13,759 results on '"Vincenzi, A"'
Search Results
2. It's not $\sigma_8$ : constraining the non-linear matter power spectrum with the Dark Energy Survey Year-5 supernova sample
- Author
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Shah, Paul, Davis, T. M., Vincenzi, M., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Camilleri, R., Galbany, L., Gill, M. S. S., Huterer, D., Jeffrey, N., Lahav, O., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Sullivan, M., Whiteway, L., Wiseman, P., Allam, S., Aguena, M., Annis, J., Blazek, J., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The weak gravitational lensing magnification of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) is sensitive to the matter power spectrum on scales $k>1 h$ Mpc$^{-1}$, making it unwise to interpret SNe Ia lensing in terms of power on linear scales. We compute the probability density function of SNe Ia magnification as a function of standard cosmological parameters, plus an empirical parameter $A_{\rm mod}$ which describes the suppression or enhancement of matter power on non-linear scales compared to a cold dark matter only model. While baryons are expected to enhance power on the scales relevant to SN Ia lensing, other physics such as neutrino masses or non-standard dark matter may suppress power. Using the Dark Energy Survey Year-5 sample, we find $A_{\rm mod} = 0.77^{+0.69}_{-0.40}$ (68\% credible interval around the median). Although the median is consistent with unity there are hints of power suppression, with $A_{\rm mod} < 1.09$ at 68\% credibility., Comment: 12 pages, submitted to MNRAS. arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2410.07956
- Published
- 2025
3. TiDES: The 4MOST Time Domain Extragalactic Survey
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Frohmaier, C., Vincenzi, M., Sullivan, M., Hönig, S. F., Smith, M., Addison, H., Collett, T., Dimitriadis, G., Ellis, R. S., Gandhi, P., Graur, O., Hook, I., Kelsey, L., Kim, Y. L., Lidman, C., Maguire, K., Makrygianni, L., Martin, B., Möller, A., Nichol, R. C., Nicholl, M., Schady, P., Simmons, B. D., Smartt, S. J., Tempel, E., Wiseman, P., and Collaboration, the LSST Dark Energy Science
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Time Domain Extragalactic Survey (TiDES) conducted on the 4-metre Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope (4MOST) will perform spectroscopic follow-up of extragalactic transients discovered in the era of the NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory. TiDES will conduct a 5-year survey, covering ${>}14\,000\,\mathrm{square\, degrees}$, and use around 250 000 fibre hours to address three main science goals: (i) spectroscopic observations of ${>}30 000$ live transients, (ii) comprehensive follow-up of ${>}200 000$ host galaxies to obtain redshift measurements, and (iii) repeat spectroscopic observations of Active Galactic Nuclei to enable reverberation mapping studies. The live spectra from TiDES will be used to reveal the diversity and astrophysics of both normal and exotic supernovae across the luminosity-timescale plane. The extensive host-galaxy redshift campaign will allow exploitation of the larger sample of supernovae and improve photometric classification, providing the largest-ever sample of spec-confirmed type Ia supernovae, capable of a sub-2 per cent measurement of the equation-of-state of dark energy. Finally, the TiDES reverberation mapping experiment of 700--1\,000 AGN will complement the SN Ia sample and extend the Hubble diagram to $z\sim2.5$, Comment: 18 pages, 14 figures, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2025
4. Comparing the DES-SN5YR and Pantheon+ SN cosmology analyses: Investigation based on 'Evolving Dark Energy or Supernovae systematics?'
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Vincenzi, M., Kessler, R., Shah, P., Lee, J., Davis, T. M., Scolnic, D., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Rose, B., Sako, M., Sánchez, B. O., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Myles, J., Palmese, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., Weller, J., and Collaboration, DES
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent cosmological analyses measuring distances of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) and Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) have all given similar hints at time-evolving dark energy. To examine whether underestimated SN Ia systematics might be driving these results, Efstathiou (2024) compared overlapping SN events between Pantheon+ and DES-SN5YR (20% SNe are in common), and reported evidence for a $\sim$0.04 mag offset between the low and high-redshift distance measurements of this subsample of events. If these offsets are arbitrarily subtracted from the entire DES-SN5YR sample, the preference for evolving dark energy is reduced. In this paper, we reproduce this offset and show that it has two sources. First, 43% of the offset is due to DES-SN5YR improvements in the modelling of supernova intrinsic scatter and host galaxy properties. These are scientifically-motivated modelling updates implemented in DES-SN5YR and their associated uncertainties are captured within the DES-SN5YR systematic error budget. Even if the less accurate scatter model and host properties from Pantheon+ are used instead, the DES-SN5YR evidence for evolving dark energy is only reduced from 3.9$\sigma$ to 3.3$\sigma$. Second, 38% of the offset is due to a misleading comparison because different selection functions characterize the DES subsets included in Pantheon+ and DES-SN5YR and therefore individual SN distance measurements are expected to be different because of different bias corrections. In conclusion, we confirm the validity of the published DES-SN5YR results., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2025
5. METFORD -- Mutation tEsTing Framework fOR anDroid
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Vincenzi, Auri M. R., Kuroishi, Pedro H., Bispo, João C. M., da Veiga, Ana R. C., da Mata, David R. C., Azevedo, Francisco B., and Paiva, Ana C. R.
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Computer Science - Software Engineering - Abstract
Mutation testing may be used to guide test case generation and as a technique to assess the quality of test suites. Despite being used frequently, mutation testing is not so commonly applied in the mobile world. One critical challenge in mutation testing is dealing with its computational cost. Generating mutants, running test cases over each mutant, and analyzing the results may require significant time and resources. This research aims to contribute to reducing Android mutation testing costs. It implements mutation testing operators (traditional and Android-specific) according to mutant schemata (implementing multiple mutants into a single code file). It also describes an Android mutation testing framework developed to execute test cases and determine mutation scores. Additional mutation operators can be implemented in JavaScript and easily integrated into the framework. The overall approach is validated through case studies showing that mutant schemata have advantages over the traditional mutation strategy (one file per mutant). The results show mutant schemata overcome traditional mutation in all evaluated aspects with no additional cost: it takes 8.50% less time for mutant generation, requires 99.78% less disk space, and runs, on average, 6.45% faster than traditional mutation. Moreover, considering sustainability metrics, mutant schemata have 8,18% less carbon footprint than traditional strategy., Comment: Accept for publication in the Journal of System and Software - JSS. This work is partially supported by Brazilian Funding Agencies FAPESP (Grant n. 2019/23160-0 and 2023/00001-9), CAPES, and CNPq
- Published
- 2025
6. Dynamics of vorticity moments in shell models of turbulence: A comparison with the Navier-Stokes equations
- Author
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Gibbon, John D. and Vincenzi, Dario
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Mathematics - Analysis of PDEs ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics - Abstract
Shell models allow much greater scale separations than those presently achievable with direct numerical simulations of the Navier-Stokes equations. Consequently, they are an invaluable tool for testing new concepts and ideas in the theory of fully developed turbulence. They also successfully display energy cascades and intermittency in homogeneous and isotropic turbulent flows. Moreover, they are also of great interest to mathematical analysts because, while retaining some of the key features of the Euler and the Navier-Stokes equations, they are much more tractable. A comparison of the mathematical properties of shell models and of the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations is therefore essential in understanding the correspondence between the two systems. Here we focus on the temporal evolution of the moments, or $L^{2m}$-norms, of the vorticity. Specifically, differential inequalities for the moments of the vorticity in shell models are derived. The contribution of the nonlinear term turns out to be much weaker than its equivalent for the three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations. Consequently, pointwise-in-time estimates are shown to exist for the vorticity moments for shell models of any order. This result is also recovered via a high-low frequency slaving argument that highlights the scaling relations between vorticity moments of different orders. Finally, it is shown that the estimates for shell models formally correspond to those for the Navier-Stokes equations 'on a point'., Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2024
7. Uniting the Observed Dynamical Dark Energy Preference with the Discrepancies in $\Omega_m$ and $H_0$ Across Cosmological Probes
- Author
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Tang, Xianzhe TZ, Brout, Dillon, Karwal, Tanvi, Chang, Chihway, Miranda, Vivian, and Vincenzi, Maria
