134 research outputs found
Two-Tone Optomechanical Instability and Its Fundamental Implications for Backaction-Evading Measurements
While quantum mechanics imposes a fundamental limit on the precision of
interferometric measurements of mechanical motion due to measurement
backaction, the nonlinear nature of the coupling also leads to parametric
instabilities that place practical limits on the sensitivity by limiting the
power in the interferometer. Such instabilities have been extensively studied
in the context of gravitational wave detectors, and their presence has recently
been reported in Advanced LIGO. Here, we observe experimentally and describe
theoretically a new type of optomechanical instability that arises in two-tone
backaction-evading (BAE) measurements, designed to overcome the standard
quantum limit, and demonstrate the effect in the optical domain with a photonic
crystal nanobeam, and in the microwave domain with a micromechanical oscillator
coupled to a microwave resonator. In contrast to the well-known oscillatory
parametric instability that occurs in single-tone, blue-detuned pumping, which
is characterized by a vanishing effective mechanical damping, the parametric
instability in balanced two-tone optomechanics is exponential, and is a result
of small detuning errors in the two pump frequencies. Its origin can be
understood in a rotating frame as the vanishing of the effective mechanical
frequency due to an optical spring effect. Counterintuitively, the instability
occurs even in the presence of perfectly balanced intracavity fields, and can
occur for both signs of detuning. We find excellent quantitative agreement with
our theoretical predictions. Since the constraints on tuning accuracy become
stricter with increasing probe power, it imposes a fundamental limitation on
BAE measurements, as well as other two-tone schemes. In addition to introducing
a new limitation in two-tone BAE measurements, the results also introduce a new
type of nonlinear dynamics in cavity optomechanics
Physical and Morphological Properties of [O II] Emitting Galaxies in the HETDEX Pilot Survey
The Hobby-Eberly Dark Energy Experiment pilot survey identified 284 [O II]
3727 emitting galaxies in a 169 square-arcminute field of sky in the redshift
range 0 < z < 0.57. This line flux limited sample provides a bridge between
studies in the local universe and higher-redshift [O II] surveys. We present an
analysis of the star formation rates (SFRs) of these galaxies as a function of
stellar mass as determined via spectral energy distribution fitting. The [O II]
emitters fall on the "main sequence" of star-forming galaxies with SFR
decreasing at lower masses and redshifts. However, the slope of our relation is
flatter than that found for most other samples, a result of the metallicity
dependence of the [O II] star formation rate indicator. The mass specific SFR
is higher for lower mass objects, supporting the idea that massive galaxies
formed more quickly and efficiently than their lower mass counterparts. This is
confirmed by the fact that the equivalent widths of the [O II] emission lines
trend smaller with larger stellar mass. Examination of the morphologies of the
[O II] emitters reveals that their star formation is not a result of mergers,
and the galaxies' half-light radii do not indicate evolution of physical sizes.Comment: 36 pages, 16 figures, 4 tables, accepted to Ap
Spectral Energy Distribution Fitting of Hetdex Pilot Survey Ly-alpha Emitters in Cosmos and Goods-N
We use broadband photometry extending from the rest-frame UV to the near-IR to fit the individual spectral energy distributions of 63 bright (L(Ly-alpha) greater than 10(exp 43) erg s(exp 1) Ly-alpha emitting galaxies (LAEs) in the redshift range 1.9 less than z less than 3.6. We find that these LAEs are quite heterogeneous, with stellar masses that span over three orders of magnitude, from 7.5 greater than logM/solar mass less than 10.5. Moreover, although most LAEs have small amounts of extinction, some high-mass objects have stellar reddenings as large as E(B V ) is approximately 0.4. Interestingly, in dusty objects the optical depths for Ly-alpha and the UV continuum are always similar, indicating that Ly photons are not undergoing many scatters before escaping their galaxy. In contrast, the ratio of optical depths in low-reddening systems can vary widely, illustrating the diverse nature of the systems. Finally, we show that in the star-formation-rate-log-mass diagram, our LAEs fall above the "main-sequence" defined by z is approximately 3 continuum selected star-forming galaxies. In this respect, they are similar to submillimeter-selected galaxies, although most LAEs have much lower mass
Evaluation of probabilistic photometric redshift estimation approaches for the Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST)
Many scientific investigations of photometric galaxy surveys require redshift estimates, whose uncertainty properties are best encapsulated by photometric redshift (photo-z) posterior probability density functions (PDFs). A plethora of photo-z PDF estimation methodologies abound, producing discrepant results with no consensus on a preferred approach. We present the results of a comprehensive experiment comparing 12 photo-z algorithms applied to mock data produced for The Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time Dark Energy Science Collaboration. By supplying perfect prior information, in the form of the complete template library and a representative training set as inputs to each code, we demonstrate the impact of the assumptions underlying each technique on the output photo-z PDFs. In the absence of a notion of true, unbiased photo-z PDFs, we evaluate and interpret multiple metrics of the ensemble properties of the derived photo-z PDFs as well as traditional reductions to photo-z point estimates. We report systematic biases and overall over/underbreadth of the photo-z PDFs of many popular codes, which may indicate avenues for improvement in the algorithms or implementations. Furthermore, we raise attention to the limitations of established metrics for assessing photo-z PDF accuracy; though we identify the conditional density estimate loss as a promising metric of photo-z PDF performance in the case where true redshifts are available but true photo-z PDFs are not, we emphasize the need for science-specific performance metrics
A Unified Analysis of Four Cosmic Shear Surveys
In the past few years, several independent collaborations have presented
cosmological constraints from tomographic cosmic shear analyses. These analyses
differ in many aspects: the datasets, the shear and photometric redshift
estimation algorithms, the theory model assumptions, and the inference
pipelines. To assess the robustness of the existing cosmic shear results, we
present in this paper a unified analysis of four of the recent cosmic shear
surveys: the Deep Lens Survey (DLS), the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing
Survey (CFHTLenS), the Science Verification data from the Dark Energy Survey
(DES-SV), and the 450 deg release of the Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS-450).
By using a unified pipeline, we show how the cosmological constraints are
sensitive to the various details of the pipeline. We identify several analysis
choices that can shift the cosmological constraints by a significant fraction
of the uncertainties. For our fiducial analysis choice, considering a Gaussian
covariance, conservative scale cuts, assuming no baryonic feedback
contamination, identical cosmological parameter priors and intrinsic alignment
treatments, we find the constraints (mean, 16% and 84% confidence intervals) on
the parameter to be
(DLS), (CFHTLenS),
(DES-SV) and (KiDS-450). From
the goodness-of-fit and the Bayesian evidence ratio, we determine that amongst
the four surveys, the two more recent surveys, DES-SV and KiDS-450, have
acceptable goodness-of-fit and are consistent with each other. The combined
constraints are , which is in good agreement with
the first year of DES cosmic shear results and recent CMB constraints from the
Planck satellite.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures, 7 tables; submitted to MNRA
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