565 research outputs found
Imprints of the quasar structure in time-delay light curves: Microlensing-aided reverberation mapping
Owing to the advent of large area photometric surveys, the possibility to use
broad band photometric data, instead of spectra, to measure the size of the
broad line region of active galactic nuclei, has raised a large interest. We
describe here a new method using time-delay lensed quasars where one or several
images are affected by microlensing due to stars in the lensing galaxy. Because
microlensing decreases (or increases) the flux of the continuum compared to the
broad line region, it changes the contrast between these two emission
components. We show that this effect can be used to effectively disentangle the
intrinsic variability of those two regions, offering the opportunity to perform
reverberation mapping based on single band photometric data. Based on simulated
light curves generated using a damped random walk model of quasar variability,
we show that measurement of the size of the broad line region can be achieved
using this method, provided one spectrum has been obtained independently during
the monitoring. This method is complementary to photometric reverberation
mapping and could also be extended to multi-band data. Because the effect
described above produces a variability pattern in difference light curves
between pairs of lensed images which is correlated with the time-lagged
continuum variability, it can potentially produce systematic errors in
measurement of time delays between pairs of lensed images. Simple simulations
indicate that time-delay measurement techniques which use a sufficiently
flexible model for the extrinsic variability are not affected by this effect
and produce accurate time delays.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Stellar classification from single-band imaging using machine learning
Information on the spectral types of stars is of great interest in view of
the exploitation of space-based imaging surveys. In this article, we
investigate the classification of stars into spectral types using only the
shape of their diffraction pattern in a single broad-band image. We propose a
supervised machine learning approach to this endeavour, based on principal
component analysis (PCA) for dimensionality reduction, followed by artificial
neural networks (ANNs) estimating the spectral type. Our analysis is performed
with image simulations mimicking the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced
Camera for Surveys (ACS) in the F606W and F814W bands, as well as the Euclid
VIS imager. We first demonstrate this classification in a simple context,
assuming perfect knowledge of the point spread function (PSF) model and the
possibility of accurately generating mock training data for the machine
learning. We then analyse its performance in a fully data-driven situation, in
which the training would be performed with a limited subset of bright stars
from a survey, and an unknown PSF with spatial variations across the detector.
We use simulations of main-sequence stars with flat distributions in spectral
type and in signal-to-noise ratio, and classify these stars into 13 spectral
subclasses, from O5 to M5. Under these conditions, the algorithm achieves a
high success rate both for Euclid and HST images, with typical errors of half a
spectral class. Although more detailed simulations would be needed to assess
the performance of the algorithm on a specific survey, this shows that stellar
classification from single-band images is well possible.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, accepted in A&
Firedec: a two-channel finite-resolution image deconvolution algorithm
We present a two-channel deconvolution method that decomposes images into a
parametric point-source channel and a pixelized extended-source channel. Based
on the central idea of the deconvolution algorithm proposed by Magain, Courbin
& Sohy (1998), the method aims at improving the resolution of the data rather
than at completely removing the point spread function (PSF). Improvements over
the original method include a better regularization of the pixel channel of the
image, based on wavelet filtering and multiscale analysis, and a better
controlled separation of the point source vs. the extended source. In addition,
the method is able to simultaneously deconvolve many individual frames of the
same object taken with different instruments under different PSF conditions.