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent results from Type Ia Supernovae (SNe), baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), and the cosmic microwave background (CMB) indicate 1) potentially discrepant measurements of the matter density $\Omega_m$ and Hubble constant $ H_0 $ in a $\Lambda$CDM model when data are analyzed individually, and 2) hints of dynamical dark energy in a $w_0w_a$CDM model when data are combined in a joint analysis. We examine whether underlying dynamical dark energy cosmologies favored by real data would result in biases in $\Omega_m$ and $ H_0 $ for each probe when analyzed individually in a $\Lambda$CDM framework. We generate mock datasets in $w_0w_a$CDM cosmologies, fit the individual probes under the $\Lambda$CDM model, and find that expected biases in $\Omega_m$ are $\sim 0.03$. Notably, the $\Omega_m$ differences between probes are consistent with the values observed in the real datasets. We also observe that mock DESI BAO datasets generated in the $ w_0w_a $CDM cosmologies will lead to a biased measurement of $ H_0 $ higher by ($\sim1.2$km/s/Mpc) when fitted under $\Lambda$CDM, appearing to mildly improve the Hubble tension, but as the true underlying $H_0$ is lower, the tension is in fact worsened. We find that the $\Omega_m$ discrepancies, the high BAO $ H_0 $ relative to CMB, and the joint dynamical dark energy signal itself are all related effects that could be explained simultaneously with either new physics or new systematics. While we find it is possible to unite many of the discrepancies seen in recent analyses along a single axis, our results underscore the importance of understanding systematic differences in datasets, as they have unique impacts in different cosmological parameter spaces., Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2024
8. Constraints on compact objects from the Dark Energy Survey 5-yr supernova sample
- Author
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Shah, P, Davis, TM, Vincenzi, M, Armstrong, P, Brout, D, Camilleri, R, Galbany, L, García-Bellido, J, Gill, MSS, Lahav, O, Lee, J, Lidman, C, Möller, A, Sako, M, Sánchez, BO, Sullivan, M, Whiteway, L, Wiseman, P, Allam, S, Aguena, M, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Desai, S, Dodelson, S, Doel, P, Ferrero, I, Flaugher, B, Frieman, J, Gaztanaga, E, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gutierrez, G, Herner, K, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Lee, S, Marshall, JL, Mena-Fernández, J, Miquel, R, Myles, J, Palmese, A, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Roodman, A, Samuroff, S, Sanchez, E, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Smith, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, To, C, Vikram, V, and Weaverdyck, N
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,gravitational lensing: weak ,stars: black holes ,cosmology: cosmological parameters ,cosmology: dark matter ,transients: supernovae ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Gravitational lensing magnification of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) allows information to be obtained about the distribution of matter on small scales. In this paper, we derive limits on the fraction $\alpha$ of the total matter density in compact objects (which comprise stars, stellar remnants, small stellar groupings, and primordial black holes) of mass M > 0.03 ${\rm M}_{\odot }$ over cosmological distances. Using 1532 SNe Ia from the Dark Energy Survey Year 5 sample (DES-SN5YR) combined with a Bayesian prior for the absolute magnitude M, we obtain α < 0.12 at the 95 per cent confidence level after marginalization over cosmological parameters, lensing due to large-scale structure, and intrinsic non-Gaussianity. Similar results are obtained using priors from the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic oscillations, and galaxy weak lensing, indicating our results do not depend on the background cosmology. We argue our constraints are likely to be conservative (in the sense of the values we quote being higher than the truth), but discuss scenarios in which they could be weakened by systematics of the order of $\Delta \alpha \sim 0.04$.
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- 2024
9. Contextualizing Security and Privacy of Software-Defined Vehicles: State of the Art and Industry Perspectives
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De Vincenzi, Marco, Pesé, Mert D., Bodei, Chiara, Matteucci, Ilaria, Brooks, Richard R., Hasan, Monowar, Saracino, Andrea, Hamad, Mohammad, and Steinhorst, Sebastian
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Computer Science - Cryptography and Security ,Computer Science - Operating Systems - Abstract
The growing reliance on software in vehicles has given rise to the concept of Software-Defined Vehicles (SDVs), fundamentally reshaping the vehicles and the automotive industry. This survey explores the cybersecurity and privacy challenges posed by SDVs, which increasingly integrate features like Over-the-Air (OTA) updates and Vehicle-to-Everything (V2X) communication. While these advancements enhance vehicle capabilities and flexibility, they also come with a flip side: increased exposure to security risks including API vulnerabilities, third-party software risks, and supply-chain threats. The transition to SDVs also raises significant privacy concerns, with vehicles collecting vast amounts of sensitive data, such as location and driver behavior, that could be exploited using inference attacks. This work aims to provide a detailed overview of security threats, mitigation strategies, and privacy risks in SDVs, primarily through a literature review, enriched with insights from a targeted questionnaire with industry experts. Key topics include defining SDVs, comparing them to Connected Vehicles (CVs) and Autonomous Vehicles (AVs), discussing the security challenges associated with OTA updates and the impact of SDV features on data privacy. Our findings highlight the need for robust security frameworks, standardized communication protocols, and privacy-preserving techniques to address the issues of SDVs. This work ultimately emphasizes the importance of a multi-layered defense strategy,integrating both in-vehicle and cloud-based security solutions, to safeguard future SDVs and increase user trust.
- Published
- 2024
10. Dark Energy Survey Year 3: Blue Shear
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McCullough, J., Amon, A., Legnani, E., Gruen, D., Roodman, A., Friedrich, O., MacCrann, N., Becker, M. R., Myles, J., Dodelson, S., Samuroff, S., Blazek, J., Prat, J., Honscheid, K., Pieres, A., Ferté, A., Alarcon, A., Drlica-Wagner, A., Choi, A., Navarro-Alsina, A., Campos, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Farahi, A., Ross, A. J., Rosell, A. Carnero, Yin, B., Flaugher, B., Yanny, B., Sánchez, C., Chang, C., Davis, C., To, C., Doux, C., Brooks, D., James, D. J., Cid, D. Sanchez, Hollowood, D. L., Huterer, D., Rykoff, E. S., Gaztanaga, E., Huff, E. M., Suchyta, E., Sheldon, E., Sanchez, E., Tarsitano, F., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Castander, F. J., Bernstein, G. M., Gutierrez, G., Giannini, G., Tarle, G., Diehl, H. T., Huang, H., Harrison, I., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Tutusaus, I., Ferrero, I., Elvin-Poole, J., Marshall, J. L., Muir, J., Weller, J., Zuntz, J., Carretero, J., DeRose, J., Frieman, J., Cordero, J., De Vicente, J., García-Bellido, J., Mena-Fernández, J., Eckert, K., Romer, A. K., Bechtol, K., Herner, K., Kuehn, K., Secco, L. F., da Costa, L. N., Paterno, M., Soares-Santos, 21 M., Gatti, M., Raveri, M., Yamamoto, M., Smith, M., Kind, M. Carrasco, Troxel, M. A., Aguena, M., Jarvis, M., Swanson, M. E. C., Weaverdyck, N., Lahav, O., Doel, P., Wiseman, P., Miquel, R., Gruendl, R. A., Cawthon, R., Allam, S., Hinton, S. R., Bridle, S. L., Bocquet, S., Desai, S., Pandey, S., Everett, S., Lee, S., Shin, T., Palmese, A., Conselice, C., Burke, D. L., Buckley-Geer, E., Lima, M., Vincenzi, M., Pereira, M. E. S., Crocce, M., Schubnell, M., Jeffrey, N., Alves, O., Vikram, V., Zhang, Y., and Collaboration, DES
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Modeling the intrinsic alignment (IA) of galaxies poses a challenge to weak lensing analyses. The Dark Energy Survey is expected to be less impacted by IA when limited to blue, star-forming galaxies. The cosmological parameter constraints from this blue cosmic shear sample are stable to IA model choice, unlike passive galaxies in the full DES Y3 sample, the goodness-of-fit is improved and the $\Omega_{m}$ and $S_8$ better agree with the cosmic microwave background. Mitigating IA with sample selection, instead of flexible model choices, can reduce uncertainty in $S_8$ by a factor of 1.5., Comment: Data access available at https://jamiemccullough.github.io/data/blueshear/
- Published
- 2024
11. Constraints on compact objects from the Dark Energy Survey five-year supernova sample
- Author
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Shah, Paul, Davis, Tamara M., Vincenzi, Maria, Armstrong, Patrick, Brout, Dillon, Camilleri, Ryan, Galbany, Lluis, Garcia-Bellido, Juan, Gill, Mandeep S. S., Lahav, Ofer, Lee, Jason, Lidman, Chris, Moeller, Anais, Sako, Masao, Sanchez, Bruno O., Sullivan, Mark, Whiteway, Lorne, Wiseman, Phillip, Allam, S., Aguena, M., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernandez, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagon, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., and Vikram, V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Gravitational lensing magnification of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) allows information to be obtained about the distribution of matter on small scales. In this paper, we derive limits on the fraction $\alpha$ of the total matter density in compact objects (which comprise stars, stellar remnants, small stellar groupings and primordial black holes) of mass $M > 0.03 M_{\odot}$ over cosmological distances. Using 1,532 SNe Ia from the Dark Energy Survey Year 5 sample (DES-SN5YR) combined with a Bayesian prior for the absolute magnitude $M$, we obtain $\alpha < 0.12$ at the 95\% confidence level after marginalisation over cosmological parameters, lensing due to large-scale structure, and intrinsic non-Gaussianity. Similar results are obtained using priors from the cosmic microwave background, baryon acoustic oscillations and galaxy weak lensing, indicating our results do not depend on the background cosmology. We argue our constraints are likely to be conservative (in the sense of the values we quote being higher than the truth), but discuss scenarios in which they could be weakened by systematics of the order of $\Delta \alpha \sim 0.04$, Comment: Accepted by MNRAS
