, such as heralded leakage events. Under a realistic circuit-level noise model where leakage is a dominant error source, our decoder enables one million error-free quantum operations with 4x fewer physical qubits when compared to standard non-adaptive decoding. This is achieved whilst decoding in under 1 us per round with modest FPGA resources, demonstrating that high-accuracy real-time decoding is possible, and reducing the qubit counts required for large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computation.
- Published
- 2024
14. Nonresonant Raman control of material phases
- Author
-
Shi, Jiaojian, Heide, Christian, Xu, Haowei, Huang, Yijing, Shen, Yuejun, Guzelturk, Burak, Henstridge, Meredith, Schön, Carl Friedrich, Mangu, Anudeep, Kobayashi, Yuki, Peng, Xinyue, Zhang, Shangjie, May, Andrew F., Reddy, Pooja Donthi, Shautsova, Viktoryia, Taghinejad, Mohammad, Luo, Duan, Hughes, Eamonn, Brongersma, Mark L., Mukherjee, Kunal, Trigo, Mariano, Heinz, Tony F., Li, Ju, Nelson, Keith A., Baldini, Edoardo, Zhou, Jian, Ghimire, Shambhu, Wuttig, Matthias, Reis, David A., and Lindenberg, Aaron M.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Important advances have recently been made in the search for materials with complex multi-phase landscapes that host photoinduced metastable collective states with exotic functionalities. In almost all cases so far, the desired phases are accessed by exploiting light-matter interactions via the imaginary part of the dielectric function through above-bandgap or resonant mode excitation. Nonresonant Raman excitation of coherent modes has been experimentally observed and proposed for dynamic material control, but the resulting atomic excursion has been limited to perturbative levels. Here, we demonstrate that it is possible to overcome this challenge by employing nonresonant ultrashort pulses with low photon energies well below the bandgap. Using mid-infrared pulses, we induce ferroelectric reversal in lithium niobate and phase switching in tin selenide and characterize the large-amplitude mode displacements through femtosecond Raman scattering, second harmonic generation, and x-ray diffraction. This approach, validated by first-principle calculations, defines a novel method for synthesizing hidden phases with unique functional properties and manipulating complex energy landscapes at reduced energy consumption and ultrafast speeds., Comment: 5 figures
- Published
- 2024
15. Interrogating the Ballistic Regime in Liquids with Rotational Optical Tweezers
- Author
-
Watson, Mark L., Stilgoe, Alexander B., Favre-Bulle, Itia A., and Rubinsztein-Dunlop, Halina
- Subjects
Physics - Optics - Abstract
Accessing the ballistic regime of single particles in liquids remains an experimental challenge that shrouds our understanding of the particle-liquid interactions on exceedingly short time scales. We demonstrate the ballistic measurements of rotational probes to observe these interactions in the rotational regime within microscopic systems. This study uses sensitive high-bandwidth measurements of polarisation from light scattered by orientation-locked birefringent probes trapped within rotational optical tweezers. The particle-liquid interactions in the ballistic regime are decoupled from the optical potential allowing direct studies of single-particle rotational dynamics. This enabled us to determine the dissipation of rotational inertia and observe and validate rotational hydrodynamic effects in a previously inaccessible parameter space. Furthermore, the fast angular velocity thermalisation time enables calibration-free viscometry using less than 50ms of data. This methodology will provide a unique way of studying rotational hydrodynamic effects and enable ultra-fast microrheometry in systems out-of-equilibrium., Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2024
16. Groups with a Fixed Character Degree
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Martin, Brandon
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,20C15 - Abstract
Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $d$ be the degree of an irreducible character of $G$ such that $|G|=d(d+e)$ for some $e>1$. Consider the case when $G$ is solvable, $d$ is square-free, and $(d,d+e)=1$. We wish to explore an equivalent condition on $G$ when $d\in\text{cd}(G)$. We show that if $d\in\text{cd}(G)$ then there is a sequence of congruences relating the prime power factors of $d+e$ to the product of prime factors of $d$ such that the product of the moduli in this sequence of congruences is $d$. Moreover, the argument will hold in both directions.
- Published
- 2024
17. Routing Light Emission from Monolayer MoS$_2$ by Mie Resonances of Crystalline Silicon Nanospheres
- Author
-
Ozawa, Keisuke, Sugimoto, Hiroshi, Shima, Daisuke, Hinamoto, Tatsuki, Habil, Mojtaba Karimi, Lee, Yan Joe, Raza, Søren, Imaeda, Keisuke, Ueno, Kosei, Brongersma, Mark L., and Fujii, Minoru
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
A dielectric Mie-resonant nanoantenna is capable of controlling the directionality of the emission from nearby quantum emitters through the excitation of multiple degenerate Mie resonances. A crystalline silicon nanosphere (Si NS) is a promising candidate for a dielectric nanoantenna because crystalline Si has a large refractive index (3.8 at 650 nm) and the small imaginary part of a complex refractive index (0.015 at 650 nm) as an optical material. In this work, we control the emission directionality of excitons supported by monolayer transition metal dichalcogenides (1L-TMDCs) using a Si NS. We first discuss the condition to extract the emission preferentially towards the Si NS side from the analytical calculations. We then study the photoluminescence (PL) of 1L-TMDCs on which differently sized single Si NSs are placed. We show that the PL spectral shape strongly depends on the emission direction, and that the emission toward the Si NS side (top) with respect to the opposite side (bottom) is the largest at wavelengths between the magnetic dipole and electric dipole Mie resonances of a Si NS. Finally, we quantitatively discuss the spectral shape of the top-to-bottom ratio from numerical simulations., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2024
18. The Maximum Length for Ducci Sequences on $\mathbb{}Z_m^n$ when $n$ is Even
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Let $D: \mathbb{Z}_m^n \to \mathbb{Z}_m^n$ be defined so \[D(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \; \text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m).\] $D$ is known as the Ducci function and for $\mathbf{u} \in \mathbb{Z}_m^n$, $\{D^{\alpha}(\mathbf{u})\}_{\alpha=0}^{\infty}$ is the Ducci sequence of $\mathbf{u}$. Every Ducci sequence enters a cycle because $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ is finite. In this paper, we aim to establish an upper bound for how long it will take for a Ducci sequence in $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ to enter its cycle when $n$ is even.
