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Search: WFRF:(Jansson P O)

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  • 2017
  • swepub:Mat__t
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4.
  • Mishra, A, et al. (author)
  • Diminishing benefits of urban living for children and adolescents' growth and development
  • 2023
  • In: Nature. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1476-4687 .- 0028-0836. ; 615:7954, s. 874-883
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Optimal growth and development in childhood and adolescence is crucial for lifelong health and well-being1–6. Here we used data from 2,325 population-based studies, with measurements of height and weight from 71 million participants, to report the height and body-mass index (BMI) of children and adolescents aged 5–19 years on the basis of rural and urban place of residence in 200 countries and territories from 1990 to 2020. In 1990, children and adolescents residing in cities were taller than their rural counterparts in all but a few high-income countries. By 2020, the urban height advantage became smaller in most countries, and in many high-income western countries it reversed into a small urban-based disadvantage. The exception was for boys in most countries in sub-Saharan Africa and in some countries in Oceania, south Asia and the region of central Asia, Middle East and north Africa. In these countries, successive cohorts of boys from rural places either did not gain height or possibly became shorter, and hence fell further behind their urban peers. The difference between the age-standardized mean BMI of children in urban and rural areas was <1.1 kg m–2 in the vast majority of countries. Within this small range, BMI increased slightly more in cities than in rural areas, except in south Asia, sub-Saharan Africa and some countries in central and eastern Europe. Our results show that in much of the world, the growth and developmental advantages of living in cities have diminished in the twenty-first century, whereas in much of sub-Saharan Africa they have amplified.
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  • Abbasi, R., et al. (author)
  • Search for decoherence from quantum gravity with atmospheric neutrinos
  • 2024
  • In: Nature Physics. - 1745-2481 .- 1745-2473. ; 20:6, s. 913-920
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Neutrino oscillations at the highest energies and longest baselines can be used to study the structure of spacetime and test the fundamental principles of quantum mechanics. If the metric of spacetime has a quantum mechanical description, its fluctuations at the Planck scale are expected to introduce non-unitary effects that are inconsistent with the standard unitary time evolution of quantum mechanics. Neutrinos interacting with such fluctuations would lose their quantum coherence, deviating from the expected oscillatory flavour composition at long distances and high energies. Here we use atmospheric neutrinos detected by the IceCube South Pole Neutrino Observatory in the energy range of 0.5-10.0 TeV to search for coherence loss in neutrino propagation. We find no evidence of anomalous neutrino decoherence and determine limits on neutrino-quantum gravity interactions. The constraint on the effective decoherence strength parameter within an energy-independent decoherence model improves on previous limits by a factor of 30. For decoherence effects scaling as E2, our limits are advanced by more than six orders of magnitude beyond past measurements compared with the state of the art. Interactions of atmospheric neutrinos with quantum-gravity-induced fluctuations of the metric of spacetime would lead to decoherence. The IceCube Collaboration constrains such interactions with atmospheric neutrinos.
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  • Abbasi, R., et al. (author)
  • Citizen science for IceCube: Name that Neutrino
  • 2024
  • In: European Physical Journal Plus. - 2190-5444. ; 139:6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Name that Neutrino is a citizen science project where volunteers aid in classification of events for the IceCube Neutrino Observatory, an immense particle detector at the geographic South Pole. From March 2023 to September 2023, volunteers did classifications of videos produced from simulated data of both neutrino signal and background interactions. Name that Neutrino obtained more than 128,000 classifications by over 1800 registered volunteers that were compared to results obtained by a deep neural network machine-learning algorithm. Possible improvements for both Name that Neutrino and the deep neural network are discussed.
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  • Abbasi, R., et al. (author)
  • Measurement of atmospheric neutrino mixing with improved IceCube DeepCore calibration and data processing
  • 2023
  • In: Physical Review D. - 2470-0010 .- 2470-0029. ; 108:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We describe a new data sample of IceCube DeepCore and report on the latest measurement of atmospheric neutrino oscillations obtained with data recorded between 2011-2019. The sample includes significant improvements in data calibration, detector simulation, and data processing, and the analysis benefits from a sophisticated treatment of systematic uncertainties, with significantly greater level of detail since our last study. By measuring the relative fluxes of neutrino flavors as a function of their reconstructed energies and arrival directions we constrain the atmospheric neutrino mixing parameters to be sin2θ23=0.51±0.05 and Δm322=2.41±0.07×10-3 eV2, assuming a normal mass ordering. The errors include both statistical and systematic uncertainties. The resulting 40% reduction in the error of both parameters with respect to our previous result makes this the most precise measurement of oscillation parameters using atmospheric neutrinos. Our results are also compatible and complementary to those obtained using neutrino beams from accelerators, which are obtained at lower neutrino energies and are subject to different sources of uncertainties.