- Published
- 2024
12. High and Low Resolution Tradeoffs in Roadside Multimodal Sensing
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Ding, Shaozu, Tang, Yihong, De Vincenzi, Marco, and Suo, Dajiang
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Computer Science - Robotics - Abstract
Designing roadside sensing for intelligent transportation applications requires balancing cost and performance,especially when choosing between high and low-resolution sensors. The tradeoff is challenging due to sensor heterogeneity,where different sensors produce unique data modalities due to varying physical principles. High-resolution LiDAR offers detailed point cloud, while 4D millimeter-wave radar, despite providing sparser data, delivers velocity information useful for distinguishing objects based on movement patterns. To assess whether reductions in spatial resolution can be compensated by the informational richness of sensors, particularly in recognizing both vehicles and vulnerable road users (VRUs), we propose Residual Fusion Net (ResFusionNet) to fuse multimodal data for 3D object detection. This enables a quantifiable tradeoff between spatial resolution and information richness across different modalities. Furthermore, we introduce a sensor placement algorithm utilizing probabilistic modeling to manage uncertainties in sensor visibility influenced by environmental or human-related factors. Through simulation-assisted ex-ante evaluation on a real-world testbed, our findings show marked marginal gains in detecting VRUs--an average of 16.7% for pedestrians and 11% for cyclists--when merging velocity-encoded radar with LiDAR, compared to LiDAR only configurations. Additionally, experimental results from 300 runs reveal a maximum loss of 11.5% and a average of 5.25% in sensor coverage due to uncertainty factors. These findings underscore the potential of using low spatial resolution but information-rich sensors to enhance detection capabilities for vulnerable road users while highlighting the necessity of thoroughly evaluating sensor modality heterogeneity, traffic participant diversity, and operational uncertainties when making sensor tradeoffs in practical applications., Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures
- Published
- 2024
13. Beyond 1776: Globalizing the Cultures of the American Revolution ed. by Maria O'Malley and Denys Van Renen (review)
- Author
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Vincenzi, Anna
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Suppression of the type Ia supernova host galaxy step in the outer regions of galaxies
- Author
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Toy, M., Wiseman, P., Sullivan, M., Scolnic, D., Vincenzi, M., Brout, D., Davis, T. M., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., Lidman, C., Lee, J., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Sánchez, B. O., Shah, P., Smith, M., Allam, S., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Drlica-Wagner, A., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using 1533 type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the five-year sample of the Dark Energy Survey (DES), we investigate the effects of projected galactocentric separation between the SNe and their host galaxies on their light curves and standardization. We show, for the first time, that the difference in SN Ia post-standardization brightnesses between high and low-mass hosts reduces from $0.078\pm0.011$ mag in the full sample to $0.036 \pm 0.018$ mag for SNe Ia located in the outer regions of their host galaxies, while increasing to $0.100 \pm 0.014$ mag for SNe in the inner regions. In these inner regions, the step can be reduced (but not removed) using a model where the $R_V$ of dust along the line-of-sight to the SN changes as a function of galaxy properties. To explain the remaining difference, we use the distributions of the SN Ia stretch parameter to test whether the inferred age of SN progenitors are more varied in the inner regions of galaxies. We find that the proportion of high-stretch SNe Ia in red (older) environments is more prominent in outer regions and that the outer regions stretch distributions are overall more homogeneous compared to inner regions, but conclude that this effect cannot explain the reduction in significance of any Hubble residual step in outer regions. We conclude that the standardized distances of SNe Ia located in the outer regions of galaxies are less affected by their global host galaxy properties than those in the inner regions., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures
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- 2024
15. An upper critical dimension for dynamo action: A $d$-dimensional closure model study
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Murugan, Sugan Durai, Krstulovic, Giorgio, Vincenzi, Dario, and Ray, Samriddhi Sankar
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Physics - Plasma Physics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics - Abstract
We construct a $d$-dimensional Eddy Damped Quasi-Normal Markovian (EDQNM) Closure Model to study dynamo action in arbitrary dimensions. In particular, we find lower $d_L$ and upper $d_U$ critical dimensions for sustained dynamo action in this incompressible problem. Our model is adaptable for future studies incorporating helicity, compressible effects and a wide range of magnetic Reynolds and Prandtl numbers., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures
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- 2024
16. Calibrating the Absolute Magnitude of Type Ia Supernovae in Nearby Galaxies using [OII] and Implications for $H_{0}$
- Author
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Dixon, M., Mould, J., Lidman, C., Taylor, E. N., Flynn, C., Duffy, A. R., Galbany, L., Scolnic, D., Davis, T. M., Möller, A., Kelsey, L., Lee, J., Wiseman, P., Vincenzi, M., Shah, P., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Nichol, R. C., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Sobreira, F., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, B. E., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The present state of cosmology is facing a crisis where there is a fundamental disagreement in measurements of the Hubble constant ($H_{0}$), with significant tension between the early and late universe methods. Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are important to measuring $H_{0}$ through the astronomical distance ladder. However, there remains potential to better standardise SN Ia light curves by using known dependencies on host galaxy properties after the standard light curve width and colour corrections have been applied to the peak SN Ia luminosities. To explore this, we use the 5-year photometrically identified SNe Ia sample obtained by the Dark Energy Survey, along with host galaxy spectra obtained by the Australian Dark Energy Survey. Using host galaxy spectroscopy, we find a significant trend with the equivalent width (EW) of the [OII] $\lambda\lambda$ 3727, 29 doublet, a proxy for specific star formation rate, and Hubble residuals. We find that the correlation with [OII] EW is a powerful alternative to the commonly used mass step after initial light curve corrections. Applying this [OII] EW correction to 20 SNe Ia in calibrator galaxies observed with WiFeS, we examined the impact on SN Ia absolute magnitudes and $H_{0}$. Our [OII] EW corrections result in $H_{0}$ values ranging between 73.04 to 73.51 $\mathrm{km} \mathrm{s}^{-1} \mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$, with a combined statistical and systematic uncertainty of $\sim$1.31 $\mathrm{km} \mathrm{s}^{-1} \mathrm{Mpc}^{-1}$. However, even with this additional correction, the impact of host galaxy properties in standardising SNe Ia appears limited in reducing the current tension ($\sim$5$\sigma$) with the CMB result for $H_{0}$., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2024
17. Evaluating Cosmological Biases using Photometric Redshifts for Type Ia Supernova Cosmology with the Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program
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Chen, R., Scolnic, D., Vincenzi, M., Rykoff, E. S., Myles, J., Kessler, R., Popovic, B., Sako, M., Smith, M., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Davis, T. M., Galbany, L., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Sánchez, B. O., Sullivan, M., Qu, H., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Choi, A., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Weaverdyck, N., and Weller, J.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Cosmological analyses with Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) have traditionally been reliant on spectroscopy for both classifying the type of supernova and obtaining reliable redshifts to measure the distance-redshift relation. While obtaining a host-galaxy spectroscopic redshift for most SNe is feasible for small-area transient surveys, it will be too resource intensive for upcoming large-area surveys such as the Vera Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time, which will observe on the order of millions of SNe. Here we use data from the Dark Energy Survey (DES) to address this problem with photometric redshifts (photo-z) inferred directly from the SN light-curve in combination with Gaussian and full p(z) priors from host-galaxy photo-z estimates. Using the DES 5-year photometrically-classified SN sample, we consider several photo-z algorithms as host-galaxy photo-z priors, including the Self-Organizing Map redshifts (SOMPZ), Bayesian Photometric Redshifts (BPZ), and Directional-Neighbourhood Fitting (DNF) redshift estimates employed in the DES 3x2 point analyses. With detailed catalog-level simulations of the DES 5-year sample, we find that the simulated w can be recovered within $\pm$0.02 when using SN+SOMPZ or DNF prior photo-z, smaller than the average statistical uncertainty for these samples of 0.03. With data, we obtain biases in w consistent with simulations within ~1$\sigma$ for three of the five photo-z variants. We further evaluate how photo-z systematics interplay with photometric classification and find classification introduces a subdominant systematic component. This work lays the foundation for next-generation fully photometric SNe Ia cosmological analyses., Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures. Submitting to MNRAS, comments welcome