For this purpose, we introduce a general geometric transformation between
individual images. This transformation allows the combination of the images
without having to interpolate them. We illustrate the capability of our
algorithm using real and simulated images with complex diffraction-limited PSF.Comment: Accepted in A&A. An application of the technique to real data is
available in Cantale et al. http://arxiv.org/abs/1601.05192v
Conditions for ß-perfectness
A ß-perfect graph is a simple graph G such that ¿(G') = ß(G') for every induced subgraph G' of G, where ¿(G') is the chromatic number of G', and ß(G') is defined as the maximum over all induced subgraphs H of G' of the minimum vertex degree in H plus 1 (i.e., d(H)+1). The vertices of a ß-perfect graph G can be coloured with ¿(G) colours in polynomial time (greedily). The main purpose of this paper is to give necessary and sufficient conditions, in terms of forbidden induced subgraphs, for a graph to be ß-perfect. We give new sufficient conditions and make improvements to sufficient conditions previously given by others. We also mention a necessary condition which generalizes the fact that no ß-perfect graph contains an even hole
COSMOGRAIL: the COSmological MOnitoring of GRAvItational Lenses XV. Assessing the achievability and precision of time-delay measurements
COSMOGRAIL is a long-term photometric monitoring of gravitationally lensed
QSOs aimed at implementing Refsdal's time-delay method to measure cosmological
parameters, in particular H0. Given long and well sampled light curves of
strongly lensed QSOs, time-delay measurements require numerical techniques
whose quality must be assessed. To this end, and also in view of future
monitoring programs or surveys such as the LSST, a blind signal processing
competition named Time Delay Challenge 1 (TDC1) was held in 2014. The aim of
the present paper, which is based on the simulated light curves from the TDC1,
is double. First, we test the performance of the time-delay measurement
techniques currently used in COSMOGRAIL. Second, we analyse the quantity and
quality of the harvest of time delays obtained from the TDC1 simulations. To
achieve these goals, we first discover time delays through a careful inspection
of the light curves via a dedicated visual interface. Our measurement
algorithms can then be applied to the data in an automated way. We show that
our techniques have no significant biases, and yield adequate uncertainty
estimates resulting in reduced chi2 values between 0.5 and 1.0. We provide
estimates for the number and precision of time-delay measurements that can be
expected from future time-delay monitoring campaigns as a function of the
photometric signal-to-noise ratio and of the true time delay. We make our blind
measurements on the TDC1 data publicly availableComment: 11 pages, 8 figures, published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
First case of strong gravitational lensing by a QSO : SDSS J0013+1523 at z = 0.120
We present the first case of strong gravitational lensing by a QSO : SDSS
J0013+1523, at z = 0.120. The discovery is the result of a systematic search
for emission lines redshifted behind QSOs, among 22298 spectra of the SDSS data
release 7. Apart from the z = 0.120 spectral features of the foreground QSO,
the spectrum of SDSS J0013+1523 also displays the OII and Hbeta emission lines
and the OIII doublet, all at the same redshift, z = 0.640. Using sharp Keck
adaptive optics K-band images obtained using laser guide stars, we unveil two
objects within a radius of 2 arcsec from the QSO. Deep Keck optical
spectroscopy clearly confirms one of these objects at z = 0.640 and shows
traces of the OIII, emission line of the second object, also at z = 0.640. Lens
modeling suggests that they represent two images of the same z = 0.640
emission-line galaxy. Our Keck spectra also allow us to measure the redshift of
an intervening galaxy at z = 0.394, located 3.2 arcsec away from the line of
sight to the QSO. If the z = 0.120 QSO host galaxy is modeled as a singular
isothermal sphere, its mass within the Einstein radius is M_E(r < 1 kpc) =
2.16e10 M_Sun and its velocity dispersion is sigma_SIS = 169 km/s. This is
about 1 sigma away from the velocity dispersion estimated from the width of the
QSO Hbeta emission line, sigma_*(M_BH) = 124 +/- 47 km/s. Deep optical HST
imaging will be necessary to constrain the total radial mass profile of the QSO
host galaxy using the detailed shape of the lensed source. This first case of a
QSO acting as a strong lens on a more distant object opens new directions in
the study of QSO host galaxies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letters. Added
