146 research outputs found
Secular Instability and Planetesimal Formation in the Dust Layer
Late in the gaseous phase of a protostellar disk, centimeter-sized bodies
probably settle into a thin ``dust layer'' at the midplane. A velocity
difference between the dust layer and the gas gives rise to turbulence, which
prevents further settling and direct gravitational instability of the layer.
The associated drag on the surface of the layer causes orbital decay in a few
thousand years---as opposed to a few hundred years for an isolated meter-sized
body. Within this widely-accepted theoretical framework, we show that the
turbulent drag causes radial instabilities even if the selfgravity of the layer
is negligible. We formulate axisymmetric, height-integrated dynamical equations
for the layer that incorporate turbulent diffusion of mass and momentum in
radius and height, vertical settling, selfgravity, and resistance to
compression due to gas entrained within the dust layer. In steady-state, the
equations describe the inward radial drift of a uniform dust layer. In
perturbation, overdense rings form on an orbital timescale with widths
comparable to the dust-layer thickness. Selfgravity is almost irrelevant to the
linear growth rate but will eventually fragment and collapse the rings into
planetesimals larger than a kilometer. We estimate that the drag instability is
most efficient at 1 AU when most of the ``dust'' mass lies in the size range
0.1-10 meters.Comment: 25 pp., 2 figures. Uses aastex version 5.0
Study of systematics effects on the Cross Power Spectrum of 21 cm Line and Cosmic Microwave Background using Murchison Widefield Array Data
Observation of the 21cm line signal from neutral hydrogen during the Epoch of
Reionization is challenging due to extremely bright Galactic and extragalactic
foregrounds and complicated instrumental calibration. A reasonable approach for
mitigating these problems is the cross correlation with other observables. In
this work, we present the first results of the cross power spectrum (CPS)
between radio images observed by the Murchison Widefield Array and the cosmic
microwave background (CMB), measured by the Planck experiment. We study the
systematics due to the ionospheric activity, the dependence of CPS on group of
pointings, and frequency. The resulting CPS is consistent with zero because the
error is dominated by the foregrounds in the 21cm observation. Additionally,
the variance of the signal indicates the presence of unexpected systematics
error at small scales. Furthermore, we reduce the error by one order of
magnitude with application of a foreground removal using a polynomial fitting
method. Based on the results, we find that the detection of the 21cm-CMB CPS
with the MWA Phase I requires more than 99.95% of the foreground signal
removed, 2000 hours of deep observation and 50% of the sky fraction coverage.Comment: 15 pages, 16 figures, accepted to MNRA
A gravitational lensing explanation for the excess of strong Mg-II absorbers in GRB afterglow spectra
GRB afterglows offer a probe of the intergalactic medium out to high redshift
which complements observations along more abundant quasar lines-of-sight.
Although both quasars and GRB afterglows should provide a-priori random
sight-lines through the intervening IGM, it has been observed that strong Mg-II
absorbers are twice as likely to be found along sight-lines toward GRBs.
Several proposals to reconcile this discrepancy have been put forward, but none
has been found sufficient to explain the magnitude of the effect. In this paper
we estimate the effect of gravitational lensing by galaxies and their
surrounding mass distributions on the statistics of Mg-II absorption. We find
that the multi-band magnification bias could be very strong in the
spectroscopic GRB afterglow population and that gravitational lensing can
explain the discrepancy in density of absorbers, for plausibly steep luminosity
functions. The model makes the prediction that approximately 20%-60% of the
spectroscopic afterglow sample (i.e. ~ 5-15 of 26 sources) would have been
multiply imaged, and hence result in repeating bursts. We show that despite
this large lensing fraction it is likely that none would yet have been
identified by chance owing to the finite sky coverage of GRB searches. We
predict that continued optical monitoring of the bright GRB afterglow locations
in the months and years following the initial decay would lead to
identification of lensed GRB afterglows. A confirmation of the lensing
hypothesis would allow us to constrain the GRB luminosity function down to
otherwise inaccessibly faint levels, with potential consequences for GRB
models.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to MNRAS
Subtraction of Bright Point Sources from Synthesis Images of the Epoch of Reionization
Bright point sources associated with extragalactic AGN and radio galaxies are
an important foreground for low frequency radio experiments aimed at detecting
the redshifted 21cm emission from neutral hydrogen during the epoch of
reionization. The frequency dependence of the synthesized beam implies that the
sidelobes of these sources will move across the field of view as a function of
observing frequency, hence frustrating line-of-sight foreground subtraction
techniques. We describe a method for subtracting these point sources from dirty
maps produced by an instrument such as the MWA. This technique combines matched
filters with an iterative centroiding scheme to locate and characterize point
sources in the presence of a diffuse background. Simulations show that this
technique can improve the dynamic range of EOR maps by 2-3 orders of magnitude.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, submitted to PAS
