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Institution

University of Warsaw

EducationWarsaw, Poland
About: University of Warsaw is a education organization based out in Warsaw, Poland. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Large Hadron Collider. The organization has 20832 authors who have published 56617 publications receiving 1185084 citations. The organization is also known as: Uniwersytet Warszawski & Warsaw University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Y. Fukuda1, T. Hayakawa1, E. Ichihara1, Kunio Inoue1, K. Ishihara1, H. Ishino1, Yoshitaka Itow1, Takaaki Kajita1, J. Kameda1, S. Kasuga1, Ken-ichiro Kobayashi1, Yohei Kobayashi1, Yusuke Koshio1, K. Martens2, K. Martens1, M. Miura1, Masayuki Nakahata1, S. Nakayama1, A. Okada1, M. Oketa1, Ko Okumura1, M. Ota1, N. Sakurai1, Masato Shiozawa1, Yasunari Suzuki1, Y. Takeuchi1, Y. Totsuka1, Shinya Yamada1, M. Earl3, Alec Habig3, E. Kearns3, S. B. Kim3, S. B. Kim4, M. D. Messier3, Kate Scholberg3, J. L. Stone3, L. R. Sulak3, C. W. Walter3, M. Goldhaber5, T. Barszczak6, W. Gajewski6, P. G. Halverson6, J. Hsu6, W. R. Kropp6, L. R. Price6, Frederick Reines6, Henry W. Sobel6, Mark R. Vagins6, K. S. Ganezer7, W. E. Keig7, R. W. Ellsworth8, Shigeki Tasaka9, J. W. Flanagan, A. Kibayashi, John G. Learned, S. Matsuno, V. J. Stenger, D. Takemori, T. Ishii, Junichi Kanzaki, T. Kobayashi, K. Nakamura, K. Nishikawa, Yuichi Oyama, A. Sakai, Makoto Sakuda, O. Sasaki10, S. Echigo11, M. Kohama11, A. T. Suzuki11, Todd Haines6, Todd Haines12, E. Blaufuss2, R. Sanford2, R. Svoboda2, M. L. Chen13, Z. Conner14, Z. Conner13, J. A. Goodman13, G. W. Sullivan13, Masaki Mori1, Masaki Mori15, J. Hill10, C. K. Jung10, C. Mauger10, C. McGrew10, E. Sharkey10, B. Viren10, C. Yanagisawa10, W. Doki16, T. Ishizuka17, T. Ishizuka16, Y. Kitaguchi16, H. Koga16, Kazumasa Miyano16, H. Okazawa16, C. Saji16, M. Takahata16, A. Kusano18, Y. Nagashima18, M. Takita18, Takashi Yamaguchi18, Minoru Yoshida18, M. Etoh19, K. Fujita19, Akira Hasegawa19, Takehisa Hasegawa19, S. Hatakeyama19, T. Iwamoto19, T. Kinebuchi19, M. Koga19, Tomoyuki Maruyama19, Hiroshi Ogawa19, A. Suzuki19, F. Tsushima19, Masatoshi Koshiba1, M. Nemoto20, Kyoshi Nishijima20, T. Futagami21, Y. Hayato21, Y. Kanaya21, K. Kaneyuki21, Y. Watanabe21, D. Kielczewska22, D. Kielczewska6, R. A. Doyle23, J. S. George23, A. L. Stachyra23, L. Wai23, J. Wilkes23, K. K. Young23 
TL;DR: In this paper, the flavor ratio of the atmospheric neutrino flux and its zenith angle dependence have been studied in the multi-GeV energy range using an exposure of 25.5 kiloton-years of the Super-Kamiokande detector.

270 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Structural and biochemical approaches revealed that CNOT1 modulates the conformation of DDX6 and stimulates ATPase activity, and provided insights into the repressive steps downstream of the GW182/TNRC6 proteins and the role of the CCR4-NOT complex in posttranscriptional regulation in general.