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- 2024
18. Interface-induced turbulence in viscous binary fluid mixtures
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Padhan, Nadia Bihari, Vincenzi, Dario, and Pandit, Rahul
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics - Abstract
We demonstrate the existence of interface-induced turbulence, an emergent nonequilibrium statistically steady state (NESS) with spatiotemporal chaos, which is induced by interfacial fluctuations in low-Reynolds-number binary-fluid mixtures. We uncover the properties of this NESS via direct numerical simulations (DNSs) of cellular flows in the Cahn-Hilliard-Navier-Stokes (CHNS) equations for binary fluids. We show that, in this NESS, the shell-averaged energy spectrum $E(k)$ is spread over several decades in the wavenumber $k$ and it exhibits a power-law region, indicative of turbulence but without a conventional inertial cascade. To characterize the statistical properties of this turbulence, we compute, in addition to $E(k)$, the time series $e(t)$ of the kinetic energy and its power spectrum, scale-by-scale energy transfer as a function of $k$, and the energy dissipation resulting from interfacial stresses. Furthermore, we analyze the mixing properties of this low-Reynolds-number turbulence via the mean-square displacement (MSD) of Lagrangian tracer particles, for which we demonstrate diffusive behavior at long times, a hallmark of strong mixing in turbulent flows., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures
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- 2024
19. The Dark Energy Survey : Detection of weak lensing magnification of supernovae and constraints on dark matter haloes
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Shah, P., Davis, T. M., Bacon, D., Frieman, J., Galbany, L., Kessler, R., Lahav, O., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Sullivan, M., Vincenzi, M., Wiseman, P., Allam, S., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bechtol, K., Bertin, E., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Doux, C., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Friedel, D., Gatti, M., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The residuals of the distance moduli of Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) relative to a Hubble diagram fit contain information about the inhomogeneity of the universe, due to weak lensing magnification by foreground matter. By correlating the residuals of the Dark Energy Survey Year 5 SN Ia sample (DES-SN5YR) with extra-galactic foregrounds from the DES Y3 Gold catalog, we detect the presence of lensing at $6.0 \sigma$ significance. This is the first detection with a significance level above $5\sigma$. Constraints on the effective mass-to-light ratios and radial profiles of dark-matter haloes surrounding individual galaxies are also obtained. We show that the scatter of SNe Ia around the Hubble diagram is reduced by modifying the standardisation of the distance moduli to include an easily calculable de-lensing (i.e., environmental) term. We use the de-lensed distance moduli to recompute cosmological parameters derived from SN Ia, finding in Flat $w$CDM a difference of $\Delta \Omega_{\rm M} = +0.036$ and $\Delta w = -0.056$ compared to the unmodified distance moduli, a change of $\sim 0.3\sigma$. We argue that our modelling of SN Ia lensing will lower systematics on future surveys with higher statistical power. We use the observed dispersion of lensing in DES-SN5YR to constrain $\sigma_8$, but caution that the fit is sensitive to uncertainties at small scales. Nevertheless, our detection of SN Ia lensing opens a new pathway to study matter inhomogeneity that complements galaxy-galaxy lensing surveys and has unrelated systematics., Comment: Submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
20. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Light curves and 5-Year data release
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Sánchez, B. O., Brout, D., Vincenzi, M., Sako, M., Herner, K., Kessler, R., Davis, T. M., Scolnic, D., Acevedo, M., Lee, J., Möller, A., Qu, H., Kelsey, L., Wiseman, P., Armstrong, P., Rose, B., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Kovacs, E., Lidman, C., Popovic, B., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Toy, M., Carollo, D., Glazebrook, K., Lewis, G. F., Nichol, R. C., Tucker, B. E., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Annis, J., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Duarte, J., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Vikram, V., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present $griz$ photometric light curves for the full 5 years of the Dark Energy Survey Supernova program (DES-SN), obtained with both forced Point Spread Function (PSF) photometry on Difference Images (DIFFIMG) performed during survey operations, and Scene Modelling Photometry (SMP) on search images processed after the survey. This release contains $31,636$ DIFFIMG and $19,706$ high-quality SMP light curves, the latter of which contains $1635$ photometrically-classified supernovae that pass cosmology quality cuts. This sample spans the largest redshift ($z$) range ever covered by a single SN survey ($0.1
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- 2024
21. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Investigating Beyond-$\Lambda$CDM
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Camilleri, R., Davis, T. M., Vincenzi, M., Shah, P., Frieman, J., Kessler, R., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Carr, A., Chen, R., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Hinton, S. R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Popovic, B., Qu, H., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Taylor, G., Toy, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Annis, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bertin, E., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Doux, C., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Fosalba, P., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Muir, J., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Rodriguez-Monroy, M., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We report constraints on a variety of non-standard cosmological models using the full 5-year photometrically-classified type Ia supernova sample from the Dark Energy Survey (DES-SN5YR). Both Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and Suspiciousness calculations find no strong evidence for or against any of the non-standard models we explore. When combined with external probes, the AIC and Suspiciousness agree that 11 of the 15 models are moderately preferred over Flat-$\Lambda$CDM suggesting additional flexibility in our cosmological models may be required beyond the cosmological constant. We also provide a detailed discussion of all cosmological assumptions that appear in the DES supernova cosmology analyses, evaluate their impact, and provide guidance on using the DES Hubble diagram to test non-standard models. An approximate cosmological model, used to perform bias corrections to the data holds the biggest potential for harbouring cosmological assumptions. We show that even if the approximate cosmological model is constructed with a matter density shifted by $\Delta\Omega_m\sim0.2$ from the true matter density of a simulated data set the bias that arises is sub-dominant to statistical uncertainties. Nevertheless, we present and validate a methodology to reduce this bias., Comment: Published to MNRAS on 20 August 2024; v2 updates to the accepted version
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- 2024
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22. Modelling the impact of host galaxy dust on type Ia supernova distance measurements
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Popovic, B., Wiseman, P., Sullivan, M., Smith, M., González-Gaitán, S., Scolnic, D., Duarte, J., Armstrong, P., Asorey, J., Brout, D., Carollo, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Lidman, C., Lee, J., Lewis, G. F., Möller, A., Nichol, R. C., Sánchez, B. O., Toy, M., Tucker, B. E., Vincenzi, M., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Vikram, V., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) are a critical tool in measuring the accelerating expansion of the universe. Recent efforts to improve these standard candles have focused on incorporating the effects of dust on distance measurements with SNe Ia. In this paper, we use the state-of-the-art Dark Energy Survey 5 year sample to evaluate two different families of dust models: empirical extinction models derived from SNe Ia data, and physical attenuation models from the spectra of galaxies. Among the SNe Ia-derived models, we find that a logistic function of the total-to-selective extinction RV best recreates the correlations between supernova distance measurements and host galaxy properties, though an additional 0.02 magnitudes of grey scatter are needed to fully explain the scatter in SNIa brightness in all cases. These empirically-derived extinction distributions are highly incompatible with the physical attenuation models from galactic spectral measurements. From these results, we conclude that SNe Ia must either preferentially select extreme ends of galactic dust distributions, or that the characterisation of dust along the SNe Ia line-of-sight is incompatible with that of galactic dust distributions.
