773 research outputs found
Neutrino cross-section measurement with neutrinos from muon decay
In this paper we stress the idea that new, more precise neutrino
cross-sections measurements at low energies will be necessary to improve the
results of future big neutrino detectors, which will be dominated by the
contribution of the systematic errors. The use of a muon beam instead of the
traditional pion beams is proposed. This choice allows the simultaneous
measurement of both, numu and nue interactions and the two helicities, in a
clean environment and with a precise knowledge of the beam flux. We show that
with approx 10^{15} mu's/year and a moderate mass detector (approx 100 tons)
placed close to the muon storage ring, precisions of the order of 10% in
sigma(nu) (E_nu bin size of 100 MeV) can be reached for neutrino energies below
2 GeV.Comment: 4 pages, proceeding to NUFACT0
A Possible Origin of Dark Energy
We discuss the possibility that the existence of dark energy may be due to
the presence of a spin zero field , either elementary or composite. In
the presence of other matter field, the transformation
constant can generate a negative pressure, like the cosmological constant. In
this picture, our universe can be thought as a very large bag, similar to the
much smaller MIT bag model for a single nucleon.Comment: 4 pages, no figure, typos correcte
The Rising Light Curves of Type Ia Supernovae
We present an analysis of the early, rising light curves of 18 Type Ia
supernovae (SNe Ia) discovered by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) and the
La Silla-QUEST variability survey (LSQ). We fit these early data flux using a
simple power-law to determine the time of first
light , and hence the rise-time from first light to
peak luminosity, and the exponent of the power-law rise (). We find a mean
uncorrected rise time of days, with individual SN rise-times
ranging from to days. The exponent n shows significant
departures from the simple 'fireball model' of (or ) usually assumed in the literature. With a mean value of , our data also show significant diversity from event to event. This
deviation has implications for the distribution of 56Ni throughout the SN
ejecta, with a higher index suggesting a lesser degree of 56Ni mixing. The
range of n found also confirms that the 56Ni distribution is not standard
throughout the population of SNe Ia, in agreement with earlier work measuring
such abundances through spectral modelling. We also show that the duration of
the very early light curve, before the luminosity has reached half of its
maximal value, does not correlate with the light curve shape or stretch used to
standardise SNe Ia in cosmological applications. This has implications for the
cosmological fitting of SN Ia light curves.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Time Domain Explorations With Digital Sky Surveys
One of the new frontiers of astronomical research is the exploration of time
variability on the sky at different wavelengths and flux levels. We have
carried out a pilot project using DPOSS data to study strong variables and
transients, and are now extending it to the new Palomar-QUEST synoptic sky
survey. We report on our early findings and outline the methodology to be
implemented in preparation for a real-time transient detection pipeline. In
addition to large numbers of known types of highly variable sources (e.g., SNe,
CVs, OVV QSOs, etc.), we expect to find numerous transients whose nature may be
established by a rapid follow-up. Whereas we will make all detected variables
publicly available through the web, we anticipate that email alerts would be
issued in the real time for a subset of events deemed to be the most
interesting. This real-time process entails many challenges, in an effort to
maintain a high completeness while keeping the contamination low. We will
utilize distributed Grid services developed by the GRIST project, and implement
a variety of advanced statistical and machine learning techniques.Comment: 5 pages, 2 postscript figures, uses adassconf.sty. To be published
in: "ADASS XIV (2004)", Eds. Patrick Shopbell, Matthew Britton and Rick
Ebert, ASP Conference Serie
Chiral-loop and vector-meson contributions to eta -> pi pi gamma gamma decays
The process eta -> pi0 pi0 gamma gamma is discussed in Chiral Perturbation
Theory (ChPT) extending two recent analyses. Special attention is devoted to
one-loop corrections, eta-eta' mixing effects and vector-meson dominance of
ChPT counter-terms. The less interesting eta -> pi^+ pi^- gamma gamma
transition is briefly discussed too.Comment: 15 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses epsfig.st
The QUEST large area CCD camera
We have designed, constructed, and put into operation a very large area CCD camera that covers the field of view of the 1.2 m Samuel Oschin Schmidt Telescope at the Palomar Observatory. The camera consists of 112 CCDs arranged in a mosaic of four rows with 28 CCDs each. The CCDs are 600 x 2400 pixel Sarnoff thinned, back-illuminated devices with 13 µm x 13 µm pixels. The camera covers an area of 4.6° x 3.6° on the sky with an active area of 9.6 deg_2. This camera has been installed at the prime focus of the telescope and commissioned, and scientific-quality observations on the Palomar-QUEST Variability Sky Survey were started in 2003 September. The design considerations, construction features, and performance parameters of this camera are described in this paper
The Low-Redshift Quasar-Quasar Correlation Function from an Extragalactic Halpha Emission-Line Survey to z=0.4
We study the large-scale spatial distribution of low-redshift quasars and
Seyfert~1 galaxies using a sample of 106 luminous emission-line objects
() selected by their H emission lines in a
far-red objective prism survey (). Of the 106 objects, 25 were
previously known AGN (Veron-Cetty and Veron 2000), and follow-up spectroscopy
for an additional 53 objects (including all object pairs with separation r <
20 \hmpc) confirmed 48 AGN and 5 narrow emission-line galaxies (NELGs). The
calculated amplitude of the spatial two-point correlation function for the
emission-line sample is A = 0.4 \cdot \bar{\xi}(r < 20 \hmpc) \cdot 20^{1.8} =
142 \pm 53. Eliminating the confirmed NELGs from the sample we obtain the AGN
clustering amplitude . Using Monte Carlo simulations we reject
the hypothesis that the observed pair counts were drawn from a random
distribution at the 99.97% and 98.6% confidence levels for the entire sample
and the AGN subset respectively. We measure a decrease in the quasar clustering
amplitude by a factor of between and ,
and present the coordinates, redshifts, and follow-up spectroscopy for the 15
previously unknown AGN and 4 luminous NELGs that contribute to the clustering
signal.Comment: ApJ, in press, Vol 548, added follow-up spectroscop
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