269 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Sergei Afanasiev1, T. Alber2, H. Appelshäuser, J. Bächler3  +146 moreInstitutions (13)
TL;DR: The NA49 detector as mentioned in this paper is a wide acceptance spectrometer for the study of hadron production in p+p, p+A, and A+A collisions at the CERN SPS.
Abstract: The NA49 detector is a wide acceptance spectrometer for the study of hadron production in p+p, p+A, and A+A collisions at the CERN SPS. The main components are 4 large-volume TPCs for tracking and particle identification via dE/dx. TOF scintillator arrays complement particle identification. Calorimeters for transverse energy determination and triggering, a detector for centrality selection in p+A collisions, and beam definition detectors complete the set-up. A description of all detector components is given with emphasis on new technical realizations. Performance and operational experience are discussed in particular with respect to the high track density environment of central Pb+Pb collisions.

269 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of isolated horizon angular momentum was introduced and extended to the rotating case of non-rotating black holes, and the first law was extended to rotating case.
Abstract: Black hole mechanics was recently extended by replacing the more commonly used event horizons in stationary space-times with isolated horizons in more general space-times (which may admit radiation arbitrarily close to black holes). However, so far the detailed analysis has been restricted to nonrotating black holes (although it incorporated arbitrary distortion, as well as electromagnetic, Yang-Mills, and dilatonic charges). We now fill this gap by first introducing the notion of isolated horizon angular momentum and then extending the first law to the rotating case.

269 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Peter A. R. Ade1, Nabila Aghanim2, Monique Arnaud3, M. Ashdown4  +270 moreInstitutions (61)
TL;DR: The Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) as mentioned in this paper is an early version of the ERCSC, which consists of data that consists of mapping the entire sky once and 60% of the sky a second time by Planck.
Abstract: A brief description of the methodology of construction, contents and usage of the Planck Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC), including the Early Cold Cores (ECC) and the Early Sunyaev-Zeldovich (ESZ) cluster catalogue is provided. The catalogue is based on data that consist of mapping the entire sky once and 60% of the sky a second time by Planck, thereby comprising the first high sensitivity radio/submillimetre observations of the entire sky. Four source detection algorithms were run as part of the ERCSC pipeline. A Monte-Carlo algorithm based on the injection and extraction of artificial sources into the Planck maps was implemented to select reliable sources among all extracted candidates such that the cumulative reliability of the catalogue is ≥90%. There is no requirement on completeness for the ERCSC. As a result of the Monte-Carlo assessment of reliability of sources from the different techniques, an implementation of the PowellSnakes source extraction technique was used at the five frequencies between 30 and 143GHz while the SExtractor technique was used between 217 and 857GHz. The 10σ photometric flux density limit of the catalogue at |b| > 30° is 0.49, 1.0, 0.67, 0.5, 0.33, 0.28, 0.25, 0.47 and 0.82 Jy at each of the nine frequencies between 30 and 857GHz. Sources which are up to a factor of ~2 fainter than this limit, and which are present in “clean” regions of the Galaxy where the sky background due to emission from the interstellar medium is low, are included in the ERCSC if they meet the high reliability criterion. The Planck ERCSC sources have known associations to stars with dust shells, stellar cores, radio galaxies, blazars, infrared luminous galaxies and Galactic interstellar medium features. A significant fraction of unclassified sources are also present in the catalogs. In addition, two early release catalogs that contain 915 cold molecular cloud core candidates and 189 SZ cluster candidates that have been generated using multifrequency algorithms are presented. The entire source list, with more than 15000 unique sources, is ripe for follow-up characterisation with Herschel, ATCA, VLA, SOFIA, ALMA and other ground-based observing facilities.

268 citations


Authors

Showing all 21191 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alexander Malakhov139148699556
Emmanuelle Perez138155099016
Piotr Zalewski135138889976
Krzysztof Doroba133144089029
Hector F. DeLuca133130369395
Krzysztof M. Gorski132380105912
Igor Golutvin131128288559
Jan Krolikowski131128983994
Michal Szleper130123882036
Anatoli Zarubin129120486435
Malgorzata Kazana129117581106
Artur Kalinowski129116281906
Predrag Milenovic129118581144
Marcin Konecki128117879392
Karol Bunkowski128119279455
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023176
2022619
20212,882
20203,208
20193,130
20183,164