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- 2024
23. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Slow supernovae show cosmological time dilation out to $z \sim 1$
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White, R. M. T., Davis, T. M., Lewis, G. F., Brout, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Hinton, S. R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Shah, P., Vincenzi, M., Wiseman, P., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Asorey, J., Bacon, D., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., De Vicente, J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kessler, R., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Nichol, R. C., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Suchyta, E., Tarle, G., Tucker, B. E., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present a precise measurement of cosmological time dilation using the light curves of 1504 type Ia supernovae from the Dark Energy Survey spanning a redshift range $0.1\lesssim z\lesssim 1.2$. We find that the width of supernova light curves is proportional to $(1+z)$, as expected for time dilation due to the expansion of the Universe. Assuming type Ia supernovae light curves are emitted with a consistent duration $\Delta t_{\rm em}$, and parameterising the observed duration as $\Delta t_{\rm obs}=\Delta t_{\rm em}(1+z)^b$, we fit for the form of time dilation using two methods. Firstly, we find that a power of $b \approx 1$ minimises the flux scatter in stacked subsamples of light curves across different redshifts. Secondly, we fit each target supernova to a stacked light curve (stacking all supernovae with observed bandpasses matching that of the target light curve) and find $b=1.003\pm0.005$ (stat) $\pm\,0.010$ (sys). Thanks to the large number of supernovae and large redshift-range of the sample, this analysis gives the most precise measurement of cosmological time dilation to date, ruling out any non-time-dilating cosmological models at very high significance., Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures. Updated in response to reviewer feedback. Accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS)
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- 2024
24. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: An updated measurement of the Hubble constant using the Inverse Distance Ladder
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Camilleri, R., Davis, T. M., Hinton, S. R., Armstrong, P., Brout, D., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Nichol, R. C., Sako, M., Scolnic, D., Shah, P., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Sánchez, B. O., Vincenzi, M., Wiseman, P., Allam, S., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Herner, K., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kent, S., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lewis, G. F., Lima, M., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Samuroff, S., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Suntzeff, N., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, B. E., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We measure the current expansion rate of the Universe, Hubble's constant $H_0$, by calibrating the absolute magnitudes of supernovae to distances measured by Baryon Acoustic Oscillations. This `inverse distance ladder' technique provides an alternative to calibrating supernovae using nearby absolute distance measurements, replacing the calibration with a high-redshift anchor. We use the recent release of 1829 supernovae from the Dark Energy Survey spanning $0.01\lt z \lt1.13$ anchored to the recent Baryon Acoustic Oscillation measurements from DESI spanning $0.30 \lt z_{\mathrm{eff}} \lt 2.33$. To trace cosmology to $z=0$, we use the third-, fourth- and fifth-order cosmographic models, which, by design, are agnostic about the energy content and expansion history of the universe. With the inclusion of the higher-redshift DESI-BAO data, the third-order model is a poor fit to both data sets, with the fourth-order model being preferred by the Akaike Information Criterion. Using the fourth-order cosmographic model, we find $H_0=67.19^{+0.66}_{-0.64}\mathrm{~km} \mathrm{~s}^{-1} \mathrm{~Mpc}^{-1}$, in agreement with the value found by Planck without the need to assume Flat-$\Lambda$CDM. However the best-fitting expansion history differs from that of Planck, providing continued motivation to investigate these tensions.
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- 2024
25. Textbook outcome following pancreaticoduodenectomy in elderly patients: age-stratified analysis and predictive factors
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Mocchegiani, F., Benedetti Cacciaguerra, A., Wakabayashi, T., Valeriani, F., Vincenzi, P., Gaudenzi, F., Nicolini, D., Wakabayashi, G., and Vivarelli, M.
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- 2025
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26. Exploring the interplay of karyotype, hormones, sexuality, and body image perception in individuals with Turner syndrome
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Tarantino, Chiara, Vincenzi, Ludovica, Angelini, Francesco, Tomaselli, Alessandra, Carlomagno, Francesco, Rosato, Elena, Pofi, Riccardo, Lenzi, Andrea, Pozza, Carlotta, Minnetti, Marianna, Spaziani, Matteo, Isidori, Andrea M., and Sbardella, Emilia
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- 2025
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27. Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli infection-related acute encephalopathy
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Bottignole, Dario, Avola, Giulia, Cancilla, Rita, Curti, Erica, Misirocchi, Francesco, Severi, Sara, Vincenzi, Francesca, and Florindo, Irene
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- 2025
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28. Spleen volume assessment in Ph-negative chronic myeloproliferative neoplasms: a real-life study comparing ultrasonography vs. magnetic resonance imaging scans
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Pugliese, Novella, Cavaliere, Carlo, Basso, Luca, Fazio, Laura De, Malafronte, Rosalia, Giordano, Claudia, Vincenzi, Annamaria, Varricchio, Silvia, Mascolo, Massimo, Martinelli, Vincenzo, Picardi, Marco, Salvatore, Marco, and Pane, Fabrizio
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- 2025
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29. Candida albicans migrates itself from the vagina to the uterus and ovaries in estrogenized mice
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Mosca, Valeria, Arita, Glaucia Sayuri, Sakita, Karina Mayumi, Rodrigues-Vendramini, Franciele Abigail Vilugron, Faria, Daniella Renata, Conrado, Pollyanna Cristina Vincenzi, Galinari, Camila Barros, Kioshima, Érika Seki, Becker, Tania Cristina Alexandrino, de Souza Bonfim-Mendonça, Patrícia, and Svidzinski, Terezinha Inez Estivalet
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- 2025
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30. Lower Circulating Gas6 Levels Are Associated with Bulbar Phenotype and Faster Disease Progression in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Patients
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Apostolo, Daria, Ferreira, Luciana L., D’Onghia, Davide, Vincenzi, Federica, Vercellino, Nicole, Perazzi, Mattia, Pirisi, Mario, Cantello, Roberto, Minisini, Rosalba, Mazzini, Letizia, Bellan, Mattia, and De Marchi, Fabiola
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- 2025
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31. Peribiliary cysts: uncommon mimickers of hepatic and biliary cystic lesions
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Uski, Ana Cláudia Vincenzi Raduan, Pedroso, Maria Helena Naves Inácio, Abud, Carolina Pereira, Costa, Marina Martini, and Ferreira, Marília Paes Fortes Diniz
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- 2025
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32. Graded C∗C∗C∗C∗-algebras and twisted C∗C∗C∗C∗-tensor products: Graded C∗C∗C∗C∗-algebras and twisted C∗C∗C∗C∗-tensor products
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Fidaleo, Francesco and Vincenzi, Elia
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- 2024
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33. Turbulent cascade arrests and the formation of intermediate-scale condensates
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Kiran, Kolluru Venkata, Vincenzi, Dario, and Pandit, Rahul
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics - Abstract
Energy cascades lie at the heart of the dynamics of turbulent flows. In a recent study of turbulence in fluids with odd-viscosity [de Wit \textit{et al.}, Nature \textbf{627}, 515 (2024)], the two-dimensionalization of the flow at small scales leads to the arrest of the energy cascade and selection of an intermediate scale, between the forcing and the viscous scales. To investigate the generality of this phenomenon, we study a shell model that is carefully constructed to have three-dimensional turbulent dynamics at small wavenumbers and two-dimensional turbulent dynamics at large wavenumbers. The large scale separation that we can achieve in our shell model allows us to examine clearly the interplay between these dynamics, which leads to an arrest of the energy cascade at a transitional wavenumber and an associated accumulation of energy at the same scale. Such pile-up of energy around the transitional wavenumber is reminiscent of the formation of condensates in two-dimensional turbulence, \textit{but, in contrast, it occurs at intermediate wavenumbers instead of the smallest wavenumber, Comment: Typos corrected