- Published
- 2024
19. STROBE-X Mission Overview
- Author
-
Ray, Paul S., Roming, Peter W. A., Argan, Andrea, Arzoumanian, Zaven, Ballantyne, David R., Bogdanov, Slavko, Bonvicini, Valter, Brandt, Terri J., Bursa, Michal, Cackett, Edward M., Chakrabarty, Deepto, Christophersen, Marc, Coderre, Kathleen M., De Geronimo, Gianluigi, Del Monte, Ettore, DeRosa, Alessandra, Dietz, Harley R., Evangelista, Yuri, Feroci, Marco, Ford, Jeremy J., Froning, Cynthia, Fryer, Christopher L., Gendreau, Keith C., Goldstein, Adam, Gonzalez, Anthony H., Hartmann, Dieter, Hernanz, Margarita, Hutcheson, Anthony, Zand, Jean in `t, Jenke, Peter, Kennea, Jamie, Lloyd-Ronning, Nicole M., Maccarone, Thomas J., Maes, Dominic, Markwardt, Craig B., Michalska, Malgorzata, Okajima, Takashi, Patruno, Alessandro, Persyn, Steven C., Phillips, Mark L., Prescod-Weinstein, Chanda, Redfern, Jillian A., Remillard, Ronald A., Santangelo, Andrea, Schwendeman, Carl L., Sleator, Clio, Steiner, James, Strohmayer, Tod E., Svoboda, Jiri, Tenzer, Christoph, Thompson, Steven P., Warwick, Richard W., Watts, Anna L., Wilson-Hodge, Colleen A., Wu, Xin, Wulf, Eric A., and Zampa, Gianluigi
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We give an overview of the science objectives and mission design of the Spectroscopic Time-Resolving Observatory for Broadband Energy X-rays (STROBE-X) observatory, which has been proposed as a NASA probe-class (~$1.5B) mission in response to the Astro2020 recommendation for an X-ray probe., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in JATIS
- Published
- 2024
20. Ion-Assisted Nanoscale Material Engineering in Atomic Layers
- Author
-
Taghinejad, Hossein, Taghinejad, Mohammad, Abdollahramezani, Sajjad, Li, Qitong, Woods, Eric V., Tian, Mengkun, Eftekhar, Ali A., Lyu, Yuanqi, Zhang, Xiang, Ajayan, Pulickel M., Cai, Wenshan, Brongersma, Mark L., Analytis, James G., and Adibi, Ali
- Subjects
Condensed Matter - Materials Science ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Physics - Applied Physics - Abstract
Achieving deterministic control over the properties of low-dimensional materials with nanoscale precision is a long-sought goal. Mastering this capability has a transformative impact on the design of multifunctional electrical and optical devices. Here, we present an ion-assisted synthetic technique that enables precise control over the material composition and energy landscape of two-dimensional (2D) atomic crystals. Our method transforms binary transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), like MoSe$_2$, into ternary MoS$_{2\alpha}$Se$_{2(1-{\alpha}})$ alloys with systematically adjustable compositions, ${\alpha}$. By piecewise assembly of the lateral, compositionally modulated MoS$_{2\alpha}$Se$_{2(1-{\alpha})}$ segments within 2D atomic layers, we present a synthetic pathway towards the realization of multi-compositional designer materials. Our technique enables the fabrication of complex structures with arbitrary boundaries, dimensions as small as 30 nm, and fully customizable energy landscapes. Our optical characterizations further showcase the potential for implementing tailored optoelectronics in these engineered 2D crystals., Comment: 22 pages, 5 Figures
- Published
- 2024
21. On common zeros of characters of finite groups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L., Morotti, Lucia, Pacifici, Emanuele, Sanus, Lucia, and Tong-Viet, Hung P.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,Mathematics - Representation Theory - Abstract
Let $G$ be a finite group, and let $\text{Irr}(G)$ denote the set of the irreducible complex characters of $G$. An element $g\in G$ is called a vanishing element of $G$ if there exists $\chi\in\text{Irr}(G)$ such that $\chi(g)=0$ (i.e., $g$ is a zero of $\chi$) and, in this case, the conjugacy class $g^G$ of $g$ in $G$ is called a vanishing conjugacy class. In this paper we consider several problems concerning vanishing elements and vanishing conjugacy classes; in particular, we consider the problem of determining the least number of conjugacy classes of a finite group $G$ such that every non-linear $\chi\in\text{Irr}(G)$ vanishes on one of them. We also consider the related problem of determining the minimum number of non-linear irreducible characters of a group such that two of them have a common zero.
