I specialize in Distributed Acoustic Sensing, developing methods to use telecommunication fibers as dense seismic arrays. I'm exploring the capability of DAS to monitor environmental signals & its role in mitigating Newtonian noise for current & future gravitational wave detectors like LIGO and Einstein Telescope.
Recommended citation: Serena, Paolo and Lasagni, Chiara and Rading, Reinhardt (n.d.). INTERPLAY OF MODAL DISPERSION AND NONLINEAR INTERFERENCE IN FIBER OPTIC SYSTEMS. .
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.12282, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, A and Abouelfettouh, I and Acernese, F and Ackley, K and Adamcewicz, C and Adhicary, S and Adhikari, D and Adhikari, N and Adhikari, RX and Adkins, VK and others (2025). All-sky search for long-duration gravitational-wave transients in the first part of the fourth LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Observing run. arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.12282.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.13523, 2025
Recommended citation: Rading, Reinhardt and Badaracco, Fracensca and Beis, Spiridon and Isleif, Katharina Sophie and Ophardt, Paul and Vossius, Wanda and WAVE Collaboration and others (2025). Distributed Acoustic Sensing for Environmental Monitoring, and Newtonian Noise Mitigation: Comparable Sensitivity to Seismometers. arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.13523.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.12263, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, Adrian and Abramo, Raul and Albanesi, Simone and Albertini, Angelica and Agapito, Alessandro and Agathos, Michalis and Albertus, Conrado and Andersson, Nils and Andrade, Tomás and Andreoni, Igor and others (2025). The science of the Einstein telescope. arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.12263.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.20721, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, AG and Abouelfettouh, I and Acernese, F and Ackley, K and Adamcewicz, C and Adhicary, S and Adhikari, D and Adhikari, N and Adhikari, RX and Adkins, VK and others (2025). Upper Limits on the Isotropic Gravitational-Wave Background from the first part of LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA's fourth Observing Run. arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.20721.
As human beings, we are deeply emotional. Our emotions are not flaws—they are proof that we are alive, connected, and aware. Unless we are entirely detached or suffering from conditions that strip away empathy, emotions are central to our human experience.
Take a deep breath. Imagine yourself watching an engrossing film, whether in a theater or at home. Hours pass, the story unfolds, and eventually the screen fades to black. Just as every show must end, so too must our lives. The difference is that, unlike a film, the timing of our ending is unknown—it could come today, tomorrow, years, or decades from now.
These are the reflections I’ve gathered, visualized, and written down as I practice Stoicism. They echo the reminders in Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations—guides on how to remain aligned with the Stoic path.
In a hundred years, I will be gone, forgotten. Those who remember me will also vanish. Like grains of Sahara sand swept away by the wind, my brief life will dissolve into nothing.
Whatever happens to me has already been set in motion by nature. It is manageable.
Plato died. Pythagoras died. Socrates died. Marcus Aurelius died. All of them went the same way, and so will I.
If someone hates me—that is their burden. If someone is racist—that is their problem, not mine.
Death is always near. Why then do I not live in the present?
I cannot control much: my health, my friends’ laughter at my expense, the judgments of others. None of it matters. What I can control is my mind.
With age, I will weaken. I will fall ill. My teeth will no longer crush food as they once did. I have no command over what logos has decided for me. Yet even Marcus, when sick, continued his duties.
Death is not evil—it is like sleep. Sleep, cousin to death, is dreamless and silent. Do I fear it? Even if it is terrible, should I not still long to dine with the gods?
Before acting, I should ask: Is this necessary?
When speaking, I should speak less than is necessary.
Recommended citation: Serena, Paolo and Lasagni, Chiara and Rading, Reinhardt (2021). INTERPLAY OF MODAL DISPERSION AND NONLINEAR INTERFERENCE IN FIBER OPTIC SYSTEMS. .
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.12282, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, A and Abouelfettouh, I and Acernese, F and Ackley, K and Adamcewicz, C and Adhicary, S and Adhikari, D and Adhikari, N and Adhikari, RX and Adkins, VK and others (2025). All-sky search for long-duration gravitational-wave transients in the first part of the fourth LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Observing run. arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.12282.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.13523, 2025
Recommended citation: Rading, Reinhardt and Badaracco, Fracensca and Beis, Spiridon and Isleif, Katharina Sophie and Ophardt, Paul and Vossius, Wanda and WAVE Collaboration and others (2025). Distributed Acoustic Sensing for Environmental Monitoring, and Newtonian Noise Mitigation: Comparable Sensitivity to Seismometers. arXiv preprint arXiv:2507.13523.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.12263, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, Adrian and Abramo, Raul and Albanesi, Simone and Albertini, Angelica and Agapito, Alessandro and Agathos, Michalis and Albertus, Conrado and Andersson, Nils and Andrade, Tomás and Andreoni, Igor and others (2025). The science of the Einstein telescope. arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.12263.
Published in arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.20721, 2025
Recommended citation: Abac, AG and Abouelfettouh, I and Acernese, F and Ackley, K and Adamcewicz, C and Adhicary, S and Adhikari, D and Adhikari, N and Adhikari, RX and Adkins, VK and others (2025). Upper Limits on the Isotropic Gravitational-Wave Background from the first part of LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA's fourth Observing Run. arXiv preprint arXiv:2508.20721.