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- 2024
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34. The DEHVILS in the Details: Type Ia Supernova Hubble Residual Comparisons and Mass Step Analysis in the Near-Infrared
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Peterson, Erik R., Scolnic, Daniel, Jones, David O., Do, Aaron, Popovic, Brodie, Riess, Adam G., Dwomoh, Arianna, Johansson, Joel, Rubin, David, Sánchez, Bruno O., Shappee, Benjamin J., Tonry, John L., Tully, R. Brent, and Vincenzi, Maria
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Measurements of Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) in the near-infrared (NIR) have been used both as an alternate path to cosmology compared to optical measurements and as a method of constraining key systematics for the larger optical studies. With the DEHVILS sample, the largest published NIR sample with consistent NIR coverage of maximum light across three NIR bands ($Y$, $J$, and $H$), we check three key systematics: (i) the reduction in Hubble residual scatter as compared to the optical, (ii) the measurement of a "mass step" or lack thereof and its implications, and (iii) the ability to distinguish between various dust models by analyzing slopes and correlations between Hubble residuals in the NIR and optical. We produce SN Ia simulations of the DEHVILS sample and find that it is $\textit{harder}$ to differentiate between various dust models than previously understood. Additionally, we find that fitting with the current SALT3-NIR model does not yield accurate wavelength-dependent stretch-luminosity correlations, and we propose a limited solution for this problem. From the data, we see that (i) the standard deviation of Hubble residual values from NIR bands treated as standard candles are 0.007-0.042 mag smaller than those in the optical, (ii) the NIR mass step is not constrainable with the current sample size of 47 SNe Ia from DEHVILS, and (iii) Hubble residuals in the NIR and optical are correlated in the data. We test a few variations on the number and combinations of filters and data samples, and we observe that none of our findings or conclusions are significantly impacted by these modifications., Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by A&A
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- 2024
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35. Investigating the Proton Structure: The FAMU experiment
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Vacchi, A., Adamczak, A., Bakalov, D., Baldazzi, G., Baruzzo, M., Benocci, R., Bertoni, R., Bonesini, M., Cabrera, H., Carsi, S., Cirrincione, D., Chignoli, F., Clemenza, M., Colace, L., Danailov, M., Danev, P., de Bari, A., De Vecchi, C., De Vincenzi, M., Fasci, E., Gadedjisso-Tossou, K. S., Gianfrani, L., Hillier, A. D., Ishida, K., King, P. J. C., Maggi, V., Mazza, R., Menegolli, A., Mocchiutti, E., Moretti, L., Morgante, G., Niemela, J., Petroselli, C., Pizzolotto, C., Pullia, A., Ramponi, R., Roman, H. E., Rossella, M., Rossini, R., Sarkar, R., Sbrizzi, A., Stoilov, M., Stoychev, L., Suarez-Vargas, J. J., Toci, G., Tortora, L., Vallazza, E., Xiao, C., and Yokoyama, K.
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Physics - Atomic Physics - Abstract
The article gives the motivations for the measurement of the hyperfine splitting (hfs) in the ground state of muonic hydrogen to explore the properties of the proton at low momentum transfer. It summarizes these proposed measurement methods and finally describes the FAMU experiment in more detail.
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- 2024
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36. Dark Energy Survey Deep Field photometric redshift performance and training incompleteness assessment⋆
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San Cipriano, L Toribio, De Vicente, J, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Hartley, WG, Myles, J, Amon, A, Bernstein, GM, Choi, A, Eckert, K, Gruendl, RA, Harrison, I, Sheldon, E, Yanny, B, Aguena, M, Allam, SS, Alves, O, Bacon, D, Brooks, D, Campos, A, Rosell, A Carnero, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Conselice, C, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Davis, TM, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Doel, P, Ferrero, I, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gaztañaga, E, Giannini, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Lee, S, Lidman, C, Marshall, JL, Mena-Fernández, J, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Palmese, A, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Roodman, A, Sanchez, E, Smith, M, Soares-Santos, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, Vincenzi, M, Weaverdyck, N, Wiseman, P, and Collaboration, DES
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Space Sciences ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Context. The determination of accurate photometric redshifts (photo-zs) in large imaging galaxy surveys is key for cosmological studies. One of the most common approaches is machine learning techniques. These methods require a spectroscopic or reference sample to train the algorithms. Attention has to be paid to the quality and properties of these samples since they are key factors in the estimation of reliable photo-zs. Aims. The goal of this work is to calculate the photo-zs for the Year 3 (Y3) Dark Energy Survey (DES) Deep Fields catalogue using the Directional Neighborhood Fitting (DNF) machine learning algorithm. Moreover, we want to develop techniques to assess the incompleteness of the training sample and metrics to study how incompleteness affects the quality of photometric redshifts. Finally, we are interested in comparing the performance obtained by DNF on the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue with that of the EAzY template fitting approach. Methods. We emulated – at a brighter magnitude – the training incompleteness with a spectroscopic sample whose redshifts are known to have a measurable view of the problem. We used a principal component analysis to graphically assess the incompleteness and relate it with the performance parameters provided by DNF. Finally, we applied the results on the incompleteness to the photo-z computation on the Y3 DES Deep Fields with DNF and estimated its performance. Results. The photo-zs of the galaxies in the DES deep fields were computed with the DNF algorithm and added to the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue. We have developed some techniques to evaluate the performance in the absence of “true” redshift and to assess the completeness. We have studied the tradeoff in the training sample between the highest spectroscopic redshift quality versus completeness. We found some advantages in relaxing the highest-quality spectroscopic redshift requirements at fainter magnitudes in favour of completeness. The results achieved by DNF on the Y3 Deep Fields are competitive with the ones provided by EAzY, showing notable stability at high redshifts. It should be noted that the good results obtained by DNF in the estimation of photo-zs in deep field catalogues make DNF suitable for the future Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) and Euclid data, which will have similar depths to the Y3 DES Deep Fields.
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- 2024
37. Voluntary disclosures and monetary policy: evidence from quantitative easing
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Vincenzi, Roberto
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- 2025
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38. A Novel In Silico–Ex Vivo Model for Correlating Coating Transfer to Tissue with Local Drug-Coated Balloon-Vessel Contact Pressures
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Stratakos, Efstathios, Tscheuschner, Linnea, Vincenzi, Lorenzo, Pedrinazzi, Edoardo, Sigala, Fragiska, D’Andrea, Luca, Gastaldi, Dario, Berti, Francesca, Tzafriri, Abraham Rami, and Pennati, Giancarlo
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- 2025
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39. A vehicle firmware security vulnerability: an IVI exploitation
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Costantino, Gianpiero, De Vincenzi, Marco, and Matteucci, Ilaria
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- 2024
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40. S-p-bromobenzyl-glutathione cyclopentyl diester (BBGC) as novel therapeutic strategy to enhance trabectedin anti-tumor effect in soft tissue sarcoma preclinical models
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Pantano, F., Simonetti, S., Iuliani, M., Guillen, M. J., Cuevas, C., Aviles, P., Cavaliere, S., Napolitano, A., Cortellini, A., Mazzocca, A., Nibid, L., Sabarese, G., Perrone, G., Gambarotti, M., Righi, A., Palmerini, E., Stacchiotti, S., Barisella, M., Gronchi, A., Valeri, S., Sbaraglia, M., Dei Tos, A. P., Tonini, G., and Vincenzi, B.