- Published
- 2024
22. On neighborhoods in the enhanced power graph associated with a finite group
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Monetta, Carmine
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D10, 05C25, 20D60 - Abstract
This article investigates neighborhoods' sizes in the enhanced power graph (as known as the cyclic graph) associated with a finite group. In particular, we characterize finite $p$-groups with the smallest maximum size for neighborhoods of nontrivial element in its enhanced power graph., Comment: 6 pages
- Published
- 2024
23. Realising efficient computation of individual frequencies for red-giant models
- Author
-
Larsen, Jens R., Christensen-Dalsgaard, Jørgen, Lundkvist, Mia S., Rørsted, Jakob L., Winther, Mark L., and Kjeldsen, Hans
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In order to improve the asteroseismic modelling efforts for red-giant stars, the numerical computation of theoretical individual oscillation modes for evolved red-giant models has to be made feasible. We aim to derive a method for circumventing the computational cost of computing oscillation spectra for models of red-giant stars with an average large frequency separation $\Delta\nu<15$ $\mu$Hz, thereby allowing for asteroseismic investigations of giants utilising individual frequencies. The proposed Truncated Scanning Method serves as a novel method detailing how the observable individual $l=0,1,2$ frequencies of red giants may be computed on realistic timescales through so-called model truncation. By carefully removing the innermost region of the stellar models, the g-mode influence on the oscillation spectra may be avoided, allowing estimation of the observable regions from the resulting pure p-mode oscillations. The appropriate observable frequency regions are subsequently scanned for the complete and un-truncated stellar model. The observable regions are determined by considering the limitations on observability from the internal mode coupling and damping, yielding consistent frequency spectra obtained at a much reduced computational cost. The Truncated Scanning Method proves the feasibility of obtaining the individual frequencies of red-giant models for a wide range of applications and research, demonstrating an improved computational efficiency by a factor of 10 or better. This means that the inclusion of $l=1,2$ individual frequencies is now a possibility in future asteroseismic modelling efforts of red-giant stars. Further potential avenues for improvements to this method are outlined for future pursuits., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Evidential Analysis: An Alternative to Hypothesis Testing in Normal Linear Models
- Author
-
Dennis, Brian, Taper, Mark L, and Ponciano, José M
- Subjects
Statistics - Methodology ,62 - Abstract
Statistical hypothesis testing, as formalized by 20th Century statisticians and taught in college statistics courses, has been a cornerstone of 100 years of scientific progress. Nevertheless, the methodology is increasingly questioned in many scientific disciplines. We demonstrate in this paper how many of the worrisome aspects of statistical hypothesis testing can be ameliorated with concepts and methods from evidential analysis. The model family we treat is the familiar normal linear model with fixed effects, embracing multiple regression and analysis of variance, a warhorse of everyday science in labs and field stations. Questions about study design, the applicability of the null hypothesis, the effect size, error probabilities, evidence strength, and model misspecification become more naturally housed in an evidential setting. We provide a completely worked example featuring a 2-way analysis of variance., Comment: 465 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2024
25. Detection and characterization of detached tidal dwarf galaxies
- Author
-
Zaragoza-Cardiel, Javier, Smith, Beverly J., Jones, Mark G., Giroux, Mark L., Toner, Shawn, Alzate, Jairo A., Fernández-Arenas, David, Mayya, Yalia D., Ortiz-León, Gisela, and Portilla, Mauricio
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Tidal interactions between galaxies often give rise to tidal tails, which can harbor concentrations of stars and interstellar gas resembling dwarf galaxies. Some of these tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs) have the potential to detach from their parent galaxies and become independent entities, but their long-term survival is uncertain. In this study, we conducted a search for detached TDGs associated with a sample of 39 interacting galaxy pairs in the local Universe using infrared, ultraviolet, and optical images. We employed IR colors and UV/optical/IR spectral energy distributions to identify potential interlopers, such as foreground stars or background quasars. Through spectroscopic observations using the Boller and Chivens spectrograph at San Pedro M\'artir Observatory, we confirmed that six candidate TDGs are at the same redshift as their putative parent galaxy pairs. We identified and measured emission lines in the optical spectra and calculated nebular oxygen abundances, which range from log(O/H) = 8.10 $\pm$ 0.01 to 8.51 $\pm$ 0.02. We have serendipitously discovered an additional detached TDG candidate in Arp72 using available spectra from SDSS. Utilizing the photometric data and the CIGALE code for stellar population and dust emission fitting, we derived the stellar masses, stellar population ages, and stellar metallicities for these detached TDGs. Compared to standard mass-metallicity relations for dwarf galaxies, five of the seven candidates have higher than expected metallicities, confirming their tidal origins. One of the seven candidates remains unclear due to large uncertainties in metallicity, and another has stellar and nebular metallicities compatible with those of a preexisting dwarf galaxy. The latter object is relatively compact in the optical relative to its stellar mass, in contrast to the other candidate TDGs [abridged]., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 15 pages, 9 figures, 6 tables
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Transmission grating arrays for the X-ray spectrometer on Arcus Probe
- Author
-
