5,306 research outputs found
New measurements of cosmic infrared background fluctuations from early epochs
Cosmic infrared background fluctuations may contain measurable contribution
from objects inaccessible to current telescopic studies, such as the first
stars and other luminous objects in the first Gyr of the Universe's evolution.
In an attempt to uncover this contribution we have analyzed the GOODS data
obtained with the Spitzer IRAC instrument, which are deeper and cover larger
scales than the Spitzer data we have previously analyzed. Here we report these
new measurements of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) fluctuations remaining
after removing cosmic sources to fainter levels than before. The remaining
anisotropies on scales > 0.5 arcmin have a significant clustering component
with a low shot-noise contribution. We show that these fluctuations cannot be
accounted for by instrumental effects, nor by the Solar system and Galactic
foreground emissions and must arise from extragalactic sources.Comment: Ap.J.Letters, in pres
Cosmic Infrared Background Fluctuations and Zodiacal Light
We have performed a specific observational test to measure the effect that
the zodiacal light can have on measurements of the spatial fluctuations of the
near-IR background. Previous estimates of possible fluctuations caused by
zodiacal light have often been extrapolated from observations of the thermal
emission at longer wavelengths and low angular resolution, or from IRAC
observations of high latitude fields where zodiacal light is faint and not
strongly varying with time. The new observations analyzed here target the
COSMOS field, at low ecliptic latitude where the zodiacal light intensity
varies by factors of over the range of solar elongations at which the
field can be observed. We find that the white noise component of the spatial
power spectrum of the background is correlated with the modeled zodiacal light
intensity. Roughly half of the measured white noise is correlated with the
zodiacal light, but a more detailed interpretation of the white noise is
hampered by systematic uncertainties that are evident in the zodiacal light
model. At large angular scales () where excess power above the
white noise is observed, we find no correlation of the power with the modeled
intensity of the zodiacal light. This test clearly indicates that the large
scale power in the infrared background is not being caused by the zodiacal
light.Comment: 17 pp. Accepted for publication in the Ap
Demonstrating the negligible contribution of optical ACS/HST galaxies to source-subtracted cosmic infrared background fluctuations in deep IRAC/Spitzer images
We study the possible contribution of optical galaxies detected with the {\it
Hubble} ACS instrument to the near-IR cosmic infrared (CIB) fluctuations in
deep {\it Spitzer} images. The {\it Spitzer} data used in this analysis are
obtained in the course of the GOODS project from which we select four
independent regions observed at both 3.6 and 4.5
\um. ACS source catalogs for all of these areas are used to construct maps
containing only their emissions in the ACS -bands. We find that
deep Spitzer data exhibit CIB fluctuations remaining after removal of
foreground galaxies of a very different clustering pattern at both 3.6 and 4.5
\um than the ACS galaxies could contribute. We also find that there are very
good correlations between the ACS galaxies and the {\it removed} galaxies in
the Spitzer maps, but practically no correlations remain with the residual
Spitzer maps used to identify the CIB fluctuations. These contributions become
negligible on larger scales used to probe the CIB fluctuations arising from
clustering. This means that the ACS galaxies cannot contribute to the
large-scale CIB fluctuations found in the residual Spitzer data. The absence of
their contributions also means that the CIB fluctuations arise at z\gsim 7.5
as the Lyman break of their sources must be redshifted past the longest ACS
band, or the fluctuations have to originate in the more local but extremely low
luminosity galaxies.Comment: Ap.J.Letters, in press. Minor revisions to mathc the accepted versio
Hannah Arendt
Peer reviewe
Reconstructing emission from pre-reionization sources with cosmic infrared background fluctuation measurements by the JWST
We present new methodology to use cosmic infrared background (CIB)
fluctuations to probe sources at 10<z<30 from a JWST/NIRCam configuration that
will isolate known galaxies to 28 AB mag at 0.5--5 micron. At present
significant mutually consistent source-subtracted CIB fluctuations have been
identified in the Spitzer and Akari data at 2--5 micron, but we demonstrate
internal inconsistencies at shorter wavelengths in the recent CIBER data. We
evaluate CIB contributions from remaining galaxies and show that the bulk of
the high-z sources will be in the confusion noise of the NIRCam beam, requiring
CIB studies. The accurate measurement of the angular spectrum of the