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- 2024
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41. Human norovirus in Brazil: an update of reports in different settings
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Oliveira, João Gabriel dos Santos, Costa, Antônio Samuel da Silva, Ferreira, Igor Vincenzi, Carvalho, Mateus de Oliveira, Siqueira, Jones Anderson Monteiro, and Aires, Caio Augusto Martins
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- 2024
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42. The Dark Energy Survey 5-year photometrically classified type Ia supernovae without host-galaxy redshifts
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Möller, A., Wiseman, P., Smith, M., Lidman, C., Davis, T. M., Kessler, R., Sako, M., Sullivan, M., Galbany, L., Lee, J., Nichol, R. C., Sánchez, B. O., Vincenzi, M., Tucker, B. E., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Allam, S., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Bertin, E., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Castander, F. J., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Myles, J., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Tucker, D. L., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., da Costa, L. N., and Pereira, M. E. S.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Current and future Type Ia Supernova (SN Ia) surveys will need to adopt new approaches to classifying SNe and obtaining their redshifts without spectra if they wish to reach their full potential. We present here a novel approach that uses only photometry to identify SNe Ia in the 5-year Dark Energy Survey (DES) dataset using the SuperNNova classifier. Our approach, which does not rely on any information from the SN host-galaxy, recovers SNe Ia that might otherwise be lost due to a lack of an identifiable host. We select 2,298 high-quality SNe Ia from the DES 5-year dataset an almost complete sample of detected SNe Ia. More than 700 of these have no spectroscopic host redshift and are potentially new SNIa compared to the DES-SN5YR cosmology analysis. To analyse these SNe Ia, we derive their redshifts and properties using only their light-curves with a modified version of the SALT2 light-curve fitter. Compared to other DES SN Ia samples with spectroscopic redshifts, our new sample has in average higher redshift, bluer and broader light-curves, and fainter host-galaxies. Future surveys such as LSST will also face an additional challenge, the scarcity of spectroscopic resources for follow-up. When applying our novel method to DES data, we reduce the need for follow-up by a factor of four and three for host-galaxy and live SN respectively compared to earlier approaches. Our novel method thus leads to better optimisation of spectroscopic resources for follow-up., Comment: Accepted MNRAS
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- 2024
43. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program: Cosmological Analysis and Systematic Uncertainties
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Vincenzi, M., Brout, D., Armstrong, P., Popovic, B., Taylor, G., Acevedo, M., Camilleri, R., Chen, R., Davis, T. M., Hinton, S. R., Kelsey, L., Kessler, R., Lee, J., Lidman, C., Möller, A., Qu, H., Sako, M., Sanchez, B., Scolnic, D., Smith, M., Sullivan, M., Wiseman, P., Asorey, J., Bassett, B. A., Carollo, D., Carr, A., Foley, R. J., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., Glazebrook, K., Graur, O., Kovacs, E., Kuehn, K., Malik, U., Nichol, R. C., Rose, B., Tucker, B. E., Toy, M., Tucker, D. L., Yuan, F., Abbott, T. M. C., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Bacon, D., Bechtol, K., Bernstein, G. M., Brooks, D., Burke, D. L., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Flaugher, B., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., James, D. J., Kuropatkin, N., Lahav, O., Lee, S., Lin, H., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Porredon, A., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., To, C., Walker, A. R., and Weaverdyck, N.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the full Hubble diagram of photometrically-classified Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) from the Dark Energy Survey supernova program (DES-SN). DES-SN discovered more than 20,000 SN candidates and obtained spectroscopic redshifts of 7,000 host galaxies. Based on the light-curve quality, we select 1635 photometrically-identified SNe Ia with spectroscopic redshift 0.10$< z <$1.13, which is the largest sample of supernovae from any single survey and increases the number of known $z>0.5$ supernovae by a factor of five. In a companion paper, we present cosmological results of the DES-SN sample combined with 194 spectroscopically-classified SNe Ia at low redshift as an anchor for cosmological fits. Here we present extensive modeling of this combined sample and validate the entire analysis pipeline used to derive distances. We show that the statistical and systematic uncertainties on cosmological parameters are $\sigma_{\Omega_M,{\rm stat+sys}}^{\Lambda{\rm CDM}}=$0.017 in a flat $\Lambda$CDM model, and $(\sigma_{\Omega_M},\sigma_w)_{\rm stat+sys}^{w{\rm CDM}}=$(0.082, 0.152) in a flat $w$CDM model. Combining the DES SN data with the highly complementary CMB measurements by Planck Collaboration (2020) reduces uncertainties on cosmological parameters by a factor of 4. In all cases, statistical uncertainties dominate over systematics. We show that uncertainties due to photometric classification make up less than 10% of the total systematic uncertainty budget. This result sets the stage for the next generation of SN cosmology surveys such as the Vera C. Rubin Observatory's Legacy Survey of Space and Time., Comment: 39 pages, 19 figures; Submitted to ApJ; companion paper Dark Energy Collaboration et al. on consecutive arxiv number 2401.02929
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- 2024
44. The Dark Energy Survey: Cosmology Results With ~1500 New High-redshift Type Ia Supernovae Using The Full 5-year Dataset
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DES Collaboration, Abbott, T. M. C., Acevedo, M., Aguena, M., Alarcon, A., Allam, S., Alves, O., Amon, A., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Annis, J., Armstrong, P., Asorey, J., Avila, S., Bacon, D., Bassett, B. A., Bechtol, K., Bernardinelli, P. H., Bernstein, G. M., Bertin, E., Blazek, J., Bocquet, S., Brooks, D., Brout, D., Buckley-Geer, E., Burke, D. L., Camacho, H., Camilleri, R., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carollo, D., Carr, A., Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Cawthon, R., Chang, C., Chen, R., Choi, A., Conselice, C., Costanzi, M., da Costa, L. N., Crocce, M., Davis, T. M., DePoy, D. L., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Dixon, M., Dodelson, S., Doel, P., Doux, C., Drlica-Wagner, A., Elvin-Poole, J., Everett, S., Ferrero, I., Ferté, A., Flaugher, B., Foley, R. J., Fosalba, P., Friedel, D., Frieman, J., Frohmaier, C., Galbany, L., García-Bellido, J., Gatti, M., Gaztanaga, E., Giannini, G., Glazebrook, K., Graur, O., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Gutierrez, G., Hartley, W. G., Herner, K., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., Huterer, D., Jain, B., James, D. J., Jeffrey, N., Kasai, E., Kelsey, L., Kent, S., Kessler, R., Kim, A. G., Kirshner, R. P., Kovacs, E., Kuehn, K., Lahav, O., Lee, J., Lee, S., Lewis, G. F., Li, T. S., Lidman, C., Lin, H., Malik, U., Marshall, J. L., Martini, P., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Mohr, J. J., Mould, J., Muir, J., Möller, A., Neilsen, E., Nichol, R. C., Nugent, P., Ogando, R. L. C., Palmese, A., Pan, Y. -C., Paterno, M., Percival, W. J., Pereira, M. E. S., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Popovic, B., Porredon, A., Prat, J., Qu, H., Raveri, M., Rodríguez-Monroy, M., Romer, A. K., Roodman, A., Rose, B., Sako, M., Sanchez, E., Cid, D. Sanchez, Schubnell, M., Scolnic, D., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Shah, P., Smith, J. Allyn., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Sullivan, M., Suntzeff, N., Swanson, M. E. C., Sánchez, B. O., Tarle, G., Taylor, G., Thomas, D., To, C., Toy, M., Troxel, M. A., Tucker, B. E., Tucker, D. L., Uddin, S. A., Vincenzi, M., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., Wechsler, R. H., Weller, J., Wester, W., Wiseman, P., Yamamoto, M., Yuan, F., Zhang, B., and Zhang, Y.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present cosmological constraints from the sample of Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) discovered during the full five years of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program. In contrast to most previous cosmological samples, in which SN are classified based on their spectra, we classify the DES SNe using a machine learning algorithm applied to their light curves in four photometric bands. Spectroscopic redshifts are acquired from a dedicated follow-up survey of the host galaxies. After accounting for the likelihood of each SN being a SN Ia, we find 1635 DES SNe in the redshift range $0.10
0.5$ SNe compared to the previous leading compilation of Pantheon+, and results in the tightest cosmological constraints achieved by any SN data set to date. To derive cosmological constraints we combine the DES supernova data with a high-quality external low-redshift sample consisting of 194 SNe Ia spanning $0.025 - Published
- 2024
45. Dark Energy Survey Deep Field photometric redshift performance and training incompleteness assessment