Heilmann, Ralf K., Bruccoleri, Alexander R., Gregory, James A., Gullikson, Eric M., Günther, Hans Moritz, Hertz, Edward, Lambert, Renee D., Young, Douglas J., and Schattenburg, Mark L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Arcus Probe mission concept has been submitted as an Astrophysics Probe Explorer candidate. It features two co-aligned high-resolution grating spectrometers: one for the soft x-ray band and one for the far UV. Together, these instruments can provide unprecedented performance to address important key questions about the structure and dynamics of our universe across a large range of length scales. The X-ray Spectrometer (XRS) consists of four parallel optical channels, each featuring an x-ray telescope with a fixed array of 216 lightweight, high-efficiency blazed transmission gratings, and two CCD readout arrays. Average spectral resolving power $\lambda/\Delta \lambda > 2,500$ ($\sim 3500$ expected) across the 12-50 \AA \ band and combined effective area $> 350$ cm$^2$ ($> 470$ cm$^2$ expected) near OVII wavelengths are predicted, based on the measured x-ray performance of spectrometer prototypes and detailed ray trace modeling. We describe the optical and structural design of the grating arrays, from the macroscopic grating petals to the nanoscale gratings bars, grating fabrication, alignment, and x-ray testing. Recent x-ray diffraction efficiency results from chemically thinned grating bars are presented and show performance above mission assumptions., Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, submitted to JATIS
- Published
- 2024
27. Grand Design vs. Multi-Armed Spiral Galaxies: Dependence on Galaxy Structure
- Author
-
Smith, Beverly J., Watson, Matthew, Giroux, Mark L., and Struck, Curtis
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We developed an algorithm to use Galaxy Zoo 3D spiral arm masks produced by citizen scientist volunteers to semi-automatically classify spiral galaxies as either multi-armed or grand design spirals. Our final sample consists of 299 multi-armed and 245 grand design galaxies. On average, the grand design galaxies have smaller stellar masses than the multi-armed galaxies. For a given stellar mass, the grand design galaxies have larger concentrations, earlier Hubble types, smaller half-light radii, and larger central surface mass densities than the multi-armed galaxies. Lower mass galaxies of both arm classes have later Hubble types and lower concentrations than higher mass galaxies. In our sample, a higher fraction of grand design galaxies have classical bulges rather than pseudo-bulges, compared to multi-armed galaxies. These results are consistent with theoretical models and simulations which suggest that dense classical bulges support the development and/or longevity of 2-armed spiral patterns. Similar specific star formation rates are found in multi-armed and grand design galaxies with similar stellar masses and concentrations. This implies that the specific star formation rates in spiral galaxies is a function of concentration and stellar mass, but independent of the number of spiral arms. Our classifications are consistent with arm counts from the Galaxy Zoo 2 project and published m=3 Fourier amplitudes., Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press, 31 pages, 17 figures
- Published
- 2024
28. Future Perspectives for Gamma-ray Burst Detection from Space
- Author
-
Bozzo, Enrico, Amati, Lorenzo, Baumgartner, Wayne, Chang, Tzu-Ching, Cordier, Bertrand, De Angelis, Nicolas, Doi, Akihiro, Feroci, Marco, Froning, Cynthia, Gaskin, Jessica, Goldstein, Adam, Götz, Diego, Grove, Jon E., Guiriec, Sylvain, Hernanz, Margarita, Hui, C. Michelle, Jenke, Peter, Kocevski, Daniel, Kole, Merlin, Kouveliotou, Chryssa, Maccarone, Thomas, McConnell, Mark L., Matsuhara, Hideo, O'Brien, Paul, Produit, Nicolas, Ray, Paul S., Roming, Peter, Santangelo, Andrea, Seiffert, Michael, Sun, Hui, van der Horst, Alexander, Veres, Peter, Wei, Jianyan, White, Nicholas, Wilson-Hodge, Colleen, Yonetoku, Daisuke, Yuan, Weimin, and Zhang, Shuang-Nan
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Since their first discovery in the late 1960s, Gamma-ray bursts have attracted an exponentially growing interest from the international community due to their central role in the most highly debated open questions of the modern research of astronomy, astrophysics, cosmology, and fundamental physics. These range from the intimate nuclear composition of high density material within the core of ultra-dense neuron stars, to stellar evolution via the collapse of massive stars, the production and propagation of gravitational waves, as well as the exploration of the early Universe by unveiling first stars and galaxies (assessing also their evolution and cosmic re-ionization). GRBs have stimulated in the past $\sim$50 years the development of cutting-edge technological instruments for observations of high energy celestial sources from space, leading to the launch and successful operations of many different scientific missions (several of them still in data taking mode nowadays). In this review, we provide a brief description of the GRB-dedicated missions from space being designed and developed for the future. The list of these projects, not meant to be exhaustive, shall serve as a reference to interested readers to understand what is likely to come next to lead the further development of GRB research and associated phenomenology., Comment: Accepted for publication on Universe. Invited review, contribution to the Universe Special Issue "Recent Advances in Gamma Ray Astrophysics and Future Perspectives", P. Romano eds. (https://www.mdpi.com/journal/universe/special_issues/7299902Z97)
- Published
- 2024
29. Ducci on $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ and the Maximum Length for $n$ Odd
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Define the Ducci function $D: \mathbb{Z}_m^n \to \mathbb{Z}_m^n$ so \[D(x_1,x_2, ...,x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \;\text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m).\] Call $\{D^{\alpha}(\mathbf{u})\}_{\alpha=0}^{\infty}$ the Ducci sequence of $\mathbf{u}$. Because $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ is finite, every Ducci sequence will enter a cycle. In this paper, we will prove that if $n$ is odd and $m=2^lm_1$ where $m_1$ is odd, then the longest it will take for a Ducci sequence to enter its cycle is $l$ iterations. Furthermore, we will prove the set of all tuples in a cycle for $\mathbb{Z}_m^n$ is $\{(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n) \in \mathbb{Z}_m^n \; \mid \; x_1+x_2+ \cdots +x_n \equiv 0 \; \text{mod} \; 2^l\}$.