fluctuations and probing the dependence of its clustering component on the
remaining shot noise power would discriminate between the various currently
proposed models for their origin and probe the flux distribution of its
sources. We show that the contribution to CIB fluctuations from remaining
galaxies is large at visible wavelengths for the current instruments precluding
probing the putative Lyman-break of the CIB fluctuations. We demonstrate that
with the proposed JWST configuration such measurements will enable probing the
Lyman break. We develop a Lyman-break tomography method to use the NIRCam
wavelength coverage to identify or constrain, via the adjacent two-band
subtraction, the history of emissions over 10<z<30 as the Universe comes out of
the 'Dark Ages'. We apply the proposed tomography to the current Spitzer/IRAC
measurements at 3.6 and 4.5 micron, to find that it already leads to
interestingly low upper limit on emissions at z>30.Comment: ApJ, in press. Minor revisions/additions to match the version in
proof
Arendt and political realism: towards a realist account of political judgement
This article argues that Hannah Arendt’s thought can offer significant insights on political judgement for realism in political theory. We identify a realist position which emphasises the need to account for how humans judge politically, contra moralist tendencies to limit its exercise to rational standards, but which fails to provide a sufficient conception of its structure and potential. Limited appeals to political judgement render the realist defence of the political elusive, and compromise the endeavour to offer a meaningful alternative to the moralist tendency to displace politics. The potential and limitations of realist discussions on judgement are made visible in relation to proto-realists Judith Shklar and Isaiah Berlin.
In seeking to enrich the realist conception of the political, the article introduces the displacement critique found in the neglected Arendtian ‘realism’. It also provides the foundations for a distinctly realist account of political judgement which, we argue, requires elaboration along two dimensions: the social coding of political judgement and the political capacities that help judgement build a suitable political sphere
New measurements of the cosmic infrared background fluctuations in deep Spitzer/IRAC survey data and their cosmological implications
We extend previous measurements of cosmic infrared background (CIB)
fluctuations to ~ 1 deg using new data from the Spitzer Extended Deep Survey.
Two fields, with depths of ~12 hr/pixel over 3 epochs, are analyzed at 3.6 and
4.5 mic. Maps of the fields were assembled using a self-calibration method
uniquely suitable for probing faint diffuse backgrounds. Resolved sources were
removed from the maps to a magnitude limit of AB mag ~ 25, as indicated by the
level of the remaining shot noise. The maps were then Fourier-transformed and
their power spectra were evaluated. Instrumental noise was estimated from the
time-differenced data, and subtracting this isolates the spatial fluctuations
of the actual sky. The power spectra of the source-subtracted fields remain
identical (within the observational uncertainties) for the three epochs
indicating that zodiacal light contributes negligibly to the fluctuations.
Comparing to 8 mic power spectra shows that Galactic cirrus cannot account for
the fluctuations. The signal appears isotropically distributed on the sky as
required for an extragalactic origin. The CIB fluctuations continue to diverge
to > 10 times those of known galaxy populations on angular scales out to < 1
deg. The low shot noise levels remaining in the diffuse maps indicate that the
large scale fluctuations arise from the spatial clustering of faint sources
well below the confusion noise. The spatial spectrum of these fluctuations is
in reasonable agreement with an origin in populations clustered according to
the standard cosmological model (LCDM) at epochs coinciding with the first
stars era.Comment: ApJ, to be publishe
A mid-infrared survey of the inner 2 × 1.5 degrees of the Galaxy with Spitzer/IRAC
We present a survey of Spitzer Space Telescope/IRAC observations of the central 2 × 1.5 degrees (265 × 200 pc) of the Galaxy at 3-8 μm. These data represent the highest spatial resolution and sensitivity large-scale map made to date of the Galactic Center (GC) at mid-infrared wavelengths. The IRAC data provide a census of the optically obscured stellar sources as well as a detailed map of the highly filamentary structure in the interstellar medium. The diffuse emission is dominated by PAH emission from small grains in star-forming regions. Dark clouds displaying a large variety of sizes and morphologies are imaged, many of which remain opaque at IRAC wavelengths. Using a multiwavelength comparison, we determine which objects are likely to be in the foreground and which are located at the GC. We find no counterparts at IRAC wavelengths to the unique system of linear, nonthermal radio filaments present at the GC
- …