A Snapshot Survey for Gravitational Lenses Among z>=4.0 Quasars: I. The z>5.7 Sample
Over the last few years, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has discovered
several hundred quasars with redshift between 4.0 and 6.4. Including the
effects of magnification bias, one expects a priori that an appreciable
fraction of these objects are gravitationally lensed. We have used the Advanced
Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space Telescope to carry out a snapshot
imaging survey of high-redshift SDSS quasars to search for gravitationally
split lenses. This paper, the first in a series reporting the results of the
survey, describes snapshot observations of four quasars at z = 5.74, 5.82, 5.99
and 6.30, respectively. We find that none of these objects has a lensed
companion within 5 magnitudes with a separation larger than 0.3 arcseconds;
within 2.5 magnitudes, we can rule out companions within 0.1 arcseconds. Based
on the non-detection of strong lensing in these four systems, we constrain the
z~6 luminosity function to a slope of beta>-4.63 (3 sigma), assuming a break in
the quasar luminosity function at M_{1450}^*=-24.0. We discuss the implications
of this constraint on the ionizing background due to quasars in the early
universe. Given that these quasars are not highly magnified, estimates of the
masses of their central engines by the Eddington argument must be taken
seriously, possibly challenging models of black hole formation.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, submitted to A
Discovery of a Fifth Image of the Large Separation Gravitationally Lensed Quasar SDSS J1004+4112
We report the discovery of a fifth image in the large separation lensed
quasar system SDSS J1004+4112. A faint point source located 0.2'' from the
center of the brightest galaxy in the lensing cluster is detected in images
taken with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) and the Near Infrared Camera
and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) on the Hubble Space Telescope. The flux
ratio between the point source and the brightest lensed component in the ACS
image is similar to that in the NICMOS image. The location and brightness of
the point source are consistent with lens model predictions for a lensed image.
We therefore conclude that the point source is likely to be a fifth image of
the source quasar. In addition, the NICMOS image reveals the lensed host galaxy
of the source quasar, which can strongly constrain the structure of the lensing
critical curves and thereby the mass distribution of the lensing cluster.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Modelling and peeling extended sources with shapelets: a Fornax A case study
To make a power spectrum (PS) detection of the 21 cm signal from the Epoch of
Reionisation (EoR), one must avoid/subtract bright foreground sources. Sources
such as Fornax A present a modelling challenge due to spatial structures
spanning from arc seconds up to a degree. We compare modelling with multi-scale
(MS) CLEAN components to 'shapelets', an alternative set of basis functions. We
introduce a new image-based shapelet modelling package, SHAMFI. We also
introduce a new CUDA simulation code (WODEN) to generate point source,
Gaussian, and shapelet components into visibilities. We test performance by
modelling a simulation of Fornax A, peeling the model from simulated
visibilities, and producing a residual PS. We find the shapelet method
consistently subtracts large-angular-scale emission well, even when the
angular-resolution of the data is changed. We find that when increasing the
angular-resolution of the data, the MS CLEAN model worsens at large
angular-scales. When testing on real MWA data, the expected improvement is not
seen in real data because of the other dominating systematics still present.
Through further simulation we find the expected differences to be lower than
obtainable through current processing pipelines. We conclude shapelets are
worthwhile for subtracting extended galaxies, and may prove essential for an
EoR detection in the future, once other systematics have been addressed.Comment: 17 pages, 11 Figures, accepted for publication in Publications of the
Astronomical Society of Australia (18/05/2020). "For the SHAMFI code, see:
https://github.com/JLBLine/SHAMFI" . "For the SHAMFI documentation, see:
https://shamfi.readthedocs.io/" . "For the WODEN code and documentation see:
https://github.com/JLBLine/WODEN
Discovering Gravitational Lenses Through Measurements Of Their Time Delays
We consider the possibility that future wide-field time-domain optical
imaging surveys may be able to discover gravitationally lensed quasar pairs
through serendipitous measurements of their time delays. We discuss the merits
such a discovery technique would have relative to conventional lens searches.
Using simulated quasar lightcurves, we demonstrate that in a survey which
observes objects several times each lunar cycle over the course of five years,
it is possible to improve the efficiency of a gravitational lens search by 2-3
orders of magnitude through the use of time delay selection. In the most
advantageous scenario considered, we are able to improve efficiency by a factor
of 1000 with no loss of completeness. In the least advantageous scenario, we
are able to improve efficiency by a factor of 110 while reducing completeness
by a factor of 9. We show that window function effects associated with the
length of the observing season are more important than the total number of
datapoints in determining the effectiveness of this method. We also
qualitatively discuss several complications which might be relevant to a real
time delay search.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to Ap
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