- Published
- 2024
30. Some results on the norm of finite groups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L., Shen, Zhencai, and Yan, Quanfu
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory - Abstract
Let $G$ be a finite group and $N_{\Omega}(G)$ be the intersection of the normalizers of all subgroups belonging to the set $\Omega(G),$ where $\Omega(G)$ is a set of all subgroups of $G$ which have some theoretical group property. In this paper, we show that $N_{\Omega}(G)= Z_{\infty}(G)$ if $\Omega(G)$ is one of the following: (i) the set of all self-normalizing subgroups of $G$; (ii) the set of all subgroups of $G$ satisfying the subnormalizer condition in $G$; (iii) the set of all pronormal subgroups of $G$; (iv) the set of all $\mathscr{H}$-subgroups of $G$; (v) the set of all weakly normal subgroups of $G$; (vi) the set of all $NE$-subgroups of $G$.
- Published
- 2024
31. On the group pseudo-algebra of finite groups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Yan, Quanfu
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory - Abstract
Let $G$ be a finite group. The group pseudo-algebra of $G$ is defined as the multi-set $C(G)=\{(d,m_G(d))\mid d\in{\rm Cod}(G)\},$ where $m_G(d)$ is the number of irreducible characters of with codegree $d\in {\rm Cod}(G)$. We show that there exist two finite $p$-groups with distinct orders that have the same group pseudo-algebra, providing an answer to Question 3.2 in \cite{Moreto2023}. In addition, we also discuss under what hypothesis two $p$-groups with the same group pseudo-algebra will be isomorphic.
- Published
- 2024
32. A note on the codegree of finite groups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Yan, Quanfu
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory - Abstract
Let $\chi$ be an irreducible character of a group $G,$ and $S_c(G)=\sum_{\chi\in {\rm Irr}(G)}{\rm cod}(\chi)$ be the sum of the codegrees of the irreducible characters of $G.$ Write ${\rm fcod} (G)=\frac{S_c(G)}{|G|}.$ We aim to explore the structure of finite groups in terms of ${\rm fcod} (G).$ On the other hand, we determine the lower bound of $S_c(G)$ for nonsolvable groups and prove that if $G$ is nonsolvable, then $S_c(G)\geq S_c(A_5)=68,$ with equality if and only if $G\cong A_5.$ Additionally, we show that there is a solvable group so that it has the codegree sum as $A_5.$
- Published
- 2024
33. On the sum of character codegrees of finite groups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Yan, Quanfu
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory - Abstract
Let $\chi$ be an irreducible character of a group $G.$ We denote the sum of the codegrees of the irreducible characters of $G$ by $S_c(G)=\sum_{\chi\in {\rm Irr}(G)}{\rm cod}(\chi).$ We consider the question if $S_c(G)\leq S_c(C_n)$ is true for any finite group $G,$ where $n=|G|$ and $C_n$ is a cyclic group of order $n.$ We show this inequality holds for many classes of groups. In particular, we provide an affirmative answer for any finite group whose order is divisible by up to 99 primes. However, we show that the question does not hold true in all cases, by evidence of a counterexample.
- Published
- 2024
34. A lower bound on the size of maximal abelian subgroups
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D25 - Abstract
Let $G$ be a $p$-group for some prime $p$. Let $n$ be the positive integer so that $|G:Z(G)| = p^n$. Suppose $A$ is a maximal abelian subgroup of $G$. Let $$p^l = {\rm max} \{|Z(C_G (g)):Z(G)| : g \in G \setminus Z(G)\},$$ $$p^b = {\rm max} \{|cl(g)| : g \in G \setminus Z(G) \},$$ and $p^a = |A:Z(G)|$. Then we show that $a \ge n/(b+l)$.
- Published
- 2024
35. Ducci on $\mathbb{Z}_m^3$ and the Max Period
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Let $D(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \;\text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m)$ where $D \in End(\mathbb{Z}_m^n)$ be the Ducci function. The sequence $\{D^k(\mathbf{u})\}_{k=0}^{\infty}$ will eventually enter a cycle. If $n=3$, we aim to establish the longest a cycle can be for a given $m$.