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  • Abbasi, R., et al. (author)
  • Search for Continuous and Transient Neutrino Emission Associated with IceCube's Highest-energy Tracks: An 11 yr Analysis
  • 2024
  • In: Astrophysical Journal. - 1538-4357 .- 0004-637X. ; 964:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • IceCube alert events are neutrinos with a moderate-to-high probability of having astrophysical origin. In this study, we analyze 11 yr of IceCube data and investigate 122 alert events and a selection of high-energy tracks detected between 2009 and the end of 2021. This high-energy event selection (alert events + high-energy tracks) has an average probability of >= 0.5 of being of astrophysical origin. We search for additional continuous and transient neutrino emission within the high-energy events' error regions. We find no evidence for significant continuous neutrino emission from any of the alert event directions. The only locally significant neutrino emission is the transient emission associated with the blazar TXS 0506+056, with a local significance of 3 sigma, which confirms previous IceCube studies. When correcting for 122 test positions, the global p-value is 0.156 and compatible with the background hypothesis. We constrain the total continuous flux emitted from all 122 test positions at 100 TeV to be below 1.2 x 10-15 (TeV cm2 s)-1 at 90% confidence assuming an E -2 spectrum. This corresponds to 4.5% of IceCube's astrophysical diffuse flux. Overall, we find no indication that alert events in general are linked to lower-energetic continuous or transient neutrino emission.
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  • Result 1-10 of 163
Type of publication
journal article (137)
conference paper (16)
other publication (3)
book chapter (3)
research review (2)
doctoral thesis (1)
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Type of content
peer-reviewed (139)
other academic/artistic (22)
pop. science, debate, etc. (1)
Author/Editor
Jansson, Stefan P.O. ... (53)
Jansson, M. (13)
Ohlsson, Claes, 1965 (13)
Jansson, John-Olov, ... (13)
Wareham, Nicholas J. (12)
Loos, Ruth J F (12)
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Lorentzon, Mattias, ... (11)
Vandenput, Liesbeth, ... (10)
Perola, Markus (10)
Deloukas, Panos (10)
Franks, Paul W. (10)
Luan, Jian'an (10)
Borecki, Ingrid B. (10)
Diaz, A. (9)
Rolandsson, Olov (9)
Chen, Z. (9)
Salomaa, Veikko (9)
Lind, Lars (9)
Kuusisto, Johanna (9)
Laakso, Markku (9)
McCarthy, Mark I (9)
Peters, Annette (9)
Samani, Nilesh J. (9)
Barroso, Ines (9)
Harris, Tamara B (9)
Gudnason, Vilmundur (9)
Chen, C. (8)
Bai, X. (8)
Kumar, A. (8)
Sarkar, S. (8)
Evans, J. (8)
Peterson, J. (8)
Delgado, D. (8)
Gudnason, V (8)
Rudan, Igor (8)
Eriksson, Joel (8)
Ridker, Paul M. (8)
Chasman, Daniel I. (8)
van Duijn, Cornelia ... (8)
Boehnke, Michael (8)
Jansson, Jan-Håkan (8)
Kathiresan, Sekar (8)
Rivadeneira, Fernand ... (8)
Zhao, Jing Hua (8)
Hofman, Albert (8)
Hayward, Caroline (8)
Boerwinkle, Eric (8)
Willer, Cristen J (8)
Feitosa, Mary F. (8)
Morris, Andrew P. (8)
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University
Uppsala University (69)
Karolinska Institutet (54)
Örebro University (52)
Lund University (43)
University of Gothenburg (32)
Umeå University (32)
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Linköping University (18)
Royal Institute of Technology (12)
Stockholm University (9)
Chalmers University of Technology (7)
Linnaeus University (3)
Högskolan Dalarna (3)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (2)
University of Skövde (1)
RISE (1)
Karlstad University (1)
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Language
English (150)
Swedish (9)
Undefined language (4)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Medical and Health Sciences (99)
Natural sciences (28)
Engineering and Technology (3)
Social Sciences (2)

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