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Institution

International School for Advanced Studies

EducationTrieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy
About: International School for Advanced Studies is a education organization based out in Trieste, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Galaxy & Dark matter. The organization has 3751 authors who have published 13433 publications receiving 588454 citations. The organization is also known as: SISSA & Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the new features of the finite element library deal, version 9.2.II is provided.
Abstract: Abstract This paper provides an overview of the new features of the finite element library deal.II, version 9.2.

141 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarise the proposal of the LHC Dark Matter Working Group on how to present LHC results on $s$-channel simplified dark matter models and compare them to direct (indirect) detection experiments.
Abstract: This document summarises the proposal of the LHC Dark Matter Working Group on how to present LHC results on $s$-channel simplified dark matter models and to compare them to direct (indirect) detection experiments.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that the FR I -FR II dividing luminosity is a function of the mass of the black hole powering the active nucleus of an elliptical galaxy.
Abstract: In the radio - host galaxy optical luminosity plane FR I and FR II radio-galaxies are clearly divided. Since the optical luminosity of an elliptical galaxy is an indication of the mass of its central black hole, we propose that the FR I - FR II dividing luminosity is a function of the mass of the black hole powering the active nucleus. Furthermore, as the radio power gives an estimate of the total kinetic power carried by the jet, the FR I - FR II separation can be re-interpreted as occurring at a constant ratio between the jet power and the black hole mass. There is also convincing evidence of a correlation between the radio power and the luminosity in narrow emission lines. As the latter results from photoionization by the radiation produced by accretion, we can estimate the ionizing luminosity and find that the separation luminosity can be also re-expressed as a constant accretion rate between \~0.01-0.001 of the Eddington one. This possibly regulates the accretion mode and the consequent presence and characteristics of nuclear outflows.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
N. Mandolesi1, Marco Bersanelli2, R. C. Butler1, Eduardo Artal3  +156 moreInstitutions (30)
TL;DR: In this paper, an overview of the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) program within the ESA Planck mission is presented, together with the model philosophy and testing strategy, and the LFI approach to ground and inflight calibration is described.
Abstract: This paper provides an overview of the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) programme within the ESA Planck mission. The LFI instrument has been developed to produce high precision maps of the microwave sky at frequencies in the range 27−77 GHz, below the peak of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation spectrum. The scientific goals are described, ranging from fundamental cosmology to Galactic and extragalactic astrophysics. The instrument design and development are outlined, together with the model philosophy and testing strategy. The instrument is presented in the context of the Planck mission. The LFI approach to ground and inflight calibration is described. We also describe the LFI ground segment. We present the results of a number of tests demonstrating the capability of the LFI data processing centre (DPC) to properly reduce and analyse LFI flight data, from telemetry information to calibrated and cleaned time ordered data, sky maps at each frequency (in temperature and polarization), component emission maps (CMB and diffuse foregrounds), catalogs for various classes of sources (the Early Release Compact Source Catalogue and the Final Compact Source Catalogue). The organization of the LFI consortium is briefly presented as well as the role of the core team in data analysis and scientific exploitation. All tests carried out on the LFI flight model demonstrate the excellent performance of the instrument and its various subunits. The data analysis pipeline has been tested and its main steps verified. In the first three months after launch, the commissioning, calibration, performance, and verification phases will be completed, after which Planck will begin its operational life, in which LFI will have an integral part.

141 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a color-magnitude diagram analysis of deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging of a mass-limited sample of 18 intermediate-age (1-2 Gyr old) star clusters in the Magellanic Clouds, including eight clusters for which new data were obtained.
Abstract: We present a color-magnitude diagram analysis of deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging of a mass-limited sample of 18 intermediate-age (1-2 Gyr old) star clusters in the Magellanic Clouds, including eight clusters for which new data were obtained. We find that all star clusters in our sample feature extended main-sequence turnoff (eMSTO) regions that are wider than can be accounted for by a simple stellar population (including unresolved binary stars). FWHM widths of the MSTOs indicate age spreads of 200-550 Myr. We evaluate the dynamical evolution of clusters with and without initial mass segregation. Our main results are (1) the fraction of red clump (RC) stars in secondary RCs in eMSTO clusters scales with the fraction of MSTO stars having pseudo-ages of 1.35 Gyr; (2) the width of the pseudo-age distributions of eMSTO clusters is correlated with their central escape velocity v esc, both currently and at an age of 10 Myr. We find that these two results are unlikely to be reproduced by the effects of interactive binary stars or a range of stellar rotation velocities. We therefore argue that the eMSTO phenomenon is mainly caused by extended star formation within the clusters; and (3) we find that v esc ≥ 15 km s–1 out to ages of at least 100 Myr for all clusters featuring eMSTOs, and v esc ≤ 12 km s–1 at all ages for two lower-mass clusters in the same age range that do not show eMSTOs. We argue that eMSTOs only occur for clusters whose early escape velocities are higher than the wind velocities of stars that provide material from which second-generation stars can form. The threshold of 12-15 km s–1 is consistent with wind velocities of intermediate-mass asymptotic giant branch stars and massive binary stars in the literature.

140 citations


Authors

Showing all 3802 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Sabino Matarrese155775123278
G. de Zotti154718121249
J. González-Nuevo144500108318
Matt J. Jarvis144106485559
Carlo Baccigalupi137518104722
L. Toffolatti13637695529
Michele Parrinello13363794674
Marzio Nessi129104678641
Luigi Danese12839492073
Lidia Smirnova12794475865
Michele Pinamonti12684669328
David M. Alexander12565260686
Davide Maino12441088117
Dipak Munshi12436584322
Peter Onyisi11469460392
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202322
202279
2021658
2020714
2019712
2018622