- Published
- 2024
36. Characterizing finite groups whose enhanced power graphs have universal vertices
- Author
-
Costanzo, David G., Lewis, Mark L., Schmidt, Stefano, Tsegaye, Eyob, and Udell, Gabe
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,Primary 20D25, Secondary 05C25 - Abstract
Let $G$ be a finite group and construct a graph $\Delta(G)$ by taking $G\setminus\{1\}$ as the vertex set of $\Delta(G)$ and by drawing an edge between two vertices $x$ and $y$ if $\langle x,y\rangle$ is cyclic. Let $K(G)$ be the set consisting of the universal vertices of $\Delta(G)$ along the identity element. For a solvable group $G$, we present a necessary and sufficient conditon for $K(G)$ to be nontrivial. We also develop a connection between $\Delta(G)$ and $K(G)$ when $|G|$ is divisible by two distinct primes and the diameter of $\Delta(G)$ is $2$., Comment: 8 pages
- Published
- 2024
37. The Period of Ducci Cycles on $\mathbb{Z}_{2^l}$ for Tuples of Length $2^k$
- Author
-
Lewis, Mark L. and Tefft, Shannon M.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Number Theory ,Mathematics - Group Theory ,20D60, 11B83, 11B50 - Abstract
Let the Ducci function $D: \mathbb{Z}_m^n \to \mathbb{Z}_m^n$ be defined as \[D(x_1, x_2, ..., x_n)=(x_1+x_2 \; \text{mod} \; m, x_2+x_3 \; \text{mod} \; m, ..., x_n+x_1 \; \text{mod} \; m)\] and let the Ducci sequence of $\mathbf{u}$ be the sequence $\{D^{\alpha}(\mathbf{u})\}_{\alpha=0}^{\infty}$. %In this paper, we will prove that if $n,m$ are powers of $2$, then repeatedly applying $D$ will eventually result in $(0,0,...,0)$, as well as establish an upper bound for how many iterations it will take for this to happen. In this paper, we will provide another proof that for $n=2^k$ and $m=2^l$, that all Ducci sequences will end in $(0,0,...,0)$ and additionally prove that this will happen in at most $2^{k-1}(l+1)$ iterations of $D$.
- Published
- 2024
38. Finite solvable tidy Groups whose orders are divisible by two primes
- Author
-
Beike, Nicolas F., Carleton, Rachel, Costanzo, David G., Heath, Colin, Lewis, Mark L., Lu, Kaiwen, and Pearce, Jamie D.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Group Theory ,Primary: 20D10 Secondary: 20D20 - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate finite solvable tidy groups. We classify the tidy $\{ p, q \}$-groups. Combining this with a previous result, we are able to characterize the finite tidy solvable groups. Using this characterization, we bound the Fitting height of finite tidy solvable groups and we prove that the quotients of finite tidy solvable groups are tidy.
- Published
- 2024
39. A real-time, scalable, fast and highly resource efficient decoder for a quantum computer
- Author
-
Barber, Ben, Barnes, Kenton M., Bialas, Tomasz, Buğdaycı, Okan, Campbell, Earl T., Gillespie, Neil I., Johar, Kauser, Rajan, Ram, Richardson, Adam W., Skoric, Luka, Topal, Canberk, Turner, Mark L., and Ziad, Abbas B.
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
To unleash the potential of quantum computers, noise effects on qubits' performance must be carefully managed. The decoders responsible for diagnosing noise-induced computational errors must use resources efficiently to enable scaling to large qubit counts and cryogenic operation. Additionally, they must operate at speed, to avoid an exponential slowdown in the logical clock rate of the quantum computer. To overcome such challenges, we introduce the Collision Clustering decoder and implement it on FPGA and ASIC hardware. We simulate logical memory experiments using the leading quantum error correction scheme, the surface code, and demonstrate MHz decoding speed - matching the requirements of fast-operating modalities such as superconducting qubits - up to an 881 and 1057 qubits surface code with the FPGA and ASIC, respectively. The ASIC design occupies 0.06 mm$^2$ and consumes only 8 mW of power. Our decoder is both highly performant and resource efficient, unlocking a viable path to practically realising fault-tolerant quantum computers., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Asteroseismology and Spectropolarimetry of the Exoplanet Host Star $\lambda$ Serpentis
- Author
-
Metcalfe, Travis S., Buzasi, Derek, Huber, Daniel, Pinsonneault, Marc H., van Saders, Jennifer L., Ayres, Thomas R., Basu, Sarbani, Drake, Jeremy J., Egeland, Ricky, Kochukhov, Oleg, Petit, Pascal, Saar, Steven H., See, Victor, Stassun, Keivan G., Li, Yaguang, Bedding, Timothy R., Breton, Sylvain N., Finley, Adam J., Garcia, Rafael A., Kjeldsen, Hans, Nielsen, Martin B., Ong, J. M. Joel, Rorsted, Jakob L., Stokholm, Amalie, Winther, Mark L., Clark, Catherine A., Godoy-Rivera, Diego, Ilyin, Ilya V., Strassmeier, Klaus G., Jeffers, Sandra V., Marsden, Stephen C., Vidotto, Aline A., Baliunas, Sallie, and Soon, Willie
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The bright star $\lambda$ Ser hosts a hot Neptune with a minimum mass of 13.6 $M_\oplus$ and a 15.5 day orbit. It also appears to be a solar analog, with a mean rotation period of 25.8 days and surface differential rotation very similar to the Sun. We aim to characterize the fundamental properties of this system, and to constrain the evolutionary pathway that led to its present configuration. We detect solar-like oscillations in time series photometry from the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and we derive precise asteroseismic properties from detailed modeling. We obtain new spectropolarimetric data, and we use them to reconstruct the large-scale magnetic field morphology. We reanalyze the complete time series of chromospheric activity measurements from the Mount Wilson Observatory, and we present new X-ray and ultraviolet observations from the Chandra and Hubble space telescopes. Finally, we use the updated observational constraints to assess the rotational history of the star and to estimate the wind braking torque. We conclude that the remaining uncertainty on stellar age currently prevents an unambiguous interpretation of the properties of $\lambda$ Ser, and that the rate of angular momentum loss appears to be higher than for other stars with similar Rossby number. Future asteroseismic observations may help to improve the precision of the stellar age., Comment: 19 pages including 9 figures and 6 tables. Astronomical Journal, accepted
