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Nabila Aghanim

Researcher at Université Paris-Saclay

Publications -  450
Citations -  110271

Nabila Aghanim is an academic researcher from Université Paris-Saclay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Planck & Cosmic microwave background. The author has an hindex of 137, co-authored 416 publications receiving 100914 citations. Previous affiliations of Nabila Aghanim include University of Paris-Sud & University of Paris.

Papers
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Searching for non-gaussianity: Statistical tests

TL;DR: In this article, a wavelet analysis of a signal is used to detect the non-gaussianity of a Gaussian signal in the presence of Gaussian and non-Gaussian signals.
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The first detection of the CMB that opened a new field in cosmology

TL;DR: The first experimental detection of this fossil radiation has been performed in 1964 and has since then become a powerful tool to probe the formation and evolution of the Universe as mentioned in this paper . But it has not yet been used for space applications.
Journal ArticleDOI

SZ and CMB reconstruction using Generalized Morphological Component Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a sparsity-based component separation method is proposed for CMB data called Generalized Morphological Component Analysis (GMCA), which is formulated in a Bayesian maximum a posteriori (MAP) framework.
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The PAU Survey and Euclid: Improving broadband photometric redshifts with multi-task learning

Laura Cabayol, +125 more
TL;DR: In this article , a multi-task learning (MTL) network was used to improve broadband photo-z estimates by simultaneously predicting the broadband photoz and the narrow-band photometry from the broadband photometry.
Peer Review

Euclid: Constraining linearly scale-independent modifications of gravity with the spectroscopic and photometric primary probes

Noemi Frusciante, +128 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors focus on modified gravity models characterised, at linear scales, by a scale-independent growth of perturbations while featuring different testable types of derivative screening mechanisms at smaller nonlinear scales.