new Keck spectroscop
Bobcat Predation on Quail, Birds, and Mesomammals
We reviewed 54 scientific articles about bobcat (Lynx rufus) food habits to determine the occurrence of quail, birds, and mesopredators including red (Vulpes vulpes) and gray fox (Urocyon cinereoargenteus), raccoon (Procyon lotor), skunk (Mephitis spp.), and opossum (Didelphis virginianus). Quail (Colinus virginianus, Cyrtonyx montezumae, Callipepla squamata, C. gambelii, C. californica, Oreortyx pictus) were found in 9 diet studies and constituted 3% of the bobcat diet in only 2 of 54 studies. Birds occurred in 47 studies, but were also a minor dietary component in most studies. Although mesopredators were represented as bobcat prey in 33 of 47 studies, their percent occurrence within bobcat diets was low and showed regional patterns of occurrence. Bobcats are a minor quail predator, but felid effects on mesopredators and secondary impacts on quail need to be studied
A Consistent Picture Emerges: A Compact X-ray Continuum Emission Region in the Gravitationally Lensed Quasar SDSS J0924+0219
We analyze the optical, UV, and X-ray microlensing variability of the lensed
quasar SDSS J0924+0219 using six epochs of Chandra data in two energy bands
(spanning 0.4-8.0 keV, or 1-20 keV in the quasar rest frame), 10 epochs of
F275W (rest-frame 1089A) Hubble Space Telescope data, and high-cadence R-band
(rest-frame 2770A) monitoring spanning eleven years. Our joint analysis
provides robust constraints on the extent of the X-ray continuum emission
region and the projected area of the accretion disk. The best-fit half-light
radius of the soft X-ray continuum emission region is between 5x10^13 and 10^15
cm, and we find an upper limit of 10^15 cm for the hard X-rays. The best-fit
soft-band size is about 13 times smaller than the optical size, and roughly 7
GM_BH/c^2 for a 2.8x10^8 M_sol black hole, similar to the results for other
systems. We find that the UV emitting region falls in between the optical and
X-ray emitting regions at 10^14 cm < r_1/2,UV < 3x10^15 cm. Finally, the
optical size is significantly larger, by 1.5*sigma, than the theoretical
thin-disk estimate based on the observed, magnification-corrected I-band flux,
suggesting a shallower temperature profile than expected for a standard disk.Comment: Replaced with accepted version to Ap
Nudged Elastic Band calculation of the binding potential for liquids at interfaces
The wetting behavior of a liquid on solid substrates is governed by the
nature of the effective interaction between the liquid-gas and the solid-liquid
interfaces, which is described by the binding or wetting potential which
is an excess free energy per unit area that depends on the liquid film height
. Given a microscopic theory for the liquid, to determine one must
calculate the free energy for liquid films of any given value of ; i.e. one
needs to create and analyze out-of-equilibrium states, since at equilibrium
there is a unique value of , specified by the temperature and chemical
potential of the surrounding gas. Here we introduce a Nudged Elastic Band (NEB)
approach to calculate and illustrate the method by applying it in
conjunction with a microscopic lattice density functional theory for the
liquid. We show too that the NEB results are identical to those obtained with
an established method based on using a fictitious additional potential to
stabilize the non-equilibrium states. The advantages of the NEB approach are
discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
A fast empirical method for galaxy shape measurements in weak lensing surveys
We describe a simple and fast method to correct ellipticity measurements of
galaxies from the distortion by the instrumental and atmospheric point spread
function (PSF), in view of weak lensing shear measurements. The method performs
a classification of galaxies and associated PSFs according to measured shape
parameters, and corrects the measured galaxy ellipticites by querying a large
lookup table (LUT), built by supervised learning. We have applied this new
method to the GREAT10 image analysis challenge, and present in this paper a
refined solution that obtains the competitive quality factor of Q = 104,
without any shear power spectrum denoising or training. Of particular interest
is the efficiency of the method, with a processing time below 3 ms per galaxy
on an ordinary CPU.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Metric values updated according to the final
GREAT10 analysis software (Kitching et al. 2012, MNRAS 423, 3163-3208), no
qualitative changes. Associated code available at
http://lastro.epfl.ch/megalu
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