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Company for the ultra-high density, ultra-short period sub-Earth GJ 367 b: discovery of two additional low-mass planets at 11.5 and 34 days
- Author
-
Goffo, Elisa, Gandolfi, Davide, Egger, Jo Ann, Mustill, Alexander J., Albrecht, Simon H., Hirano, Teruyuki, Kochukhov, Oleg, Astudillo-Defru, Nicola, Barragan, Oscar, Serrano, Luisa M., Hatzes, Artie P., Alibert, Yann, Guenther, Eike, Dai, Fei, Lam, Kristine W. F., Csizmadia, Szilárd, Smith, Alexis M. S., Fossati, Luca, Luque, Rafael, Rodler, Florian, Winther, Mark L., Rørsted, Jakob L., Alarcon, Javier, Bonfils, Xavier, Cochran, William D., Deeg, Hans J., Jenkins, Jon M., Korth, Judith, Livingston, John H., Meech, Annabella, Murgas, Felipe, Orell-Miquel, Jaume, Osborne, Hannah L. M., Palle, Enric, Persson, Carina M., Redfield, Seth, Ricker, George R., Seager, Sara, Vanderspek, Roland, Van Eylen, Vincent, and Winn, Joshua N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
GJ 367 is a bright (V $\approx$ 10.2) M1 V star that has been recently found to host a transiting ultra-short period sub-Earth on a 7.7 hr orbit. With the aim of improving the planetary mass and radius and unveiling the inner architecture of the system, we performed an intensive radial velocity follow-up campaign with the HARPS spectrograph -- collecting 371 high-precision measurements over a baseline of nearly 3 years -- and combined our Doppler measurements with new TESS observations from sectors 35 and 36. We found that GJ 367 b has a mass of $M_\mathrm{b}$ = 0.633 $\pm$ 0.050 M$_{\oplus}$ and a radius of $R_\mathrm{b}$ = 0.699 $\pm$ 0.024 R$_{\oplus}$, corresponding to precisions of 8% and 3.4%, respectively. This implies a planetary bulk density of $\rho_\mathrm{b}$ = 10.2 $\pm$ 1.3 g cm$^{-3}$, i.e., 85% higher than Earth's density. We revealed the presence of two additional non transiting low-mass companions with orbital periods of $\sim$11.5 and 34 days and minimum masses of $M_\mathrm{c}\sin{i_\mathrm{c}}$ = 4.13 $\pm$ 0.36 M$_{\oplus}$ and $M_\mathrm{d}\sin{i_\mathrm{d}}$ = 6.03 $\pm$ 0.49 M$_{\oplus}$, respectively, which lie close to the 3:1 mean motion commensurability. GJ 367 b joins the small class of high-density planets, namely the class of super-Mercuries, being the densest ultra-short period small planet known to date. Thanks to our precise mass and radius estimates, we explored the potential internal composition and structure of GJ 367 b, and found that it is expected to have an iron core with a mass fraction of 0.91$^{+0.07}_{-0.23}$. How this iron core is formed and how such a high density is reached is still not clear, and we discuss the possible pathways of formation of such a small ultra-dense planet., Comment: 28 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJL
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Two-Way Quantum Time Transfer: A Method for Daytime Space-Earth Links
- Author
-
Lafler, Randy, Eickhoff, Mark L., Newey, Scott C., Gonzalez, Yamil Nieves, Stoltenburg, Kurt E., Camacho, J. Frank, Harris, Mark A., Oesch, Denis W., Lewis, Adrian J., and Lanning, R. Nicholas
- Subjects
Quantum Physics - Abstract
High-precision remote clock synchronization is crucial for many classical and quantum network applications. Evaluating options for space-Earth links, we find that traditional solutions may not produce the desired synchronization for low Earth orbits and unnecessarily complicate quantum-networking architectures. Demonstrating an alternative, we use commercial off-the-shelf quantum-photon sources and detection equipment to synchronize two remote clocks across our freespace testbed utilizing a method called two-way quantum time transfer (QTT). We reach picosecond-scale timing precision under very lossy and noisy channel conditions representative of daytime space-Earth links and software-emulated satellite motion. This work demonstrates how QTT is potentially relevant for daytime space-Earth quantum networking and/or providing high-precision timing in GPS-denied environments., Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2211.00737
- Published
- 2023
43. Tunable vector beam decoder by inverse design for high-dimensional quantum key distribution with 3D polarized spatial modes
- Author
-
Otte, Eileen, White, Alexander D., Güsken, Nicholas A., Vučković, Jelena, and Brongersma, Mark L.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Quantum Physics - Abstract