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Cipriano, L. Toribio San, De Vicente, J., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Hartley, W. G., Myles, J., Amon, A., Bernstein, G. M., Choi, A., Eckert, K., Gruendl, R. A., Harrison, I., Sheldon, E., Yanny, B., Aguena, M., Allam, S. S., Alves, O., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Campos, A., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., Castander, F. J., Conselice, C., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Diehl, H. T., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Gaztañaga, E., Giannini, G., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Lee, S., Lidman, C., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Menanteau, F., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Roodman, A., Sanchez, E., Smith, M., Soares-Santos, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Vincenzi, M., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Context. The determination of accurate photometric redshifts (photo-zs) in large imaging galaxy surveys is key for cosmological studies. One of the most common approaches are machine learning techniques. These methods require a spectroscopic or reference sample to train the algorithms. Attention has to be paid to the quality and properties of these samples since they are key factors in the estimation of reliable photo-zs. Aims. The goal of this work is to calculate the photo-zs for the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue using the DNF machine learning algorithm. Moreover, we want to develop techniques to assess the incompleteness of the training sample and metrics to study how incompleteness affects the quality of photometric redshifts. Finally, we are interested in comparing the performance obtained with respect to the EAzY template fitting approach on Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue. Methods. We have emulated -- at brighter magnitude -- the training incompleteness with a spectroscopic sample whose redshifts are known to have a measurable view of the problem. We have used a principal component analysis to graphically assess incompleteness and to relate it with the performance parameters provided by DNF. Finally, we have applied the results about the incompleteness to the photo-z computation on Y3 DES Deep Fields with DNF and estimated its performance. Results. The photo-zs for the galaxies on DES Deep Fields have been computed with the DNF algorithm and added to the Y3 DES Deep Fields catalogue. They are available at https://des.ncsa.illinois.edu/releases/y3a2/Y3deepfields. Some techniques have been developed to evaluate the performance in the absence of "true" redshift and to assess completeness. We have studied... (Partial abstract), Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures
- Published
- 2023
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46. Preserving large-scale features in simulations of elastic turbulence
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Yerasi, Sumithra R., Picardo, Jason R., Gupta, Anupam, and Vincenzi, Dario
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Physics - Fluid Dynamics ,Nonlinear Sciences - Chaotic Dynamics ,Physics - Computational Physics - Abstract
Simulations of elastic turbulence, the chaotic flow of highly elastic and inertialess polymer solutions, are plagued by numerical difficulties: The chaotically advected polymer conformation tensor develops extremely large gradients and can loose its positive definiteness, which triggers numerical instabilities. While efforts to tackle these issues have produced a plethora of specialized techniques -- tensor decompositions, artificial diffusion, and shock-capturing advection schemes -- we still lack an unambiguous route to accurate and efficient simulations. In this work, we show that even when a simulation is numerically stable, maintaining positive-definiteness and displaying the expected chaotic fluctuations, it can still suffer from errors significant enough to distort the large-scale dynamics and flow-structures. Focusing on two-dimensional simulations of the Oldroyd-B and FENE-P equations, we first compare two decompositions of the conformation tensor: symmetric square root (SSR) and Cholesky with a logarithmic transformation (Cholesky-log). While both simulations yield chaotic flows, only the Cholesky-log preserves the pattern of the forcing, i.e., its vortical cells remain ordered in a lattice as opposed to the vortices of the SSR simulations which shrink, expand and reorient constantly. To identify the accurate simulation, we appeal to a hitherto overlooked mathematical bound on the determinant of the conformation tensor, which unequivocally rejects the SSR simulation. Importantly, the accuracy of the Cholesky-log simulation is shown to arise from the logarithmic transformation. We then consider local artificial diffusion, a potential low-cost alternative to high-order advection schemes, and find unfortunately that it significantly modifies the dynamics. We end with an example, showing how the spurious large-scale motions identified here contaminate predictions of scalar mixing., Comment: 24 pages, 11 figures
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- 2023
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47. Environmental Quenching of Low Surface Brightness Galaxies near Milky Way mass Hosts
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Bhattacharyya, J., Peter, A. H. G., Martini, P., Mutlu-Pakdil, B., Drlica-Wagner, A., Pace, A. B., Strigari, L. E., Cheng, Y. -T., Roberts, D., Tanoglidis, D., Aguena, M., Alves, O., Andrade-Oliveira, F., Bacon, D., Brooks, D., Rosell, A. Carnero, Carretero, J., da Costa, L. N., Pereira, M. E. S., Davis, T. M., Desai, S., Doel, P., Ferrero, I., Frieman, J., García-Bellido, J., Giannini, G., Gruen, D., Gruendl, R. A., Hinton, S. R., Hollowood, D. L., Honscheid, K., James, D. J., Kuehn, K., Marshall, J. L., Mena-Fernández, J., Miquel, R., Palmese, A., Pieres, A., Malagón, A. A. Plazas, Sanchez, E., Santiago, B., Schubnell, M., Sevilla-Noarbe, I., Smith, M., Suchyta, E., Swanson, M. E. C., Tarle, G., Vincenzi, M., Walker, A. R., Weaverdyck, N., and Wiseman, P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Low Surface Brightness Galaxies (LSBGs) are excellent probes of quenching and other environmental processes near massive galaxies. We study an extensive sample of LSBGs near massive hosts in the local universe that are distributed across a diverse range of environments. The LSBGs with surface-brightness $\mu_{\rm eff,g}> $24.2 mag arcsec$^{-2}$ are drawn from the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 catalog while the hosts with masses $9.0< log(M_{\star}/M_{\odot})< 11.0$ comparable to the Milky Way and the Large Magellanic Cloud are selected from the z0MGS sample. We study the projected radial density profiles of LSBGs as a function of their color and surface brightness around hosts in both the rich Fornax-Eridanus cluster environment and the low-density field. We detect an overdensity with respect to the background density, out to 2.5 times the virial radius for both hosts in the cluster environment and the isolated field galaxies. When the LSBG sample is split by $g-i$ color or surface brightness $\mu_{\rm eff,g}$, we find the LSBGs closer to their hosts are significantly redder and brighter, like their high surface-brightness counterparts. The LSBGs form a clear 'red sequence' in both the cluster and isolated environments that is visible beyond the virial radius of the hosts. This suggests a pre-processing of infalling LSBGs and a quenched backsplash population around both host samples. However, the relative prominence of the 'blue cloud' feature implies that pre-processing is ongoing near the isolated hosts compared to the cluster hosts., Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures
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- 2023
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48. The evolutionary history of the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) revealed by chloroplast and nuclear genomes analysis
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Frascarelli, Giulia, Galise, Teresa R., D’Agostino, Nunzio, Cafasso, Donata, Cozzolino, Salvatore, Cortinovis, Gaia, Sparvoli, Francesca, Bellucci, Elisa, Di Vittori, Valerio, Nanni, Laura, Pieri, Alice, Rossato, Marzia, Vincenzi, Leonardo, Benazzo, Andrea, Delledonne, Massimo, Bitocchi, Elena, and Papa, Roberto
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- 2025
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49. A semi-automatic pipeline integrating histological and µCT data in a mouse model of lung fibrosis
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Vincenzi, Elena, Buccardi, Martina, Ferrini, Erica, Fantazzini, Alice, Polverini, Eugenia, Villetti, Gino, Sverzellati, Nicola, Aliverti, Andrea, Basso, Curzio, Pennati, Francesca, and Stellari, Franco Fabio
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- 2024
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50. Author Correction: Adaptive gene loss in the common bean pan-genome during range expansion and domestication
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Cortinovis, Gaia, Vincenzi, Leonardo, Anderson, Robyn, Marturano, Giovanni, Marsh, Jacob Ian, Bayer, Philipp Emanuel, Rocchetti, Lorenzo, Frascarelli, Giulia, Lanzavecchia, Giovanna, Pieri, Alice, Benazzo, Andrea, Bellucci, Elisa, Di Vittori, Valerio, Nanni, Laura, Ferreira Fernández, Juan José, Rossato, Marzia, Aguilar, Orlando Mario, Morrell, Peter Laurent, Rodriguez, Monica, Gioia, Tania, Neumann, Kerstin, Alvarez Diaz, Juan Camilo, Gratias, Ariane, Klopp, Christophe, Bitocchi, Elena, Geffroy, Valérie, Delledonne, Massimo, Edwards, David, and Papa, Roberto
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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