Spatial modes of light have become highly attractive to increase the dimension and, thereby, security and information capacity in quantum key distribution (QKD). So far, only transverse electric field components have been considered, while longitudinal polarization components have remained neglected. Here, we present an approach to include all three spatial dimensions of electric field oscillation in QKD by implementing our tunable, on-a-chip vector beam decoder (VBD). This inversely designed device pioneers the "preparation" and "measurement" of three-dimensionally polarized mutually unbiased basis states for high-dimensional (HD) QKD and paves the way for the integration of HD QKD with spatial modes in multifunctional on-a-chip photonics platforms., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures. Corrected typos & added reference
- Published
- 2023
44. Plastic ingestion in thick-billed murres (Uria lomvia) from the Canadian high Arctic
- Author
-
Maddox, Mark L., Provencher, Jennifer F., and Mallory, Mark L.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Impact of clinical note format on diagnostic accuracy and efficiency
- Author
-
Payton, Evita M, Graber, Mark L, Bachiashvili, Vasil, Mehta, Tapan, Dissanayake, P Irushi, and Berner, Eta S
- Published
- 2024
46. Reducing therapeutic inertia in type 2 diabetes
- Author
-
Stroud, Mark L, Malik, Asif N, Ahmad, Shahid, Ahmed, Saqib, and Kadhem, Leena Abdulla
- Published
- 2024
47. Decades of monitoring plastic pollution in seabirds in Canada: Spatial, temporal, and methodological insights
- Author
-
Baak, Julia E., Hanifen, Kristine E., Maddox, Mark L., Mallory, Mark L., Elliott, Kyle H., Keegan, Shane, and Provencher, Jennifer F.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Achiral dielectric metasurfaces for spectral and polarization control of valley specific light emission from monolayer MoS2
- Author
-
Liu, Yin, Lau, Sze Cheung, Cheng, Wen-Hui Sophia, Johnson, Amalya, Li, Qitong, Simmerman, Emma, Karni, Ouri, Hu, Jack, Liu, Fang, Brongersma, Mark L., Heinz, Tony F., and Dionne, Jennifer A.
- Subjects
Physics - Optics ,Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics ,Condensed Matter - Materials Science - Abstract
Excitons in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides have a valley degree of freedom that can be optically accessed and manipulated for quantum information processing. Here, we integrate MoS2 with achiral silicon disk array metasurfaces to enhance and control valley-specific absorption and emission. Through the coupling to the metasurface Mie modes, the intensity and lifetime of the emission of neutral excitons, trions and defect bound excitons can be enhanced, while the spectral shape can be modified. Additionally, we demonstrate the symmetric enhancement of the degree-of-polarization (DOP) of neutral exciton and trions via valley-resolved PL measurements, and find that the DOP can be as high as 24% for exciton emission and 34% for trion emission at 100K. These results can be understood by analyzing the near-field impact of metasurface resonators on both the chiral absorption of MoS2 emitters as well as the enhanced emission from the Purcell effect. Combining Si-compatible photonic design with large-scale (mm-scale) 2D materials integration, our work makes an important step towards on-chip valleytronic applications approaching room-temperature operation.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The First Flight of the Marshall Grazing Incidence X-ray Spectrometer (MaGIXS)
- Author
-
Savage, Sabrina L., Winebarger, Amy R., Kobayashi, Ken, Athiray, P. S., Beabout, Dyana, Golub, Leon, Walsh, Robert W., Beabout, Brent, Bradshaw, Stephen, Bruccoleri, Alexander R., Champey, Patrick R., Cheimets, Peter, Cirtain, Jonathan, DeLuca, Edward, Del Zanna, Giulio, Guillory, Anthony, Haight, Harlan, Heilmann, Ralf K., Hertz, Edward, Hogue, William, Kegley, Jeffery, Kolodziejczak, Jeffery, Madsen, Chad, Mason, Helen, McKenzie, David E., Ranganathan, Jagan, Reeves, Katharine K., Robertson, Bryan, Schattenburg, Mark L., Scholvin, Jorg, Siler, Richard, Testa, Paola, Vigil, Genevieve D., Warren, Harry P., Watkinson, Bejamin, Weddendorf, Bruce, and Wright, Ernest
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Marshall Grazing Incidence X-ray Spectrometer (MaGIXS) sounding rocket experiment launched on July 30, 2021 from the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. MaGIXS is a unique solar observing telescope developed to capture X-ray spectral images, in the 6 - 24 Angstrom wavelength range, of coronal active regions. Its novel design takes advantage of recent technological advances related to fabricating and optimizing X-ray optical systems as well as breakthroughs in inversion methodologies necessary to create spectrally pure maps from overlapping spectral images. MaGIXS is the first instrument of its kind to provide spatially resolved soft X-ray spectra across a wide field of view. The plasma diagnostics available in this spectral regime make this instrument a powerful tool for probing solar coronal heating. This paper presents details from the first MaGIXS flight, the captured observations, the data processing and inversion techniques, and the first science results., Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Solvable groups whose monomial, monolithic characters have prime power codegrees
- Author
-
Chen, Xiaoyou and Lewis, Mark L.
- Subjects
Mathematics - Representation Theory ,20C20, 20C15 - Abstract
In this note, we prove that if $G$ is solvable and ${\rm cod}(\chi)$ is a $p$-power for every nonlinear, monomial, monolithic $\chi\in {\rm Irr}(G)$ or every nonlinear, monomial, monolithic $\chi \in {\rm IBr} (G)$, then $P$ is normal in $G$, where $p$ is a prime and $P$ is a Sylow $p$-subgroup of $G$., Comment: To appear in International Journal of Group Theory
- Published
- 2022
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.